
Heritage Heights Golf
and Curling Club
4300 Garden Crescent
Petrolia, ON N0N 1R0
Phone: (519) 882-0860
Fax: (519) 882-4298
Email: info@heritageheightsgolf.com


CURLING ETIQUETTE... the unwritten rules.
Be on time! Get to the club in time to change and warm up before the game.
When you're late you're holding up seven other players. Delays are upsetting
to your opponents and your own team. If you know you'll be unavoidably late,
inform your team in advance.
Get a sub. There may be occasion when you're not able to curl as scheduled.
It's your responsibility to get a substitute. Call your skip and give the
name of the curler substituting for you or the names of people you have
called. No shows are no no's!
Start with a handshake. At the beginning of a game, greet the members of the
opposing team with a handshake, tell them your name, and wish them good
curling. Make sure everyone knows everyone else.
Finish with a handshake. When the game is over, offer each of the players a
hearty handshake and move off the ice. The winning curlers traditionally
offer their counterparts some refreshment. In turn, your opponent should
reciprocate.
Practice on a different sheet. If you arrive early and want to throw a few
stones to practice or warm up, by all means do so. But be sure not to use
the sheet you'll be playing on.
Keep the ice clean. Change your shoes in the warm room. Sand, grit and dirt
are the ice's worst enemy. The shoes you wear should only be used for
curling. Keep them clean.
Compliment a good shot. One of the nicest curling traditions is that players
and spectators compliment a good shot by either side while not remarking on
a poor shot or a competitor's misfortune.
Be ready. Take your position in the hack as soon as your opponent has
delivered his/her stone. Keep the game moving; delays detract from the
sport. Be prepared to sweep as soon as your teammate releases the rock.
Place your skip’s rock in front of the hack to help speed up the game.
Be courteous. Don't distract your opponent in the hack. Keep your distance,
be silent and motionless. Don't walk or run across the ice when a player is
in the hack. Don't gather around the back of the house when an opponent is
throwing. Sweepers should stay on the sidelines between the hog lines when
not sweeping.
Wait for the score. Vice skips are the only players allowed in the house
while the score for the end is being decided. All other players should wait
beyond the hog line until told they may move into the house to clear the
rocks.
Skips should keep the game moving by minimizing delay in making decisions.
Avoid long conferences. This is rock science, not rocket science.
THE SPIRIT OF CURLING
Curling is a game of skill and traditions. A shot well executed is a delight
to see and so, too, it is a fine thing to observe the time-honoured
traditions of curling being applied in the true spirit of the game. Curlers
play to win but never to humble their opponents.
A true curler would prefer to lose rather than win unfairly.
A good curler never attempts to distract an opponent or otherwise prevent
him/her from playing his/her best.
No curler ever deliberately breaks a rule of the game or any of its
traditions. But, if he/she should do so inadvertently and be aware of it,
he/she is the first to divulge the breach.
While the main object of curling is to determine the relative skills of the
players, the spirit of the game demands good sportsmanship, kindly feeling
and honourable conduct. This spirit should influence both the interpretation
and application of the rules of the game and also the conduct of all
participants on and off the ice.
SAFETY DO'S
Step onto the ice gripper foot first.
Step off the ice slider foot first.
Warm up before starting the game.
Face towards the skip when sweeping.
Watch for stray rocks from other sheets.