A 6ft poppy has arrived in Truro after being pulled around Cornwall to raise awareness of the Royal British Legion.
Despite driving rain, members of the public turned out on Saturday to see the giant plastic poppy arrive in Lemon Quay before the team processed to the war memorial to pay their respects. They then returned to Lemon Quay, where Cornwall's own military wives' choir, The Culdroses, performed some of their songs.
Click here to see a gallery of the giant poppy arriving in Truro.Servicemen and women have pulled the poppy 500 metres for every colleague lost in Afghanistan, taking it on a route about 180 miles long through the Duchy.
Starting in Penzance, the poppy has passed through Camborne, St Mawgan, Bodmin, Launceston and St Austell. Each day's route started and ended at memorials to those who died in the First World War.
The event was led by Sqn Ldr Sean Pascoe from RAF St Mawgan, who said he came up with the idea as "an act of remembrance".
He originally proposed pulling the poppy all the way himself, but said teams from RAF St Mawgan and RNAS Culdrose were so keen to be involved with the event that he ended up pulling it for just one day of the six-day journey.
By the end of the trip, he said an "amazing response" to the poppy pull had raised £1,200 for the British Legion. However, he added that the real point of the journey had been to "show people in Cornwall the poppy" and to remind them of what it stood for.