Now what...?

> 10 years ago
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Odi
Odi
WA
1 posts
Odi Odi
WA, 1 posts
3 Dec 2012 4:18pm

(Before i start, this is the first time ever I have been on any sort of board before in my life.. never even flew a kite as a kid..)

Ola all, did my 5 hour lesson mission this weekend, absolutely brilliant! today sore and bruised but will defo do it all over again!!

question is now what?? should i do more lessons? my instructor was great, and said he was pleased with me, i managed to stand up (sorta kinda... lol) but could only go left??!! seems my going "right" is broke!

do i do more lessons? or do i just practice more and more by myself? any tips or ideas? i am really keen to get going, and cant wait till i actually can look at myself and go "wow chick.. u rock!!"

so impatient!!!



Haydn24
Haydn24
QLD
473 posts
QLD, 473 posts
3 Dec 2012 7:08pm
You *could* go out and practice with a hire kite or your own if you have one but I would strongly advise having someone of high level supervise you while you can't go upwind and still learning.

But yes, I think another few hours of lessons will get you going upwind and much more confident so you can practice by yourself!

Goodluck :)
Plummet
Plummet
4862 posts
4862 posts
3 Dec 2012 5:48pm
my suggestion is don't rush the basics too fast.

do more kite flying.

Get back out and do some body dragging. Body drag until you can body drag upwind and get back to where you started.

practice relaunching and self rescue.

get that down.

practice launching and landing and deploying the safeties.

then think about doing water starts.

also give yourslef until the end of summer to be going upwind.
KiteBud
KiteBud
WA
1615 posts
WA, 1615 posts
3 Dec 2012 7:51pm
Odi, I understand your excitement, we've all been there before.

I would suggest not to measure your progression by the amount of hours you've spent in lessons or how many meters you can ride on your board...but more in terms of what specific skills you can achieve without assistance.

Ask yourself the following questions:

-Can you efficiently perform a self-rescue in deep water (not just the practice scenario on the beach or in shallow water) in a strong wind day (18 knots+ ) ?

-Can you body drag upwind to recover your board in a variety of wind and water conditions?

-Can you water-relaunch your kite in a variety of scenarios i.e. various kite positions, wind conditions...again in deep water?

If not, then I suggest you take more lessons or simply look for better instruction as we will inevitably find your board in the Lost & Found section some day and you will either need someone to come rescue you or end up swimming for ages back to the shore...

AquaPlow
AquaPlow
QLD
1066 posts
QLD, 1066 posts
3 Dec 2012 11:04pm
I think all the above post are on the money - but if you can buddy up with someone - or take a mate out to help (+ video - really helps) and you have a beginners zone available then it pays off to stand back before your next lessons and practice what U have been taught and add some experience of your own.
Take Brighton or Lake Weyba for example - you can walk for upto 200 metres from shore - so it is a big play area - you can meet other people in the same boat - you can muck up with limited consequences.. the thing you must always understand is matching your skill set to the conditions. So kite size / body weight / wind strength / site skill level... A lot of learners with no other background in equivalent sports just do not have the knowledge to do a risk assessment - so easy solution is take advice...
The www.progression.me/videos/ site has snippits of what next - the begginers DVD is money well spent.

Cheers
AP

SaltySinus
SaltySinus
VIC
960 posts
VIC, 960 posts
4 Dec 2012 12:25pm
Agree with all the above.

I personally purchased the kite and gear from my instructor. This had the advantage it was identical to what I was used to... so didn't add to my learning curve with different kinds of kites. On the downside, I bashed a new kite around more than I possibly would have done with 6months practice.

On balance, I'm glad I purchased a brand new kite as it made setting up predictable and there were no added complications like a leaky kite (like one i bought from ebay!) that would have rocked my confidence.

If you've the means, buying your own gear, going out there and practice practice practice would be my advice. KBers are on balance a really friendly bunch and if you're having issues with a specific area, talking it through with other KB's on the beach is almost as good as lessons.

I personally found I need to just go through the motions and repeatedly practice the water start until my thick brain got the whole process.

Good luck tiger.
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