eppo said...
Starboard tack has right of way, wind over right shoulder, on the west coast coming back towards shore into your wAve, guy coming out gives way. Guy going out keeo kite low, guy coming in kite higher. Easy. And some common sense, generally.
If I'm heading out and someone has right of way and we seem to holding a collision course, then I will boost downwind, easy solved then.
Guy at beach waiting to get in, wait until you are clear. You have no right of way as you are not on the water yet and someone is coming into shore to either do a trick, transition or on a wave. The rider coming in is coming at speed, you are still. Be patient and stay the Farq out of people's way who are already on the water. That's my own rule, ha ha .
So if someone is sitting there patiently waiting to come out with their kite up, you come screaming in to do a trick 5m from the shore, you stuff it up and come through onto the beach, cleaning them up in the process, that's their fault?
Uh, yeah-nah... that's not what I was taught by instructors...
If you are coming into shore and you see someone walking off the beach, you keep clear of them. The most dangerous time for a kiteboarder is that 30 seconds from launch to getting into the water and starting. If something goes wrong the person launching will be bouncing down the beach. Don't force someone to stand there waiting on the shore for you to come in 5 m from the beach to do you trick in front of the crowd. You can either do your trick a bit further out or just turn around and come in again 30 seconds later.
Strictly speaking you should only be that close to the beach if you are doing two things, coming off the beach (launching), or intending to walk up onto the beach (landing). Obviously this doesn't really happen in practice.
If you plan to do a trick, then YOU HAVE NO RIGHT OF WAY - it is your responsibility to ensure that you have clear space downwind to complete your trick and also some fudge factor if you don't pull it off and get dragged downwind.
As Rowdy has mentioned there is a "person on the wave has right of way" rule but how many situations are there where someone is riding a properly formed wave that close to shore?