



2008 33rd Annual Cambridge Highland Games
Friday July 18th – Saturday July 19th 2008
Failte Oirbh! Welcome To You






Putting the stone
Hammer Throw
Sheaf Toss
Caber Toss
One of the classics, and actually the precursor to Olympic Shot Put. The stone weighs (for men) either the light stone at 17-19lbs or the heavy stone weighing in at 24-27lbs. Essentially, there's two ways of doing this one, Braemar style, or open stone. Braemar is the classic,consisting of you planting one foot just behind a block, then placing the stone behind your chin, and resting it on one arm, then just twisting your body and shoving the thing as far as you can, similar to a shot put. One foot must always be on the ground.
The other method is to do essentially any method you want, whether its spinning, hopping or even running up to the trig (within a 4 1/2 x 7 1/2 foot area) plant your foot, and hurl the stone. I'm not bad at this event, but hardly fantastic. Takes a lot of timing with the twist to get it right. As with most of the events, the power comes out of your hips.
Again, similar to the Olympic Hammer Throw, except your feet stay still. No spinning. You just dig in, and rotate the hammer (a 16 or 22lb weight on the end of a 4' rattan or PVC pipe for some bend) around your body, then releasing it for distance. I've seen this one throw 260lb men onto the ground. Many of the best throwers use a spike on the toes of their feet to dig in. This takes enormous skill, and you almost have to learn to throw all over again, but it seems to be the way to add the extra feet on when you have it.
Sheaf! Sheaf! Not sheep! This goes back to one of the classic male things to do. Compete with each other while at work. You grab a pitchfork, stick it into the sheaf (a 16lb or 20lb bag of straw, etc), and toss it over a bar, and in between the two posts the bar rests on. Accuracy and power. After all, how long would you have kept your job if you couldn't toss a hay bale into the hay loft?
Kind of looks like a telephone pole throwing contest, and is the last event usually. Probably the most well known of the heavy events, although usually the point is a bit lost in the translation. The caber is not thrown for height, or distance, but accuracy. You take the 'small' end of the caber in your hands, flip the caber and try to get the other end to land at 12:00 from your shoulders. A perfect 180. This event takes more skill than any of the others (maybe). A world class caber weighs anywhere from 90-150lbs (or more) and is 16-25' long. The biggest challenge of the caber toss isn't in lifting the caber, its in controlling it. You can't out-muscle the caber. No one is strong enough to fight that much leverage. You have to out-manouver it. Then get it moving in the right direction. Then its all timing and lift to get the large end to hit the ground, and keep the small end rising up, over and perfectly land away from you. In professional competitions they have a qualifying caber, then the competition caber. I finally flipped a couple in competition this year. Hell, I'm just as happy to pick the damn thing up and get it moving correctly






Heavy Events
For information Contact
Steve Clark 519-787-9989