Can we not just nip this bullshit in the bud now by disbanding the BMC via a debilitating series of motions of no confidence; and let climbing slowly revert to its former underground, small number of participants, glory? This would lead to loads of bouldering walls going bust but it'd be for the greater good of the real thing.
Bet you quite like those Nomic axes
I think the genie is out of the bottle; people have realised that climbing and other mountain sports are way more fun than the team sports that schools tried to convince them were good.
. I should have said I think we're currently in a bouldering fad - indoors and out. I don't think it'll keep increasing the way some people seem to think, in the long term. General increases, sure, in line with population growth.
I should have said I think we're currently in a bouldering fad - indoors and out. I don't think it'll keep increasing the way some people seem to think, in the long term. General increases, sure, in line with population growth.
The idea that the BMC is predominantly responsible for the increase in participation is laughable. As such, the above point also applies in my mind; better to use it as a force for good to maintain access than criticise at every opportunity like some are wont to do. Apologies if it was a tongue in cheek response which I have spectacularly misread.
Bounced a few ideas around this lunchtime with Grimer and a few other folk for film ideas. Hopefully we can scrape a budget together for it, having spent all our cash on a gold-plated Beastmaker for the office we're a bit strapped right now.
If your first exposure to bouldering is at the Depot in Manchester say, your perception is big groups, load music, lots of chalk and shouting encouragement. When you head outside for the first time, you and your group take those perceptions with you and transpose it to the countryside. People don’t necessarily have an appreciation of the issue with access, noise pollution, visual pollution, crag etiquette etc
Quote from: teestub on February 20, 2018, 01:09:26 pmI think the genie is out of the bottle; people have realised that climbing and other mountain sports are way more fun than the team sports that schools tried to convince them were good.I think what we're seeing currently is a fad. The Olympics will undoubted fuel the fashion but long-term that's all I think it is - a fashion that will move on. And some people at the BMC are keen to ride the wave. The growth of climbing walls looks like a bubble to me and I think some of them won't survive beyond 10-15 years.
Doing something about this came up in discussion with Rob Dyer (BMC access dude) last week in the office, we were talking about posters for climbing walls and whether a "good practice when climbing outside" poster would be useful. I'll give him a nudge but I believe he's already working on it. Stuff like this has been done before, like the bouldering 10 commandments posters etc. A video might be a good idea as well.
The "no dogs" signs at Bamford are often ignored, for example. Got to be worth a shot though before we lose any more quality venues.
I do believe there are some who want the BMC to grow in ways I personally think aren't beneficial to the majority of current climbers but are beneficial to a minority of vested interests: the BMC itself, business and sponsors, pro teams and athletes.The logical response by participants in a niche outdoor activity that impacts the playground where it takes place, is to keep a lid on it and not try to get a huge commercial bandwagon going. That isn't happening. Why? Follow the money.
Social media from "influencers" seems like the obvious way to go with this IMO.If people like Shauna, SBC, Nalle, Dave G, Sharma, Ondra et-al came out with a quick united message about outdoor etiquette, it would have an impact considerably over a poster at the local wall.This would be for internationally relevant stuff; tick marks, tidiness, respect for the outdoors etc. Even small stuff like maybe less "driving to the crag" sections, more "post session chalk brushing" bits.