They found my organThe mystery surrounding the discovery of a "piano" near the top of Britain's highest mountain appears to have been solved.
Kenny Campbell, a woodcutter from Bonar Bridge in the Highlands, claims the piano is actually an organ.
And he says he carried it up the mountain for a cancer charity in 1971.
Volunteers clearing stones from the 4,4118ft peak were stunned when they discovered the musical instrument on Ben Nevis at the weekend.It was recovered by 15 volunteers from the John Muir Trust, the conservation charity which owns part of Ben Nevis.
Mr Campbell said: "It took me four days to get the organ to the top and when I did I played Scotland the Brave.
BBC NewsHe said: "I carried an organ weighing 226lb to the summit and played Scotland the Brave on it and I had some Norwegian tourists who were up on the summit and they were dancing."
As a British Citizen, Might I also point out ME NEITHER !!!!!!! (er... bad teeth that is)jade said:.... We are funny, strong and, not all of us have bad teeth.... ....
jade said:As someone with 3/4 British heritage and a former rugby player, I figure it was a couple of hearty school lads who dropped it off on their way home from a match! We are funny, strong and, not all of us have bad teeth....
Go Manchester U!!!!!
...Jade
beverly said:They found my organ
Now that he's admitted carting it up there... think he'll get a ticket for littering?
Wrappers from a packet of McVitie's biscuits that Mike Clark and his team of Dundee removers washed down with a bottle of whisky to celebrate their achievement have been found nearby, with a telltale sell-by date, says the John Muir Conservation Trust.
Plot Thickens Over Ben Nevis PianoThe biscuit wrapper which said ‘Best before 13 December, 1986’, which we found in the cairn gives further proof that this was the piano Mike and his friends took up the mountain. We get 120,000 visitors every year, and all of them were walking right past a piano."
Mr Clark, 51, a retired removal man, said: "We did the exploit to raise money for the cystic fibrosis charity and also to get in the Guinness Book of Records, but their representatives were late in arriving and said they needed verification that we had carried the piano up the mountain.
"They asked us to carry another piano up the mountain the next day - and we told them they must be joking. We were absolutely knackered but happy we had achieved what we set out to do."
Enter your email address to join: