quote:
Originally posted by RAL INN
Maybe i'm getting a bit Jaded or just Old.
Helping out newbies and setting them straight on where to go and how and where not to be is OK but sometimes a bit tedious.
But what do you do when you notice yourself participating with other experienced kiters is potentially dangerous practices?
OK it may well be good to stop yourself, but when asked to launch someone from a treelined footpath on top of a hill, what sort of diplomacy needs to be engaged? especially when you have done it yourself.
Am I just a woosy kiter.
Best Winds
Tony L
ABK
Some people don't have the ability to determine when they are in danger. Sometimes just you letting them know that you think what they are doing is a little dangerous or that you don't feel comfortable with what they are doing will make them actually stop and think properly.
I know if someone says "thats a little dodgy" i will rethink what i'm doing.
I also think it is your responsibility to let people know that what you are doing is risky, but you're willing to accept the risk. Other people may not be aware that there is actually any risk involved, see you are doing it and assume it is safe. Putting your own life at risk is one thing, risking the life of others is another.
At local spot over here (melville) there has been a riding zone enforced a distance away from the beach and all riders have been asked to stay away from the beach while riding and walking back up. The main issue involved here really wasn't that experienced riders were really causing a huge safety issue, it was that beginners would follow the same bad habits. Its amazing how little people we got doing the wrong thing this season and how few incidents there were.
If your doing the wrong thing, people who don't know any better will soon follow.