Sunday, December 14, 2025

50 Years of the British Mountain Guides.

 



Last weekend I was fortunate  to attend the 50th birthday party of the British Mountain Guides which was held in Fort William Scotland.  Below is an attempt to describe just a little of what the organisation has achieved during that time.

Over the past five decades, the BMG has quietly helped shape the course of UK and global mountaineering through steady, thoughtful contributions across every corner of the mountain world.

From the beginning, the BMG has stood for professionalism, safety, and the passing-on of hard-earned knowledge. Its members guide on some of the most technical and serious terrain in the world, but their influence reaches far beyond individual climbs of which there are far too Guides many to name check in this article.

National recognition has occasionally come, with figures like Alan Fyffe, Rob Collister and Pat Littlejohn honoured with MBEs for services to mountaineering. Alan Hinkes OBE is a BMG member and is still the only Britain to have climbed all the worlds fourteen 8000 meter peaks.

These awards are rare acknowledgements of what has often background work: developing safety standards, expanding access, and inspiring generations of climbers.

Many members have also held key positions in organisations that define best practice for the wider outdoor community—Mountaineering Scotland, Mountain Training, Glenmore Lodge, and Plas y Brenin among them. These institutions are central to how outdoor education and mountain safety are taught and practised in the UK. Further a field, some BMG members have served as advisors on outdoor education policy in both the UK and the United States, ensuring that their grounded, experience-led approach helps inform national thinking.

Roger Payne—former BMG President and BMC General Secretary—played key roles in the British Mountaineering Council and global guiding circles.

One of the most enduring contributions came 40 odd years ago with the publication of "Chance in a Million?", a book co-authored by Bob Barton and Blyth Wright at a time when many still considered avalanches in Scotland to be little more than bad luck. The book was instrumental in shifting that perception, and can arguably be seen as the beginning of what would become the Scottish Avalanche Information Service—a vital part of winter mountaineering in the UK today.

Climbing’s public image has also been shaped by BMG members. Much of how televised audiences first experienced climbing in the UK owes a debt to the technical rigging and behind-the-scenes vision of Brian Hall and his rigging company.  His team were key to the success of the film version of Touching the Void.


The creative side of mountaineering has long been nurtured within the BMG. Victor Saunders, in addition to a long list of cutting-edge ascents, has become one of the UK's most respected climbing writers. Sandy Allan’s Piolet d’Or-winning climb on Nanga Parbat’s Mazeno Ridge, and the reflective book that followed, added to a long tradition of storytelling that bridges adventure and insight. And while Pat Littlejohn didn’t invent sea cliff climbing, his influence on its development—particularly in the southwest—is hard to overstate.

In the technical realm, BMG members have often been at the leading edge. Alan Fyffe's decision to take the then-novel Terrordactyl ice tools to the North Face of the Droites was considered revolutionary at the time, and opened doors for another leap in standards in  British alpinism. In more recent years, Will Sim has blended paragliding and mountaineering in the Greater Ranges—a modern expression of the same spirit of innovation.

Mountain medicine is another area where the BMG has made a mark. Owen Samuels mountain first aid course is widely regarded as a gold standard, adopted not only in the BMG  but by other countries seeking to improve safety in remote terrain. Most notably the Ecole Nationale d’Ski and Alpinism ENSA in Chamonix France.

These are only a few examples in a long and growing list. As previously stated, not every contribution can be named, and many were never intended to be. That, perhaps, is what defines the BMG’s role over the last 50 years: not a single achievement, but a consistent presence that has helped shape mountaineering into something safer, broader, and more deeply rooted in community.

As the organisation looks to the future, There are new challenges environmental pressures, and evolving access rights and of course the biggest challenge of them all climate change.  It is certain that the BMG is going to be a the epi- centre of how mountaineering adapts to this.

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