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Winter Kiting

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Created by Nc1887 > 9 months ago, 22 Mar 2015
Nc1887
WA, 13 posts
22 Mar 2015 8:00AM
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Heya, watched these two videos and thought id post. Would probably serve better being posted before winter in a few months time but here you go anyway. Just shows pretty good what can potentially happen when a squall comes through. Looks like experienced kiters but just goes to show how unpredictable it can get. Always worth coming in to land if in any doubt about whats coming over the horizon and not to kite alone. Sorry If they've been posted before.
Cheers

shi thouse
WA, 1151 posts
23 Mar 2015 5:07PM
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Have just been talking to a mate about the upcoming winter situation, and given that I dont intend to stop kiting throughout the winter this is of good reference. Coming from a windsurfing background, the issue of sudden squalls is not a major issue, either ride it out and try tail walking the board across the water or jump in the water and hold onto the mast till the big wind has gone. Where I kite you can see the definite line in the clouds as they break over the hill from the ocean. At that stage wind is a comfy 15knots then when it hits the wind can jump well above the 35+knots for the next five minutes till it passes. Having a kite in the air is just going to be too dangerous, so on that note, will probably wait till the squally NW winds have passed from the front and have swung to the more consistent SWesters of the post front. Sadly will probably drag out the windsurf gear for the prefrontals.



Forcetwelve
TAS, 170 posts
23 Mar 2015 8:30PM
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I can't work out why that guy in the boots is yelling at his mate to come over. His kite is depowered, flagged out and he's sitting on the beach. If he didn't have those clown boots on he could have handled it a bit easier... Am I missing something?

Plummet
4862 posts
23 Mar 2015 6:07PM
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Winter riding is fun. The crowds on the beach go, the wind cranks and so does the swell. Plus it sorts the men from the boys on the water too.

In this day and age with rain radar, live weather readings and pretty accurate forecasting sites there's really no excuse to be surprised when a squall hits. They never materialise out of an otherwise calm day. You can see them coming for hours on the rain radar. You can see the effect of previous squalls on the day on live weather stations through out the day.

The most important decision is what kite to rig. Small and struggle in the lulls or big and put the kite down before the squall hits. It depends on the day.

Some hints for the newbie.

* Don't rig a bigger kite than the experienced guys on the beach.

* If the experienced guys all land their kites before some in coming clouds..... So should you.

* If the experienced guys aren't going out.... neither should you!

* If the cloud upwind is black and angry, LAND YOUR KITR WELL IN ADVANCE!... The wind gradient pushes out 5-10 mins in front of the cloud.

harry potter
VIC, 2777 posts
23 Mar 2015 9:29PM
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Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.

loftsofwind
QLD, 226 posts
23 Mar 2015 9:05PM
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harry potter said..
Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.


But you know what happens after squalls- the wind dies and if you out at sea I would not enjoy the swim back

harry potter
VIC, 2777 posts
23 Mar 2015 10:38PM
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loftsofwind said..

harry potter said..
Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.



But you know what happens after squalls- the wind dies and if you out at sea I would not enjoy the swim back


If a 1-200m swim worries you..... You need another sport

flyingcab
VIC, 942 posts
23 Mar 2015 11:26PM
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being worried is not the same as not enjoying something

Chris6791
WA, 3271 posts
24 Mar 2015 1:42AM
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Select to expand quote
loftsofwind said..

harry potter said..
Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.


But you know what happens after squalls- the wind dies and if you out at sea I would not enjoy the swim back



That's easy then, make sure you have your kite on the beach before the squall gets close because the only safe way to ride out a decent squall is if you are on the water is several hundred metres out to sea and away from any hard objects. So you have room to give up ground or punch out long before you get near the beach and hard objects if its goes pear shaped.

Plummet
4862 posts
24 Mar 2015 6:17AM
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Chris6791 said..

loftsofwind said..


harry potter said..
Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.



But you know what happens after squalls- the wind dies and if you out at sea I would not enjoy the swim back




That's easy then, make sure you have your kite on the beach before the squall gets close because the only safe way to ride out a decent squall is if you are on the water is several hundred metres out to sea and away from any hard objects. So you have room to give up ground or punch out long before you get near the beach and hard objects if its goes pear shaped.


It depends on the sea conditions and the angle of the wind. Cross shore for example does not require to be several hundred meters out.
Heavy swell may mean its more dangerous out past the breakers if the wind dies.

Land the kite prior to the squall or rig a kite that can handle the squall and keep riding like a legend. On squally days you can see the effect of the squall on live weather web sites as they go through. You can closely predict it will spike to 35 knots or 40 knots when the squall comes through. If no other squalls have been through for the day, that's easy too... Land your kite, the squall cannot be predicted.

If it gets stupid windy even a kite flagged to safety will have a ton of pull. Like the vid above. The guy can't walk the line to the kite when its blowing 50 knots. The best thing to do then is flag the kite to safety in the water. Hopefully a wave washes over it and it give you enough time to secure the kite.



NickT
WA, 1094 posts
24 Mar 2015 6:37AM
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Plummett said:

Some hints for the newbie.

* Don't rig a bigger kite than the experienced guys on the beach.

* If the experienced guys all land their kites before some in coming clouds..... So should you.

* If the experienced guys aren't going out.... neither should you!

* If the cloud upwind is black and angry, LAND YOUR KITR WELL IN ADVANCE!... The wind gradient pushes out 5-10 mins in front of the cloud.




And listen to your gut, sometimes you don't think it's right for some reason but don't know why? Ive dodged some major squalls as a result.

Watch the radar as plummett said for a couple of hours before hand and give yourself room if the sh!t his the fan. Make sure your safeties work too!

kitcho207
NSW, 865 posts
24 Mar 2015 9:46AM
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Great advice here. Make sure you take notice.

BUT

It's not all doom and gloom.

Winter kiting is awesome.

Respect it and you will have some of the best sessions. This thread is not to scare, its to raise awareness

MDSXR6T
WA, 1019 posts
24 Mar 2015 7:52AM
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Where's the best place to buy a dirt cheap wetty? Last winter i just used a 2mm long john and rashie and it was fine but it died in September

toddws
WA, 469 posts
24 Mar 2015 8:50AM
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safety tips aside the question you have to ask yourself is why is the first guy wearing washing up gloves, and if you were on the beach would you land a guy wearing viledas..?

Rails
QLD, 1371 posts
24 Mar 2015 12:42PM
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toddws said..
safety tips aside the question you have to ask yourself is why is the first guy wearing washing up gloves, and if you were on the beach would you land a guy wearing viledas..?


Funnily enough I was mostly curious above the gloves...

fingerbone
NSW, 921 posts
24 Mar 2015 3:47PM
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Select to expand quote
harry potter said..

loftsofwind said..


harry potter said..
Also worth noting that sometimes if you do get caught in a squall it can be better to head out to sea 1-200 m and ride it out from there rather than attempting to land.




But you know what happens after squalls- the wind dies and if you out at sea I would not enjoy the swim back



If a 1-200m swim worries you..... You need another sport


It would bother me if my kite was down and lines wrapped around me because of the squall.
A 200 m swim is not as easy as it sounds.

MDSXR6T
WA, 1019 posts
24 Mar 2015 1:29PM
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If you struggle to swim 200m in any conditions your kiting in, you shouldn't be out.

Alysum
NSW, 1030 posts
24 Mar 2015 5:01PM
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In both videos they both keep their kites at 12 when the squall goes past, huge danger of being lofted... Wouldn't it be smart to quick release as soon as the squall hits ? Self rescue would be tricky in those conditions...

Plummet
4862 posts
25 Mar 2015 3:35AM
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MDSXR6T said..
If you struggle to swim 200m in any conditions your kiting in, you shouldn't be out.


That is a statement from a person that hasn't been out in heavy conditions. 200m Is a lifetime away in some conditions. It sounds easy sitting behind a keyboard being a hero. But out there when your being battered by monster swell, have to negotiate rips and current its a completely different story. I took 45 mins to swim from approxitmately 200m out one time. It was HARD!

flyingcab
VIC, 942 posts
25 Mar 2015 9:27AM
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shi thouse said..
Have just been talking to a mate about the upcoming winter situation, and given that I dont intend to stop kiting throughout the winter this is of good reference. Coming from a windsurfing background, the issue of sudden squalls is not a major issue, either ride it out and try tail walking the board across the water or jump in the water and hold onto the mast till the big wind has gone. Where I kite you can see the definite line in the clouds as they break over the hill from the ocean. At that stage wind is a comfy 15knots then when it hits the wind can jump well above the 35+knots for the next five minutes till it passes. Having a kite in the air is just going to be too dangerous, so on that note, will probably wait till the squally NW winds have passed from the front and have swung to the more consistent SWesters of the post front. Sadly will probably drag out the windsurf gear for the prefrontals.





Take your bigger kite and ride the squalls out, just crank the depower if you need. This is what I tend to do in winter squalls. Its so funny when the squall pasts everyones kite are in the water and not flying and I'm the only one riding! HAHA

glasstraxx
WA, 321 posts
25 Mar 2015 8:54AM
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stuff the swim in!

Not to mention worrying about those big Noah's swiming around waiting to chomp on you!! Uhhhh no thanks.

I found the best thing just staying a little bit out and keeping the kite super lower.

But if you can get in before **** get really bad definately do it. Nothing worse that those kind of situations

MDSXR6T
WA, 1019 posts
25 Mar 2015 9:17AM
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Select to expand quote
Plummet said...
MDSXR6T said..
If you struggle to swim 200m in any conditions your kiting in, you shouldn't be out.


That is a statement from a person that hasn't been out in heavy conditions. 200m Is a lifetime away in some conditions. It sounds easy sitting behind a keyboard being a hero. But out there when your being battered by monster swell, have to negotiate rips and current its a completely different story. I took 45 mins to swim from approxitmately 200m out one time. It was HARD!


I know you love the heroics of your monster NZ swell and 30kn winds but perhaps a short swim that took 45min of really hard work meant conditions that you might be better off sitting out and waiting for more suitable conditions?

No point being a dead hero

Plummet
4862 posts
25 Mar 2015 9:53AM
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Select to expand quote
MDSXR6T said..

Plummet said...

MDSXR6T said..
If you struggle to swim 200m in any conditions your kiting in, you shouldn't be out.



That is a statement from a person that hasn't been out in heavy conditions. 200m Is a lifetime away in some conditions. It sounds easy sitting behind a keyboard being a hero. But out there when your being battered by monster swell, have to negotiate rips and current its a completely different story. I took 45 mins to swim from approxitmately 200m out one time. It was HARD!



I know you love the heroics of your monster NZ swell and 30kn winds but perhaps a short swim that took 45min of really hard work meant conditions that you might be better off sitting out and waiting for more suitable conditions?

No point being a dead hero


All big conditions are like that. Should we sit them all out? You can if you want.

My main point was going 200m + out to sea during a squall can be more dangerous than being close to the beach.

Plummet
4862 posts
25 Mar 2015 10:03AM
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flyingcab said..


Take your bigger kite and ride the squalls out, just crank the depower if you need. This is what I tend to do in winter squalls. Its so funny when the squall pasts everyones kite are in the water and not flying and I'm the only one riding! HAHA


With correct kite selection and local weather knowledge and research this is entirely possible. The key is to rig a kite that can handle the max gust and still ride through the lulls.

Eg 10-20 gutsing to 25 = 13m
16-20 gusting to 30 = 10m
20-25 gusting to 35 = 8m
25-30 gusting to 40+= 6m

waveslave
WA, 4263 posts
25 Mar 2015 10:42AM
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I can state for a fact,

that when crew are watching my winter wavekiting,

no one is digging what I'm doing,

except for me of course.

lol.

Juddy
WA, 1103 posts
25 Mar 2015 10:57AM
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waveslave said..
I can state for a fact,

that when crew are watching my winter wavekiting,

no one is digging what I'm doing,

except for me of course.

lol.


Let me fix that for you:

I can state for a fact,

that when I'm out kiting anytime of the year

no one is digging what I'm doing

except me of course....

Dawn Patrol
WA, 1991 posts
25 Mar 2015 12:06PM
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I wonder if he had some nice speed holes in his kite with all that hail!

I'd also rather be further out to sea than close to shore (obviously kite on the ground is best but if the situation arises...).

Shouldn't be out in conditions that you wouldn't be comfortable swimming in.

harry potter
VIC, 2777 posts
25 Mar 2015 5:38PM
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I'm glad at least some people understand the benefits of being out to see if a squall hits.

Coming in to land and Trying to land your kite in a gusty 45+knot squall is exceptionally dangerous. Particularly if you need to self land even flagging the kite out in those winds can drag you down the beach.
By all means if there are people on the beach to catch your kite perhaps attempt to land it, but use caution as it can be incredibly hard to keep the kite stable in those winds .... They tend to surge forward in the window at the most in opportune time.
I have been caught out more than my fair share usually you know the squalls are coming in the distance but the swell or boost entice you to stay out longer.
I simply head a bit further out take the kite out to the edge of the window and sit a wingtip on the water and wait it out.
Haven't had to swim in yet either

gcdave
534 posts
26 Mar 2015 5:27AM
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^^^

The problem with the swim in idea is it reminds people they were out of their comfort zone

If uve ridden 40-50kts a bit,not riding out a squall is like missing a session



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"Winter Kiting" started by Nc1887