Meet the toddler who has been climbing since she was 11 months old and can now scale 52-foot-high walls. <br /><br />Isla Murr, four, started to climb things just two months after she started to walk at nine months old.<br /><br />Mum Lucy Murr, 29, quickly noticed her daughter's unusual abilities for climbing and started taking her to playgrounds for older children.<br /><br />Lucy, who lives in Sydney, Australia, said: "As soon as she learned to walk she's been climbing things.<br /><br />"So when she was about 11 months I started taking her to older playgrounds so she could.<br /><br />"She went to more advanced playgrounds for older kids. I'd say she's climbed all of the highest playgrounds they have in Sydney.<br /><br />"I took her to playgrounds that have really high things to climb."<br /><br />It didn't take long for Isla to become bored with playground climbing frames, so Lucy decided to introduce her to rock climbing. <br /><br />Lucy said: "I showed her rock climbing videos on my phone and she just wanted to do that.<br /><br />"She'd see videos of rock climbing and say I wanna do that, mum can I do that?<br /><br />"One time there was a proper rock wall at some indoor playground we were at and she said 'mum can I go up there? I wanna go up there.'"<br /><br />Unfortunately, no rock-climbing centres would allow young Isla to attend for safety reasons, so Lucy had to wait three years to finally let Isla explore her passion.<br /><br />Lucy, a stay-at-home mum, said: "They wouldn't let her in because she was too young, which I understand, but I knew she could do it.<br /><br />"I'd always tell her we have to wait until she's four and before she turned four she used to say 'when I turn four I'm going to go rock climbing.'<br /><br />"She'd be disappointed and sad when I'd tell her she'd have to wait."<br /><br />As soon as Isla turned four and became old enough, Lucy took Isla to a climbing centre and the little girl climbed everything she could.<br /><br />She climbed all the kid walls first and quickly graduated to the adult walls, including a 52-foot-high wall. <br /><br />Lucy said: "I had people around me saying 'wow, that's amazing!' There were kids that were about 12 saying that they wouldn't be able to go that high.<br /><br />"We told her that she didn't have to go that high, but she just kept climbing."<br /><br />Isla's performance didn't only shock the other onlookers, dad Brendon Murr, 34, a hydraulic engineer, was also surprised and squeamish at Isla climbing so high.<br /><br />Lucy, said: "My husband was shocked, he didn't think she would get that high. I had to tell him to let her just go for it.<br /><br />"I believe that a child will get more confident and better at things if you just let them do it."<br /><br />Lucy is sure that climbing will be a lasting passion and thinks that Isla will go on to greater things.<br /><br />She added: "She wants to go back again. I will definitely take her back wherever she wants to go with it we'll nurture it.<br /><br />"The second we left she asked to go back to the rock climbing centre, and she's been asking a few times since.<br /><br />"We'll probably take her about once or twice a month.