Yeah, I doubt the bridge crossing history too, but in general a 10 foot caber no matter how heavy would be an easy turn.

Length makes for a much tougher caber to turn than weight does. SAAA uses cabers that average between 14-18 feet, and from 90-150 lbs. There might be some smaller or larger in there, but generally those are good length/weights.

If more than half of a class cannot turn the caber at all, or if everyone turns it easily, it means the judge chose a bad caber.

In the class I compete in a "good" caber is about 14 or 15 feet long, and about 120 lbs. It's long enough and heavy enough you wont be able to turn it unless you have near perfect form. However, if you do hit your toss just right, you'll get a turn between 11 and 1 o'clock.

Now a 10 foot, 100 lb caber? I might be able to flip that twice before it lands.