Forums > Kitesurfing General

Riding upwind

Reply
Created by ayersy > 9 months ago, 11 Mar 2015
ayersy
QLD, 8 posts
11 Mar 2015 2:12PM
Thumbs Up

Hi guys,
Ive just started riding upwind and now really starting to enjoy kitesurfing and not having to walk up the beach haha.
My question is I have a cabirina spectum 144×43. I am 6'2 about 90 kg. Im wanting to know if there is a better board for keeping an edge in for riding upwind easier? Any advice would be helpful thanks

Loftywinds
QLD, 2060 posts
11 Mar 2015 2:22PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
ayersy said..
Hi guys,
Ive just started riding upwind and now really starting to enjoy kitesurfing and not having to walk up the beach haha.
My question is I have a cabirina spectum 144×43. I am 6'2 about 90 kg. Im wanting to know if there is a better board for keeping an edge in for riding upwind easier? Any advice would be helpful thanks


Just practice. You seem to have the right sized board for your weight and height. I ride a 136cm and I weigh around 83kg, and yes I am shorter.

The trick is foot work, edging and balance. Eventually you'll get it more

TheGeneral
WA, 31 posts
11 Mar 2015 6:35PM
Thumbs Up

Having learnt to go upwind on a freestyle board, which took a while, and then switched to a freeride board, I can tell you that freeride boards RULE at going upwind. Less rocker, softer tips, bigger fins. The trade-off is, they don't pop off the water too well for your tricks. Let's face it, the lawn won't get mowed if you spend all your time in the air.

If you were on an out-and-out freestyle/wakestyle board, I'd say get a freeride board to learn on, because the real fun doesn't start until you can go upwind, so the quicker you get there the better. However, Cabrinha rates the Spectrum as freestlye/freeride/all conditions, with 'great upwind tracking'. It sounds like it shouldn't be too bad for going upwind, so I'm going to go ahead and agree with Lofty ^^^^^ You'll get there, and the longer it takes you, the better you'll be at it.

scubaste
WA, 210 posts
11 Mar 2015 8:54PM
Thumbs Up

Buy a foilboard

flyingcab
VIC, 942 posts
12 Mar 2015 12:05AM
Thumbs Up

Any commercially made board will ride upwind fine. Hell, I've even riden a flat rectangular plank upwind.
If you are struggling you are either severely under or over powered, or are still lacking skill.
Just remember weight back, edge in. Keep that front leg straight.

cauncy
WA, 8407 posts
11 Mar 2015 10:43PM
Thumbs Up

Correct kite position and power, good stance, and IMHO a good body, hip, and head position, also get used to flying one handed with a trailing upwind arm, it automatically brings the body around

RobClaisse
12 posts
12 Mar 2015 7:35AM
Thumbs Up

Best thing you can do is forget about "trying" to go upwind. Just work on improving your stance, your balance on the board and most importantly improve your kite handling - get the power locked in so you can park the kite in the middle of the wind window. Do all this and start riding comfortably and you riding upwind with out even trying.

This video might help a bit with the stance side of things:



Let us know how you get on.

skywalker3d
VIC, 228 posts
12 Mar 2015 1:23PM
Thumbs Up

Look upwind when riding.

KiteBud
WA, 1599 posts
12 Mar 2015 11:33AM
Thumbs Up

Hi ayersy,

On top the the usual tips you were already given, you have to understand that a longer and wider board can make upwind riding more difficult, especially in strong winds and choppier water. Smaller and narrower boards are easier to edge and cut across any form of chop much better than a larger board. At your body weight, depending how strong the winds are in your area, I would recommend your next board to be something around 136x40.

I often use larger boards for students at the very beginning of their progression (easier to get up and balance on and need less power from the kite). When they start to be comfortable on the board and want to learn to ride upwind, I give them a smaller and narrower board, makes it much easier to edge and go upwind. Mind you we teach in strong winds and very choppy water most days.

If you ride flat water and below 20 knots winds, then your current board size is fine and should be easier to edge and go upwind...you just have to be more aggressive with your edge (lean more, turn hips more, etc.)

hope this helps
Christian



Subscribe
Reply

Forums > Kitesurfing General


"Riding upwind" started by ayersy