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The programme for the Woodcraft Folk international camp at Debden in 1951 (available on our heritage website ) says that Lord Henderson, undersecretary for foreign affairs, gave the opening address (Letters, 27 April). Sixty years later, Woodcraft Folk will again host 3,000 young people from around the world at CoCamp. Lord Henderson's successor William Hague would be welcome to join us, particularly if he is able to talk to his colleagues at the Home Office, whose revised visa rules mean that it is now much harder for our sister organisations in poorer parts of the world to participate in youth exchanges and festivals of international co-operation.
Jon Nott
General secretary, Woodcraft Folk
• How disappointing that Joshua Bullock (Take the real Spain by the horns, Travel, 23 April) found the Gaucin Easter Sunday bull race "utterly wonderful", only then to write that the exhausted bull is taken away and "sadly, killed". Surely he would have known this would be the result of the race he took part in. Perhaps more distant observation would have been the better part of valour!
Alistair Smith
Chirk, North Wales
• Many of us from the south also have our supper just before bedtime (Letters, 23 April). It's not just Angela Hartnett; Nigella and Nigel also harp on about supper, when they mean tea or dinner. I think it's a chattering classes thing: supper menus were invented in the posh part of Islington in the 1980s.
Roger Perry
Wighill, North Yorkshire
• I want to know what happened to the kitten (Who's that girl? Photographer seeks beautiful stranger, 26 April).
Issy Cartmail
Stafford
• "Bottle of former pope's blood to go on display" (27 April)? Next to Piss Christ, perhaps? Sick, or what?
Colin Pickthall
Ulverston, Cumbria
• Can I borrow that cat (Letters, 25 April)? The cuckoo is really getting on my nerves.
Geoff Elms
Llanfyrnach, Pembrokeshire