Tips for Beginning Kiters
I hope these tips will help speed your progression and make you a better kiter.
1. Pump the leadinf edge of your kite until it is hard. A saggy leading edge will make the kite less responsive and more difficult to relaunch. In very gusty wind it can lead to nasty inversions and bowties.
2. When sining the kite up and down to obtain more power during a lull, you don't have to turn the kite so that it is barely above the water durung the downstroke. Keep the kite 15 feet above the water on the downstroke and avoid the possibility of cathing the tip of your kite on the water. Most of the power is higher up above the surface of the water anyway.
3. When another rider is passing behind you and you are riding in front lower your kite so that it is closer to the water. The natural tendancy is to fly your kite to zenith. This makes it much more difficult for someone to pas you. When you are upwind of another kiter and are passing fly your kite high in the window.
4. It is true that the best kiters can make just about any piece of equipment work. Lou Wainman is known for riding om McDonald's lunch trays. However, for the rest of us good equipment makes a big difference between a great session and a difficult one. So don't just buy a kite on e-bay without doing some research first. You can post on this forum, "I am thinking about buying X kite and we will tell you if it is a good choice for this area and if it is not we will give you some alternatives.
5. Take a lesson - kiteboarding can be practiced safely, but it can kill you if you don't follow the rules. The pimary object of a lesson is to teach you how to safely do the sport withot injuring yourself or others.
Have fun on the water and hopefuuly soon the snow.
1. Pump the leadinf edge of your kite until it is hard. A saggy leading edge will make the kite less responsive and more difficult to relaunch. In very gusty wind it can lead to nasty inversions and bowties.
2. When sining the kite up and down to obtain more power during a lull, you don't have to turn the kite so that it is barely above the water durung the downstroke. Keep the kite 15 feet above the water on the downstroke and avoid the possibility of cathing the tip of your kite on the water. Most of the power is higher up above the surface of the water anyway.
3. When another rider is passing behind you and you are riding in front lower your kite so that it is closer to the water. The natural tendancy is to fly your kite to zenith. This makes it much more difficult for someone to pas you. When you are upwind of another kiter and are passing fly your kite high in the window.
4. It is true that the best kiters can make just about any piece of equipment work. Lou Wainman is known for riding om McDonald's lunch trays. However, for the rest of us good equipment makes a big difference between a great session and a difficult one. So don't just buy a kite on e-bay without doing some research first. You can post on this forum, "I am thinking about buying X kite and we will tell you if it is a good choice for this area and if it is not we will give you some alternatives.
5. Take a lesson - kiteboarding can be practiced safely, but it can kill you if you don't follow the rules. The pimary object of a lesson is to teach you how to safely do the sport withot injuring yourself or others.
Have fun on the water and hopefuuly soon the snow.