06/20/2026
🏴 The caber toss is judged not by distance but by accuracy — the perfect toss is the one where the caber, having been turned end for end so that its small end now leads, falls forward in the twelve o'clock position relative to the athlete who threw it, falling directly away from the thrower in a perfect straight line. The athlete who can consistently achieve this with a nineteen-foot pine log weighing a hundred and fifty pounds has mastered one of the most demanding physical skills in any athletic tradition anywhere in the world.
The origin of the caber toss — like most Highland Games events — is disputed and various, with theories ranging from the practical military requirement to throw logs across streams for rapid crossing to the simple test of strength and technique that all human cultures devise in different forms. What is certain is that the specific technical challenge of the caber — the combination of raw strength required to lift and carry the log and the athletic precision required to achieve the turning toss — is unique to the Scottish tradition and cannot be reduced to any other athletic form.
The Highland Games tradition of which the caber toss is the centrepiece has spread wherever Scottish emigrants have settled. The Braemar Gathering — the most celebrated of all Highland Games, attended by the Royal Family annually — is famous worldwide, but the tradition is as strong at the Antigonish Highland Games in Nova Scotia, at the Caledonian Games in New Zealand, at the Highland Games of Grandfather Mountain in North Carolina, and at hundreds of other venues where the Scottish diaspora has established the tradition that their ancestors brought from the glens of Perthshire and Argyll and the far north.
A pine log, vertical in a Highland sky, on a perfect August afternoon.
Scotland invented this. The world is still trying to throw it straight.