
Some people will do anything for charity, even if it means stripping naked in freezing temperatures atop Africa's highest peak.
That's
 exactly what cheeky Ben Boleyn did when he reached the summit of Mount 
Kilimanjaro after enduring treacherous conditions during a nine-day 
charity climb.
The
 18-year-old student scaled the 19,341-ft high mountain wearing full 
walking gear, including four layers of thermals, and then bared all for 
pictures after a friend bet him just 18 pence to streak at the peak in 
-12C weather.
  
Before
 the climb he raised £600 for Acorns Children's Hospice in Worcester, 
where he is a volunteer, but he has received hundreds more after posting
 his cheeky snaps on Facebook.
He posed for 10 minutes in just his walking boots, bringing some life to the dormant volcanic mountain. 4
The
 teen from Kingswinford, West Midlands, said: 'Everyone at the summit 
loved it and everyone was taking pictures of me and I had a bit of an 
audience.
'My parents were shocked at first but people seem to have donated more because of it, which is great. It is quite unique.
'I would do it again at other landmarks. I want to go to Machu Picchu next so maybe I will strip there too.' Here's more pictures of the young man...
He
 got the idea from a fellow Acorns Children's Hospice volunteer, who 
snaps a picture of himself naked at every landmark he visits.
Ben said: 'Once I was with the climb group I mentioned it in conversation and it just snowballed after that.
'Everyone kept talking about it and one climber bet me 500 Tanzanian shillings, which is about 18p, that I wouldn't do it.
'When we got to the top I had to do it so just thought why not, it was a once in a lifetime opportunity.'



He
 added: 'It was between -10C and -12C but it didn't feel that cold, 
probably because of the adrenaline and we had just walked for six hours 
so I was already warm.'
Ben
 scaled the mountain with seven other climbers after he spent four weeks
 volunteering at a hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
They trekked an average of almost six miles a day with a team of 31 porters.
He said: 'The summit climb was the hardest part but walking for nine days in a row was challenging.
'Some days we would do a short three hour trek and an hour trek to acclimatise and other treks would be eight hours.'

He did it all to raise money for Acorns Children's Hospice and awareness of the 'fantastic' work that they do.
'I
 do voluntary work every week at Acorns Children's Hospice in Worcester 
so have seen the amazing work they do caring for terminally ill children
 first hand and everybody has a massive smile on their face most of the 
time.'
Now
 that the climb is over, Ben is taking a gap year and hopes to study 
medicine at a university abroad before training to become a doctor.
He
 recently finished his A-Levels at King Edward VI College in 
Stourbridge, where he got an A in chemistry, an A in human biology and a
 B in maths with statistics.
Culled from Daily Mail 
 
 
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