It was windy today, NW at 18 gusty kts. It is still cold in Vancouver. The mountain that was so famously bare during the Olympics has snow again
Our field still has remnants of the lake that occupied it for the winter and most of the rest is stinking mud. But, the sun was out and so were five
intrepid buggiers; Drifter, Roland and his dad, Dusty and myself. We were even visited by a kite surfer.
The first event: Roland brought out his home brewed kite for its debut. No fancy pattern and the bridle still needs some fine tuning, but it flies
quite nicely and Dusty, a quilter, was quite impressed with his sewing.
Second Event: Roland's father was flying my Libre 2.7 Vampir Race Pro. He had a few sessions with and said he was impressed with its power. He
truly impressed with its power when a gust came through and it yarded him from the buggy and dragged him though about twenty five feet of puddle. He
recovered the kite and was promptly dragged through twenty five feet of fetid mud. He was definitely Tide commercial material. Ed is a real trooper
and still kept flying in the cold wind even though he was soaked from toes to nipples.
Third event: Rod, our visiting kite surfer, came in to perform some fluid levels maintenance leaving his kite parked on the small beach. When he got
back from spending his penny, his lines were cut and stolen.
When he left it, there was a man with a small dog watching him.
Event four: Drifter, flying his three meter Reflex, is pulled out the back and up by one of the day's nastier gusts. After being pulled out he
recovered with a graceful pirouette before dropping to his feet.
Event five: Roland is lofted by his home brew.
Event six: as Roland is lofted, Dusty is hit by the same gust and is also lofted. The kite is ripped from her hands and she is dropped like a rock
spraining her ankle in the process.
Her kite collapses but is caught in a thermal and keeps rising. Dusty is lying in the mud as we go chasing after her kite, 3m Samurai, which is
headed for the Fraser, the handles about forty feet in the air. Roland and I watch sadly as Dusty's kite sails off and finally lands half way to the
Steveston breakwater - about forty meters offshore.
Dusty is in luck. Rod, our visiting kite surfer, is still hanging out. He says, "Keep an eye on it while I change back into my wet suit." We watch
the incoming tide slowly drive Sammy up river towards Steveston's fishing wharves as it slowly sinks lower and lower. A couple of fish boats go by
cutting their thottle so as to not suck the kites in their props. The intrepid Rod paddles out into the river and catches up with it just before it
sinks. While I, on Rod's suggestion, take Dusty to the rivers edge to soak her ankle in the Fraser's icy water, he even untangles the kite lines.
Rod, if you are out there, you are the best.
As for me, I had some nice kiting; ate a bit of mud; and spent the day with some great people.
S
Is it possible to design for strength, if the designer doesn't really understand what strength is?
8m speed wings.
Ozone Samurai 3m
Sky Country Reflex 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10m new 6m!
Sky Country NaSCa 2 11m
Sky Country Alasca 10m - sold
Rhombus Firebee 3m (ret).
Libre Vampir Race Pro 2.6m
Jojo Rage 8m
www.skycountry.ca