Archive for the ‘Kite Tips and Tricks’ Category
How long to learn? -Progression Timeline
Yea it`s cool, but how long will it take for me to do that? Here is a basic time line, assuming that you put some effot into your new sport:
| LEVEL | TIMELINE | SKILL SET | WORKING ON | ATTRACTION FACTOR |
| Newbie | 10 hours | I just took my course, and got up on a board (sort of). I can body drag my ass to safety. | Water starts | +2 At least you`re out there |
| Kiter | 30 hours | I can get up no problem, but have to stop to change direction. I am a victim of the walk of shame. | Kite control, flirting with more power. Edging and upwind kiting. | +5 You can tell chicks that you were out there today. |
| Ripper | 60 hours | I can do this. Going up wind is no problem. Lets see what happens when I send the kite. | Small Jumps, rotations and more power. | +10 You can talk about your day at the bar without sounding like an idiot. |
| Rockstar | years | Kiteloops are for kids | Sponsorship | -10. You`re a cocky ass now |
Learning to Kite is easy and fun. Many of our students come from other sports, looking for the one that unites them all. Depending on your background, here is what to expect:
Common beginner stupid questions
These are some of the common questions that we are often asked…
Is kiteboarding hard?
No, kiteboarding is not hard, but it is not easy either. If you take lessons from a competent instructor, you will be able to progress quickly. There is a very steep learning curve. (meaning you learn fast) If helps if you have experience in other board sports.
Is kiteboarding dangerous?
Like any activity, there are dangers involved in kiteboarding. The dangers are minimized when you learn under the supervision of a competent instructor. Kites can produce a huge amount of power and become dangerous to both the user and to bystanders when flown by someone who is not experienced.
I’ve wakeboarded and surfed before, can’t I just get a kite and go?
While your wakeboarding or surfing experience will help, kiteboarding requires a completely different set of skills. Before you can try to ride a kiteboard, you need to first learn how to handle the kite. Having said this, our experience with most wakeboarders/surfers is 3 days and you are up (for short periods) on the board.
What other sports is kiteboarding like?
Kiteboarding is an interesting blend of wakeboarding, surfing, snowboarding, windsurfing, sailing, and even skateboarding. Experience in any of the above sports will help (especially in windsurfing or sailing), but kiteboarding is an experience completely different from any other sport.
Do I have to be strong to kiteboard?
Strong? no. Just like your girlfriend told you , its all about technique and finesse. It helps if you are in good physical shape. You must be comfortable in the water and be a competent swimmer.
Is kiteboarding expensive?
This question makes me laugh. Compared to surfing, it`s a little more expensive, but compared to almost any other sport it`s cheap, because THE WIND IS FREE!
How much is Kiteboarding equipment?
Depending on where you live and whether you buy new or used equipment, the cost of equipment varies. We have complete used kits (board/harness/kite) for as cheap as $700, and great new kits from $1100 – $1500. The best part is, once you`ve bought the gear the wind is free.
Where can I kiteboard back home?
You can kiteboard on snow and sand as well as on water. There are websites dedicated to listing all the local spots. Check on www.kitebeaches.com or do a search on you local home town. If you are near water or snow, chances are there is someone doing it in your area!
Is kiteboarding fun?
Are you kidding? It`s Amazing!
History of Kitesurfing
HISTORY
KiteSurfing is by far the latest craze in extreme sports. The idea of using a kite to enhance speed and gravity for the surfer seems like a new and exhilarating challenge, yet the art of KiteSurfing dates back to the 13th Century Chinese when it was used as a simple mode of transportation.
KiteSailing, as it was known, was a medium that used the wind as an aid to harness its momentum and energy to mobilize their canoes across water. The earliest recorded history of KiteSailing dates back to the early 12th Century. In the 1800’s George Pocock took the basic kite design to a whole new level by increasing the size of the overall kite and used them as a sail to glide carts on land and ships on the water. The designs of the kites were engineered with 4 lines, the same setup being deployed today. Both carts and boats were able to turn and sail upwind. The wind would generate enough lift underneath the kite to raise it off of the ground and powerful enough to sustain it for a period of time. These kites have been able to propel a man-made vehicle across the ground, snow, ice and water. These kites are codependent on the wind and its necessary to get off of the ground or water to get them to fly. However, once the kite is in the air it manufactures its own wind, which is proportionately faster and creates a higher rate of speed for the vehicle. Yet one issue still remains most of the earlier kites were deployed from the land and off of the flat ground. Not on the water where KiteSurfing takes place.
In the 1980’s Wipika, Kiteski, fOne, Concept Air, C-Quad, and Naish Kites marketed water launch kites. These kites could be sailed again after falling short of wind into the water. In the late 1990’s off of the Hawaiian coast of Maui, Laird Hamilton and Manu displayed the extreme sport opportunities to radical surfers and wake boarders. Its popularity has since skyrocketed as one of the fastest growing water sports in the past two years.
Today there are organizations, competitions, videos and magazines worldwide dedicated to this increasingly popular sport and the thrills associated with it.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jakob_Jelling
Steps to Learning
Always learn from a professional. Bad habbits are hard to break, and a proper instructor will teach you the correct way first. These are the basic steps towards learning to Kiteboard.
Fly a kite on land.
Learn to fly your kite in light to moderate winds on land first. Traction kites for Kite Boarding can have either 2 lines or 4 lines. 4 line kites will give you greater control. Understanding how the kite works and how it's set up and packed down is also important. Familiarise yourself with handling and storing flying lines, as this will help in trouble-free flying.
Beach Dragging.
Use the power of your kite to drag you across the beach or shoreline. This is a good way to learn how to balance against the pull of the kite and experience how powerful these kites are. The idea is not to resist the pull, but control it and move with the kite. You will need to lean away from the pull, to maintain balance and forward movement.
Body drag.
To get used to flying over water, use the kite to pull you along in the water. This is good practice for when you come off your board. It's important to be able to control your kite when you have fallen off your board from the water.
Water starts.
You start by lying on your back in the water with your feet in the footstraps of your board. Have the board in front of you with the kite hovering high above you. Steer the kite into the power zone. You will be lifted out of the water and pulled forwards onto the board. You need to know how to water start with confidence as there will be times when you come off your board in deep water far from shore. Don't forget you'll need a leash to stop your board drifting away.
Maintain speed on the board.
When on the board, keep the kite ahead of yourself. It may be helpful to fly a "scooping" pattern to maintain pull. Kite Boarding relys on feeling the correct position relative to wind and water. As with any sailing activity, you will get to sense when things a "right" and you're spending more time on the board than off.
Stay upwind.
You must learn to be able to go upwind. This is important if you want to return to your starting point. Getting too far downwind without the ability to get back can result in a long swim, or the infamous walk of shame.
JUMP
Once you have learned the basics and can confidently control your kite and board, the possibilities for tricks and hang time are limitless. Pack a few kites, grab your board and travel. You'll soon discover the countless places to enjoy this new and exciting sport.
Transition times from other sports
Learning to Kite is easy and fun. Many of our students come from other sports, looking for the one that unites them all. Depending on your background, here is what to expect:
Kitesurfing Genesis
Many people will tell you how kitesurfing really began. Â Last I heard, fishermen had been working on a kite design so that they could rescue themselves out at sea. Â The board was not part of the plan, it was only the kite and a raft… who knows for sure
What is thermal wind???
For all the people who think that Cabarete`s wind is a thermal wind, here is some clarification. Thermal wind is not actually a wind, but a wind difference between two pressure levels. Cabarete`s summer wind is a sea breeze… (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_wind) What are sea breezes and why do they occur? Sea breezes occur during hot days because of the unequal heating rates of land and water. During the day, the land surface heats up faster than the water surface. Therefore, the air above the land is warmer than the air above the ocean. Warmer air is lighter than cooler air. As a result, warm air rises. Therefore, the warmer air over the land surface is rising. As the warm air over the land is rising, the cooler air over the ocean is flowing over the land surface to replace the rising warm air. This is the sea breeze and can be seen at the top of the following image. The bottom of the following image illustrates the land breeze that occurs at night. Recall that the land surface cools quicker than the water surface at night. Therefore, the warmer air over the ocean is buoyant and is rising. The denser cool air over the land is flowing offshore to replenish the buoyant warm air and is called a land breeze.
Another explanation: Differential heating is the motive force behind land breezes and sea breezes (or, in the case of larger lakes, lake breezes), also known as on- or off-shore winds. Land is a rapid absorber/radiator of heat, whereas water absorbs heat more slowly but also releases it over a greater period of time. The result is that, in locations where sea and land meet, heat absorbed over the day will be radiated more quickly by the land at night, cooling the air. Over the sea, heat is still being released into the air at night, which rises. This convective motion draws the cool land air in to replace the rising air, resulting in a land breeze in the late night and early morning. During the day, the roles are reversed. Warm air over the land rises, pulling cool air in from the sea to replace it, giving a sea breeze during the afternoon and evening. 
The earth`s major wind systems (key for kiting/surfing!)
Prevailing winds — the general circulation of the atmosphere Prevailing winds are winds which come about as a consequence of global circulation patterns. These include the Trade Winds, the Westerlies, the Polar Easterlies, and the jet streams. Because of differential heating and the fact that warm air rises and cool air falls, there arise circulations that (on a non-rotating planet) would lead to an equator-to-pole flow in the upper atmosphere and a pole-to-equator flow at lower levels. Because of the Earth’s rotation, this simple situation is vastly modified in the real atmosphere. In almost all circumstances the horizontal component of the wind is much larger than the vertical — the exception being violent convection. The Trade Winds are the most familiar consistent and reliable winds on the planet, exceeded in constancy only by the katabatic winds of the major ice sheets of Antarctica and Greenland. It was these winds that early mariners relied upon to propel their ships from Europe to North and South America. Their name derives from the Middle High German trade, akin to Old English trod meaning “path” or “track”, and thus the phrase “the wind blows trade”, that is to say, on track. The Trades form under the Hadley circulation cell, and are part of the return flow for this cell. The Hadley carries air aloft at the equator and transports it poleward north and south. At about 30°N/S latitude, the air cools and descends. It then begins its journey back to the equator, but with a noticeably westward shift as a result of the action of the Coriolis force. Along the east coast of North America, friction twists the flow of the Trades even further clockwise. The result is that the Trades feed into the Westerlies, and thus provide a continuous zone of wind for ships travelling between Europe and the Americas. The Westerlies, which can be found at the mid-latitudes beneath the Ferrel circulation cell, likewise arise from the tendency of winds to move in a curved path on a rotating planet. Together with the airflow in the Ferrel cell, poleward at ground level and tending to equatorward aloft (though not clearly defined, particularly in the winter), this predisposes the formation of eddy currents which maintain a more-or-less continuous flow of westerly air. The upper-level polar jet stream assists by providing a path of least resistance under which low pressure areas may travel. The Polar Easterlies result from the outflow of the Polar high, a permanent body of descending cold air which makes up the poleward end of the Polar circulation cell. These winds, though persistent, are not deep. However, they are cool and strong, and can combine with warm, moist Gulf Stream air transported northward by weather systems to produce violent thunderstorms and tornadoes as far as 60°N on the North American continent.