Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Sports and Games: Caber Toss

Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Sports and Games: Caber Toss

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The Highland Games:
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Culture > Sports and Games > The Highland Games:Caber Toss

Culture: Sports and Games
Caber Toss:

Caber Toss

Aside from pipe and drum and Highland dance competitions, the games are renowned for
their unique heavy events. By far the most recognizable trademark of the games is the spectacular caber toss. The origins of this
event are unknown, although it may have developed as a sport among foresters, who would compete amongst themselves by throwing tree
trunks into nearby rivers.
The caber, a long wooden pole similar to a telephone pole, normally weighs over 150 pounds, is about 18 feet long, and nine inches
thick. (According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the largest caber ever tossed was 25 feet long and weighed 280 pounds!)
Contrary to popular belief, the caber is thrown not for distance but for style. The athlete must rest the caber against his
shoulder and lift it vertically up off the ground while keeping it perfectly balanced. His objective is then to toss it in such a
way that it turns end over end in the air and lands with the lower end pointing towards the athlete in a relative twelve o’clock
position.

READ  Windsor's Scottish Heritage - People - Scots of Windsor's Past: Bartlet, MacDonald & Gow

 Caber Toss 

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