Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Stihl Timbersports Series is a series of woodsman or wood chopping competitions where the athletes compete in the use of axes and saws in manners typical for lumberjacks. It was founded in 1985, and currently includes six different disciplines, with both professional and collegiate divisions.
"Stihl" is burnt into or marked on the log and brands the resulting cookies. In Stihl Timbersports, the hot saw event sees competitors race to cut three cookies from a horizontal log. The first cut is going down, the second back up.
Hermann Schonbachler (born July 14, 1966) is a Swiss Canadian former sport wood feller, who was five time worldchampion in the Stihl Timbersports Series (2005 to 2010), [1] [2] businessman and television celebrity.
Stihl says it is the world's best-selling brand of chainsaws and the only chainsaw manufacturer to make its own saw chains and guide bars. [4] Andreas Stihl AG is a privately held company owned by the descendants of Andreas Stihl. Stihl operates the Stihl Timbersports Series.
Wynyard at the Lumberjack World Championship in 2011. Jason Wynyard MNZM (14 November 1973 – 4 October 2023) was a New Zealand champion woodchopper from Kawakawa.He won over a hundred world titles in the sport, [2] including the individual world championship nine times.
Wood chopping competition at Avilés, Spain, 2005. Woodsman (also, woodsmen, pl.) refers to the title of competitors participating in competitive timber sports.Woodsmen participate in various events that replicate real skills used by lumberjacks while cutting down trees and preparing the wood.
In 2014 Hart switched to racing axe competition. In his first STIHL Canadian Championship [3] [5] he finished second in Toronto, Ontario.It was followed with a silver medal win for team Canada in Innsbruck, Austria.
If the template has a separate documentation page (usually called "Template:template name/doc"), add [[Category:Sports schedule templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page.