-
Oil rallies, stocks drop as Trump dampens Mideast hopes
-
Nexperia's China unit nears fully local production of chips: company sources
-
Indonesia issues fresh summons for Google, Meta over teen social media ban
-
Japan axe coach Nielsen 12 days after winning Women's Asian Cup
-
French President Macron lands in South Korea after Japan visit
-
India's says defence exports hit 'all-time high' of $4 bn
-
Nielsen leaves as Japan coach weeks after winning Women's Asian Cup
-
Too bright: Seoul to dim digital billboards after complaints
-
Iran vows 'crushing' attacks on US after Trump threats
-
Women's Asian Cup finalists accuse governing body over equal money
-
French president Macron heads to South Korea after Japan visit
-
Armenia's underground salt clinic at centre of alternative medicine debate
-
'Muted' international response as Senegal enacts same-sex relations law
-
Slow boat to Ilulissat: long nights on Greenland's last ferry
-
Wemby rampant again as Spurs rack up 10th straight win
-
Ukrainian death metal band growls against Russia's war
-
Iran fires missiles at Israel after Trump threatens weeks of strikes
-
Surging 'Jewish terrorism' in West Bank condemned but unpunished
-
England's Brook, Bethell warned after New Zealand nightclub incident
-
What's real anymore? AI warps truth of Middle East war
-
Europe to negotiate with NASA on lunar missions: ESA
-
Trump tells US that Iran war victory near, but vows big strikes
-
Poppies offer hope in fire-scarred Los Angeles
-
Trump says Iran war almost over, warns of weeks more heavy strikes
-
Oil rallies, stocks tumble as Trump says US to hammer Iran further
-
US Republicans announce deal to end partial government shutdown
-
Trump tells Americans that Iran war ending as popularity dips
-
7.4-magnitude quake off Indonesia kills one, tsunami warning lifted
-
Bordeaux-Begles' Van Rensburg 'not thinking' about Champions Cup double
-
Eagle Plains Partner Refined Energy Completes Drill Program at Dufferin West
-
U.S. Polo Assn. Supports Division I National Intercollegiate Championship, Showcasing the Future of the Sport of Polo
-
Sky Quarry's Nevada Refinery Gains Strategic Value as Brent Crude Surpasses $110 and West Coast Refining Capacity Shrinks
-
Healthy Extracts Reports Preliminary 2025 Results, Net Revenue Expected Up 45% to Record $4.5 Million
-
Helix CXM Acquires DRGN Studios to Accelerate AI-Powered Revenue Operations
-
Gamma Resources Commences Aerial Photogrammetry Survey at Green River, Utah
-
LLM Consensus Matches or Outperforms the Best AI Models in Expert Evaluation Without Performance Degradation
-
Multiple Geophysical Datasets Support Increased Target Dimensions at Hank Copper-Gold Discovery, HWY 37 Project, Golden Triangle
-
Former Prosecutor With 50+ Trials Joins Razavi Law Group as Firm Expands Trial Capabilities
-
66% of Leaders Don't Trust Their Productivity Data, New Global Study Finds
-
Algo Grande Reports Results from Completed Phase I Drill Program at Cerro Grande Skarn
-
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC Announces Transaction in Own Shares - April 02
-
Caledonia Mining Corporation Plc-Issue of Securities Pursuant to Long Term Incentive Plan Awards and Issue of New Long Term Incentive Plan Awards
-
Caldwell Expands Consumer Practice with Addition of Domenic Falzarano in Dubai
-
The Smart Money Is Quietly Moving - a Rare Window in Electric Infrastructure May Not Stay Open for Long
-
US automakers report mixed sales as car market awaits war impact
-
Astronauts begin NASA lunar mission after climactic blast-off
-
Astronauts blast off for historic US lunar journey
-
Embattled Woods won't captain 2027 Ryder Cup team: PGA of America
-
Judge allows Woods to travel overseas for treatment
-
Chelsea's Bompastor furious as Arsenal reach women's Champions League semis
Game of stones: Scottish island sweeps up Olympic curling
In a factory outside Ayr in southwest Scotland, James Wyllie carefully lifts and caresses a curling stone, as well-used drilling and polishing machines grind in the background.
The 40-pound (18 kilogram) stone is made from unique granite rock harvested on Ailsa Craig, about 16 kilometres (10 miles) over a wild stretch of sea to the west of the mainland.
Wyllie, 72, is the retired owner of Kays Curling, which has been making curling stones since 1851 and has the exclusive right to harvest granite from the remote volcanic island.
The stones from his factory will be used at the Beijing Winter Olympics, which start with a mixed doubles event between Great Britain and Sweden on Wednesday.
"Ailsa Craig for probably almost 200 years now has been a unique source of granite for curling stones," Wyllie told AFP at the factory in Mauchline, 12 miles from Ayr.
"There has been no equivalent type of granite found anywhere else in the world so far which is suitable for the purpose of a curling stone.
"There have been one or two other sources tried with varying degrees of success but none of them has proved to be nearly as good as the Ailsa Craig stone."
- 'Paddy's Milestone' -
Ailsa Craig is known to locals as "Paddy's Milestone" for being a resting spot across the sea between Glasgow and Belfast.
It was a haven for Catholics fleeing persecution by Protestants during the Scottish Reformation in the 16th century.
Today it is uninhabited, serving as a nature reserve for colonies of gannets, puffins and seals, which watch over the granite quarries.
Kays Curling, which harvests the rock intermittently, has been involved in providing curling stones for the Winter Olympics since the Chamonix Games in 1924.
The quarries hold two types of granite ideal for the sport, which is believed to have first been played on iced-over ponds and lochs in Scotland around 500 years ago.
Blue Hone non-porous micro-granite, formed by volcanic eruptions 60 million years ago, has low water absorption, which prevents repeatedly freezing water from eroding the stone.
Ailsa Craig Common Green is more resistant to heat transfer, helping it to cope better with condensation and it does not splinter after contact with another stone in play.
The Blue Hone insert -- which is the part of the curling stone that makes contact with the ice -- is fitted to the Ailsa Craig Common Green stone body, in a technique called "Ailserts".
The bottom surface of the stone has to be extremely hard as ice can be very abrasive, says Wyllie.
Durability is vital in a sport in which players slide stones across sheets of ice about 150 feet (46 metres) long towards a target area of four concentric circles.
Curlers sweep the ice in front of the travelling stones with brooms to help them reach the intended target.
- Precision and harmony -
Precision and the granite's harmony with the ice are everything.
Even the slightest of bumps could mean the stone slipping off course and the difference between a gold medal and bitter disappointment.
"The running surface of the stone can wear out, believe it or not," Wyllie says.
"And in addition to that it has to be impervious to absorbing moisture.
"If moisture from the ice gets into the surface of the stone, then eventually that can freeze and expand and causes damage to the running surface."
Kays Curling managing director Jim English says the curling stones are exported to 70 countries.
Demand for stones, which each take five hours to produce, is growing, he says.
"Canada, America, certainly the Swiss, Austria and Europe itself," he says of the market.
"But we sell as far as South America, all the way down to South Korea, Afghanistan and Nigeria."
In the yard outside the factory, a short distance from the home once owned by Scotland's national poet Robert Burns, Wyllie inspects a row of rejected curling stones that are destined to be used as garden planters.
"I have no doubt curling will grow in popularity after the Beijing Olympics," he says. "Demand for the stones is sure to be high in the months ahead."
As always, Wyllie will be watching the curling events at the Winter Olympics closely.
"Curling is simply too much fun to miss," he says with a smile.
A.Ruiz--AT