The BBC reports that the stones used in the sport of curling at the Winter Olympics come from a business founded in 1851, that's been supplying them since 1924. Click any image for a larger view.
Curling is back in the spotlight at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics - and all the stones used by the competitors originate from an uninhabited Scottish island.
They are hand-crafted at Kays Curling's workshop in Mauchline, Ayrshire, using granite from the island of Ailsa Craig.
The company's stones are the only ones used in competition by the World Curling Federation.
Kays Curling was founded in 1851, and has been providing curling stones for the Winter Olympics since the Chamonix Games in 1924.
The company's director is 72-year-old Jimmy Wyllie, who began working there at the age of 15.
He told BBC Radio's Good Morning Scotland programme: "The history books tell us that curling stones have been made from Ailsa Craig material for probably at least 200 years now.
"There are two sources on the island and in the good old days you could have a pair made from either."
Today, those two types of granite are combined to make one stone. Common Green granite is used for the main body, before Blue Hone granite is added.
Workers produce one stone per hour, a total of 38 stones a week. Each one is checked for shape and balance to ensure they meet Olympic requirements.
There's more at the link, including a fascinating series of photographs showing the stones being made by hand in the traditional way. Some modern tools are used, but all the old ones are still there, in serried ranks along the walls. It's a way of life I'd thought long gone, but it supports an Olympic sport to this day.
Peter
Tip for the cooks out there.
ReplyDeleteThe secret to preventing bacon, baloney or thinly sliced spam from curling in the frying pan is to steal their tiny brooms.
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You beat me to it!
DeleteERJ - that's a BAD Dad joke
ReplyDeleteInteresting article, and honestly had never thought about where they came from...
ReplyDeleteI have a Scottish buddy that is big into curling. He has stones cut from the flint from Dover. He had one shatter a few years back. He nearly had a mental meltdown.
ReplyDeleteLooks like the same sort of geologic formation as the Giant's Causeway in Northern Ireland. It's very near the Bushmills distillery. I was lucky enough to go to both many years ago.
ReplyDeleteThat area is where the Atlantic ocean started to open up. The northwestern Highlands is a part of North America that was left behind, once connected to the Newfoundland/Labrador area of Canada. You can find hex columns on the Isle of Skye. too.
ReplyDelete