speller said...
I wonder why they don't teach people to start on the upstroke of the kite, rather than the downstroke? Starting on the upstroke pulls you up out of the water easier, plus avoids the chance of smacking the kite down and having to relaunch.
^^^
A kite develops more power on the down stroke, which get you going much easier. The kite flies faster and consequently develops more power on the downstroke due to gravity.
Beginners who have good kites skills (flew kites or trainer kites previously) adapt to controlling the power of the kite in a downstroke easier and faster. Beginners with good kite control skills don't crash the kite easily. Focus on developing kite control skills, trainer kites are the best way to do this, even after you finish your lessons.
Simple answer is water starting on an upstroke just does not work as well.
The J thing sounds complicated, but if you think its easier to understand fine. If you are waterstarting to the left, extend your left leg as you dive the kite, and keep your right leg bent at the knee, opposite for starting in the other direction. How much to dive the kite and then how long you steer you board towards the kite takes practice to learn.