User,
The rules are designed to avoid accidents and are a generic overlay for all situations. I agree that they look confusing but only if you look for the worse situation in each scenario. Is your glass half empty all the time???
Sailboards and Kites are different craft and have different needs, kites need more leeway when going down the line because they cannot quickly stop or change direction like a sailboard. Sailboards need priority going out because they are sometimes underpowered and have no choice when trying to avoid a breaking wave section.
Rider leaving the beach should have right of way because if you force them to stay on the beach with their kite at 12 o'clock and in possibly gusty winds, then you are setting them up for a possible lofting accident which could be prevented by allowing them to launch and get out into the relative safety of the water. Ever tried keeping your kite at 12 at Lanes in Maui where it is cross off and gusty like you read about. Some waves are reef breaks far from shore where this has no effect.
And you are right, the kiter on the beach wishing to enter the water should stay there and give way while someone else comes in so that then there can be two kites on the beach in the air, both in close proximity and both in gusty wind.....not!
The kiter going out through the surf is powered and has options to turn around and change direction easily, whereas the kiter on the wave has no such luxury in big surf.
The last rule is clear "Avoid accidents at all cost regardless of who has right of way" This is common sense. I didn't make these rules up, they were devised by IKO many years ago and I believe in them and I teach them to my students, and also to the instructors I have taught, all 130 of them over the last 4 years. Your attempts at debunking these rules does nothing to creat uniformity in the community. If everyone sticks to the same rules and exercises
common sense,
respect and common
courtesy, we will all have more fun and be safer.
Exercise the above and I wish you good winds,