Sailing around on the Pamlico Sound behind Hatteras Island was a blast.
However, Winston started kiteboarding when it was just starting to take off as a sport, and he tried for a number of years to get us to try it. We fumbled around some, and finally in 2008 my brother Mark and I each bought a kite and a board, and the fumbling got serious.
A couple of years after that, Paula and I were assigned to South America for almost five years, and by the time we got back, Mark was getting pretty good at the sport, Winston was getting great, and I had been left miles behind in the eternal outdoor sports arms race.
I kept fumbling, experiencing major frustration. I finally got some better kites (the equipment had evolved, whether I had or not) and an easier board, and I began getting some short runs on the relatively flat water of the Sound.
The 2018 Spring Old Guys' Kite Camp rolled around last week, and we packed eleven people in to a beautiful house on the Sound, with two rank beginners, a couple of experts including one of our missionaries that served with us in Peru and his brother, along with the usual suspects, my brother Mark and his wife Amy, and our buddy Winston. The several 20-something people skewed the average age downward, but it was still over 45.
And it was a stupendous week!! There were buckets of wind all week long, and we kited for six out of seven days, resting on Sunday.
I believe that the conditions were the best ever, though it was cold enough to warrant dry suits for a couple of days. (This is Winston 'boosting' over an old nasty shipwreck in the Sound.)
I became known as Mango Man! for the color of my dry suit.
By the first couple of days, I was finally getting around on the kite! And after that, it was fun!
And what do you do when it's too dark to kite, or your muscles finally yell, "ENOUGH!?" Duh! You go shop crawling! There's always some new shiny object to buy!
And you watch kiting videos! And eat lots! While you're watching kiting videos!
Everyone made great progress, including the experts, who leaped ahead and learned 'foiling' which involves using a kite and a hydrofoil board to ride up and out of the water. (I found the image online - the guy's not wearing a dry suit!)
OK, I admit that in the grand scheme of things, kiting is of little or no importance. However, it has been fun (at occasional moments) learning it, and hanging out with friends. As the average age at the OGKC advances, we hope to be doing this for a good while longer.
We hope that you also continue to learn new things, and that you remember to point your forward foot downwind when you water start.
Dave & Paula
1 comment:
I think that looks fabulously fun! Huzzah for a perfect week of wind and new skills!
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