The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

We have got to axe: Champion on more women making the cut at timber tournament­s

- By Laura Smith lasmith@sundaypost.com

Standing astride a huge section of tree trunk, a seven-pound axe raised above her head, Catherine Eccles tenses her muscles and then throws every ounce of strength into a powerful downward swing that hews the wood towards its core with a satisfying crack.

The arborist isn’t just splitting wood in her garden to heat her home this year, although that is a useful bonus of training for an extreme sport inspired by lumberjack skills that she hopes to see take root in Scotland.

Timberspor­ts, or competitiv­e wood chopping, sees lumberjack­s and lumberjill­s from around the world compete to saw, chop and slice through tree trunks at speed, using different axes, saws and chainsaws across a range of discipline­s that mirror how lumberjack­s, or loggers, fell trees.

Stihl Timberspor­ts is the worldwide league of lumberjack sports, which started 37 years ago in the USA and arrived in Britain in 2012 with the country’s first British Championsh­ip.

Eccles is one of two Scottish loggers hoping to carve out a legacy of timberspor­ts in Scotland and is the first Scottish woman to take part in lumberjack sports competitiv­ely.

At home, she can practise the underhand chop, where competitor­s chop through a 32cm-thick tree trunk with an axe from above on both sides within 90 seconds.

“It’s really tough,” said Eccles, 42. “Ninety seconds doesn’t seem long but when you are swinging the axe and hitting hard into the wood, the lactic acid kicks in and you feel the fatigue in your muscles, especially the arms, really quickly.

“When I first started training I was using muscles I never knew I had!”

The mum-of-two discovered timberspor­ts through her work as a tree surgeon but it was attending the 2018 World Championsh­ips in Liverpool that inspired her to get involved herself. “I applied for a taster day and ended up being invited to a training camp down in Wales,” added Eccles.

“I went through the training programme, which involved four training camps in the lead-up to the first-ever British women’s timberspor­ts championsh­ips in Malvern last June.”

While she spends her days climbing, trimming and dismantlin­g trees, Eccles sets aside one night a week to practise wood chopping with an axe in her back garden, using spare wood she’s collected from work. She then seasons and processes her chopped logs for firewood.

“The physical side of my job has helped me in terms of fitness, and I’m used to using a chainsaw, so I can practise for the stock saw event at work. But learning how to chop with an axe and buck saw has been a learning curve,” said Eccles, from Coylton in Ayr, who has worked as a tree surgeon for over two decades.

Yet it’s not all about brute strength, she said: “There’s a technique to it. You need to stick to your lines and hit the wood in the right place, trying to avoid any knots. When you know you’ve done your cuts right and cut through the block it’s massively satisfying.

“I’ve chopped wood my whole life but I love the athletic side of timberspor­ts and the community, it’s such a friendly sport. I’ve made good friends through it.”

With origins in 19th-Century Australia, where foresters would compete with each other outside work to see who had the best

It’s really tough. You feel fatigue in your muscles really quickly

tree-felling skills, it has become a high-octane sport that requires strength, stamina, power and precision. In the competitio­ns sponsored by chainsaw makers Stihl, women compete in three disciples: the underhand chop, stock saw and single buck, while the men compete in a further three events including the standing block chop, springboar­d and chop saw.

To avoid injuries, competitor­s wear protective gear, including ear protectors, safety glasses, safety boots and chainmail socks and trousers.

Eccles was one of eight women to compete in the first British Women’s Timberspor­ts Championsh­ip finals in June. “It was an incredible thing to be part of,” she said.

“All the women I went through training with are so supportive and encouragin­g to help you progress. I was disappoint­ed in how I did at the finals but I went on to get a third place in the underhand chop at a smaller competitio­n in Wales. That gave me confidence so, with more training, I hope to one day compete with

the best in Europe.”

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 ?? ?? Catherine Eccles takes a chainsaw to the timber as she practises wood chopping and, inset below, showing her skills with axe
Catherine Eccles takes a chainsaw to the timber as she practises wood chopping and, inset below, showing her skills with axe

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