Hi Jeremy,
This is a good plan to try. We are a good crew from Perth going to New Zealand every year.
The first thing I would say, snowkite is easier than kiting (on flat surface). As said above, the kite doesnt have to pull you out of the water and it's pretty low friction to ride on snow.
Regarding the spot to go :
- choose an empty spot out of usual obstacle (same as kiting)
- wind needs to come from a clear direction and facing directly the spot you are riding. So the wind is always going up the hill where you are kiting Avoid wind coming from behind a mountain or behind a crest.
- Start somewhere flat. Then start to experiment going up and down slowly.
Kite to choose :
- We find out that we can kite most of the time with our 7m inflatable (Ikon Peak) so from 10knots to 25knots. Best shapes are delta/hybrid shape. Avoid C-shape.
- The second kite to have would be a 10m/12m foil kite (need a bit of experience to fly them) or a 12+m inflatable delta/hybrid shape
- Dont kite over 25 knots
Tips :
- Avoid kite at the zenith, The wind window is sometime over your head so the kite will lift you up quiet easily. Keep your kite mid wind window (10 o'clock or 2)
- Test your safety before
- Check your valve before flying (the cold can freeze the plastic of the valve
- Better to have a smaller kite and move it than a big kite
- Snowboard : every board is fine (around 160cm will do) make sure the board is symmetrical (the front bindings and the back bindings are at the same distance from the tips. Put your bindings at the same angle, dont go to much on the angle cause your knees will be in pain.
Check our video from last year :
Hope this is helping.
Ride safe