The indoor climbing wall where legends honed their craft

Samantha JaggerNorth East and Cumbria
Kendal Wall A woman with blonde hair is on an indoor climbing wall, surrounded by assorted-shaped and assorted-coloured plastic lumps attached to the wall. She is holding herself against the wall, with both of her hands holding a larger blue, ridged lump, with pink spots. She is wearing an orange top and black shorts. Her shoulder-length hair is hanging down with gravity.Kendal Wall
Kendal Wall first opened its doors to climbers in 1995

You should only tackle perilous routes like the north wall of Gogarth sea cliff in North Wales when you are over 74, says rock climber Rob Matheson.

This, the 75-year-old jokes, is because, by then, "you've had a good life, so it doesn't matter what happens".

Matheson first got to grips with the sport in 1957 and has since put up a long list of some of the Lake District's hardest first ascents, meaning he was the first to identify, create and climb those routes up rock faces.

His experience is strikingly different from the majority of beginner climbers today, who use indoor walls to learn the basics. And yet, at an indoor wall in Kendal in Cumbria, you can find masters and amateurs alike - and everything in between.

Indoor centres offer regulated safety equipment, soft matting and coloured plastic grips to hold on to, attached across the walls. Some big, some small, different shapes and some harder to reach than others, they are a route-choosing puzzle that caters for all abilities.

Kendal Wall, perched on the edge of the Lake District, opened 30 years ago and has nurtured new climbers and enabled the more experienced to train for some of the hardest routes in the UK.

Rob Matheson Rob Matheson is climbing a practically vertical rock face with very few parts poking out to provide any sort of hold. His right hand appears to be hanging on by no more than his fingertips. There are large grey boulders below him. He is wearing an orange fleece, a blue hat and black trousers. With his left hand he is reaching for a thin climbing hold on the rock.Rob Matheson
Rob Matheson has climbed the challenging The Bells! The Bells! route at Gogarth North Stack Wall in North Wales

At the time, Stella Adams, and her husband Jonny, both 79, would host fellow climbers travelling up to the Lakes at their home in Kendal.

"Climbing walls were few and far between back then," she said.

"To have a facility like that coming to Kendal was very exciting because our nearest one before that was Preston or Altrincham."

Adams was one of the wall's first route-setters, meaning she devised the layout of linked climbing holds.

"It was good fun - it's up to the setter to make the routes flow properly and enjoyable," she said.

"We stopped route-setting in our mid-60s but we're still climbing of course."

Stella Adams Stella Adams, climbing in the Lake District. She is climbing a ribbed rock face which is very exposed onto the patchwork of fields and hedges in the valley below her. She has one foot perched higher up and the other leg straight, and does not appear to be holding on with her hands. The rock has a purple-tint and the valley below her is very green. She is wearing a pink climbing helmet, a green t-shirt and turquoise blue trousers. Stella Adams
Stella Adams was one of the first route setters at Kendal Wall

Cumbrian adventure climber Leo Houlding said he helped build the wall "straight out of school aged 16".

Some "climbing legends" mucked in with the construction of it too.

"My dad was on the job too - it was really exciting working with them on the building site," the 45-year-old said.

Since moving to the village of Staveley, his two children have learned to climb at the wall and have gone on, with him, to scale El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, California.

Leo Houlding Leo Houlding and his family on the side of El Capitan. The family of four are wearing brightly coloured climbing attire in bright blues, reds, pinks, purples and greens, and have on outdoor gear which include helmets. They are sort of sitting on the side of the huge, cream-coloured granite rock face which is really exposed and are taking a selfie, which means our view of them is from above, making the huge drop below them even more evident.Leo Houlding
Leo Houlding and his wife Jessica, daughter Freya and son Jackson climbed the famous El Capitan

One of the wall's founders, Jeremy Wilson, said his involvement in its making was "entirely serendipitous".

He said he stumbled on the idea of setting one up after bumping into two friends at a wedding, where he heard about this former creamery building which had become available but "needed a lot of finance".

However the project almost "ended in early disaster" when he tried out its newest wall - the highest in England at that time - and fell.

"I was being belayed by one of Britain's top mountaineers at the time, the late Brendan Murphy, who I trusted intimately but we were using a 45m rope," he said.

He was being lowered when the end of the rope "ran right through the belay plate and I fell the last 15ft (4m), landing smack on my bottom".

"I thought I had broken my back and couldn't walk properly for weeks".

Kendal Wall A man crouches over metal framework, which he appears to be cutting with a rotary metal saw. Sparks are spraying out from the point of contact, forwards and backwards. He is wearing dark grey jeans and a white, long-sleeved t-shirt. Beyond him is a steel scaffolding frame.Kendal Wall
Climbers were involved in the actual building of the wall at Kendal

Adams said the climbing wall scene in the 1990s was "very small", consisting of regular local climbers and clubs.

Since Kendal Wall opened, she had seen more young women "getting out there and supporting each other".

"It has been phenomenal to see our community grow," she said.

It is a sentiment echoed by Mel Adam, who runs women's technique workshops at the venue.

"Walls were a bit male-dominated" when she first started climbing several years ago, she said.

"From what I've seen, many beginner women climbers have a lot of self doubt," the 41-year-old said.

"They feel out of their depth so it's about throwing them a float and giving them a way to be independent."

Adam said numbers just "keep on growing" with mothers returning to climbing, entry-level beginners and those looking for new climbing partners.

Kendal Wall Mel Adam is wearing a blue short-sleeved t-shirt under which she has a green, blue and white striped long-sleeved t-shirt. She appears to be mid conversation, with one arm out in an expressive manner. Behind her, and slightly out of focus, is a pale wood coloured climbing wall with holds or grips attached in a variety of colours. One child is climbing and another watches, both wearing helmets.Kendal Wall
Mel Adam runs women's technique workshops at the wall

Matheson said he too had seen a big shift in more women coming to climbing walls in recent years.

"When I was climbing with my parents in the 1960s, my mum Rena was pretty much the only female on the crag," he said.

How the walls are used has also changed, he said, with so many "young 'uns leaping about and putting us to shame".

Climbers now used walls "instead of training at the gym or socialising at the pub" whereas, in the early days, walls in Ingleton and Kendal were mostly used for training on bad weather days.

"It was also a place to make plans for the high cliffs of the Lakes," he said.

Rob Matheson Rob Matheson's mum Rena stands at the foot of a crag body holding on to a rope which she is using for belaying. She is wearing brown trousers and a black and white stripy shirt. She has brown curly hair and is half smiling. Rob Matheson
Rob Matheson said his mother Rena was "pretty much the only female at the crag" in the 1960s

Professional climber Neil Gresham said, growing up, he found some of the wall's cohort were an inspiration to him.

"I used to read about these legends in magazines and it's a marvel to be able to see them at the wall," he said.

Gresham too has been responsible for laying out some of the hardest routes in UK climbing, one being the first ascent of a climb called Lexicon at Pavey Ark in the Lake District in 2021.

Under the British grading system, the route is E11 7a - the E standing for "extremely severe", the "11" suggesting a very high level of difficulty and potential for fatality, and "7a" referring to technical complexity.

But the 54-year-old's career keeps connecting back to the wall, he said, and his time living in the town and working as a climbing coach had been "a huge part of his life".

"I had a renaissance period here by doing some of my best routes and I used Kendal Wall as my training base for them," he said.

"You can see 12-year-old kids climbing with 70-year-old adults.

"There are no boundaries in climbing."

Ben Mitchell Neil Gresham climbs on a dark grey and light grey climbing wall, on which there are lots of grips or holds in bright colours. He has a shaved head and is wearing a blue vest and grey shorts with climbing shoes. He appears not to be far from the ground but is holding himself up by such small holds that the tension in the muscles on his upper arms and forearms is very defined.Ben Mitchell
Neil Gresham said Kendal Wall had been "such a huge part of his life"

As the wall enters its 30th year, Wilson said older venues could "struggle financially such that they cannot refresh their centres and keep them clean and shiny".

He pointed to an "overbuild of indoor walls" as climbing has become more mainstream.

But, he said, Kendal's offering to the community was something more than just a place to climb. It was a hub linking veteran Lake District climbing legends to each other and to a new generation.

Kendal Wall A woman is climbing on an indoor wall. She is wearing a harness and is holding on the side of the wall which has brown-coloured holds. She has short, brown hair and is wearing maroon stretchy trousers and a baggy, brown jumper. The image appears to be old.Kendal Wall
Kendal Wall was one of few centres in the north in the 1990s and used to be a creamery

Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.