Thursday, 1 October 2015

Reading Part 1 (Sample FCE 2014)

I'm focused. Completely terrified, but focused. I've got a tiny area to stand on and beneath me is a 10-metre drop. To make things worse, the totem pole that I'm trying to climb onto is shaking. With one knee bent on the top of the pole and the other foot next to it, I slowly stand up with my arms outstretched for balance. Once upright, my legs are still wobbling but an enormous smile has spread across my face. I shuffle my toes over the edge. And then I jump. Back on the ground, my knees won't stop quaking. But for the boys ar Head 4 Heights, an aerial adventure centre in Cirencester, it's all in a days work.

Head 4 Heights, one of the tallest climbing centres in Britain, opened two years ago. It's the only UK climbing centre open to the public year-round (the only days it closes are when winds exceed 70 mph, almost enough to blow you off a totem pole and into one of the lakes). The course was set up by Roy Baber, adventurer extraordinaire and holder of the world record for scaling the highest peak of every country in Europe in the shortest time. Rod's late plan is to snag the record for North and South America as well, but in between he starts every day with a clamber round the Cirencester course. His favourite is the Trapeze challenge: "It still gets me every time. Eyes dilate, mouth goes dry and adrenaline goes everywere."

Although the course is only roughly the size of a tennis court it packs a lot into a small space. There are four totem poles (of varying degrees of difficulty according to the holds attached to them), a stairway to heaven (a giant ladder with an increasing distance between the rungs), two freefall platforms and a trapeze jump. Plans for a new 30-meter pole are presently under way. All can be made easier or harder, according to ability and incorporated into different challenges, which is why the course has proved a success with families, corporate days out and the armed forces. More than half who visit return for more and the centre now averages about 1,5000 visitors a month.

All ages over five are welcome, but children are the most enthusiastic and "far easier to teach than the bankers" says Rod. Parents are usually more reluctant to join in "We hear all sorts of excuses" says Rod. Everything from bad knees to "I haven't trimmed my toenails." The oldest customer was a 78 year old who arrived with his son and grandson. When the younger two decided to give it a miss, the grandfather set off to show them how it was done.

For the most part, though, people start off nervous and only gain confidence as they progress. "Everything is kept very positive. We always tell people to look up not down and to take their time" says Rod. We want to push people outside their comfort zone and into the adventure zone, but we don't want people to be pushed into the panic zone, which can be mentally damaging"

Alse reassuring is the 100 per cent safety record. The course was designed and built by Nick Moriarty, an expert in his field who has constructed 450 courses in 16 countries and trained 2,7000 instructors. Key to the design is the safety rope system, which ensures that if you do lose your balance or grip, your full-body harness will guarantee that you float, not fall back to earth.

What isn't guaranteed, though, is family harmony. "The Leap of Love" is usually left as the final challenge and involves two (similarly sized) people squeezing themselves onto a bird table at the top of a totem pole before jumping tandem to grab a trapeze. Not everything always goes according to plan. Aside from not arguing, both people need to be careful not to unbalance each other and must jump at exactly the same time. "We do have some people who have refuesed to speak to each other afterwards" says Rod "but if you can both make it together, it's such a buzz.


Saint Ambrose Language School

Experts in General English at your workplace or home!