
Becoming a kiter is simple: Take lessons, get gear and practice.
1. INSTRUCTION
Even if you are amazing at other sports, you need to take kiteboarding lessons. Simply combine modern equipment with qualified instruction and kiteboarding becomes a very safe and easy sport. Starting out the right way will save you a lot of aggravation, you will progress as fast as possible and, most importantly, you will not put yourself and others at risk.
2. GEAR
You can’t be a kiteboarder without the proper gear. First, you need a trainer kite and an instructional DVD. The trainer kite will give you the kite-flying skills to control your larger inflatable kite and the DVD will help you visualize the sport.
Once you complete your lessons you’ll need kites. Modern kiteboarding gear has broadened the wind range and safety of the sport, so people of all weights and ages can kiteboard. Making the investment into a range of kites will increase your number of days on the water. With one kite you can kiteboard about 50 percent of the time there is wind. With two kites that percentage jumps to about 75 percent and with three kites you will be able to kiteboard in about 90 percent of conditions.
Your next crucial purchase is a board. Boards have taken the same developmental path as kites. Many people try to use a wakeboard or old surfoard to start out, but they become more of a hassle than a help. Modern board construction and design allow you to ride through chop and go upwind with ease.
3. PRACTICE
The biggest mistake people make when learning to kiteboard (once they’ve taken lessons) is they wait for the conditions to be a perfect 15 to 20 mph before they will practice. To become a kiteboarder you need to become a proficient kite flyer before you can begin riding behind the kite. By starting with a trainer kite and working up to flying your inflatable kite on a light-wind day, you will build the necessary kite-flying and rigging skill set. When the conditions are sideshore and steady, you can take your inflatable kite into the water if you have the necessary kite control to be safe.
The second step in the practice stage is working on board skills. Any board skills will translate to helping you become a kiteboarder, but the best will be practicing on an Indo Board and wakeboarding. The Indo Board will help you find your center of gravity and enhance you ability to stay balanced on a board. Wakeboarding will take your balance onto the water and give the feeling of edging against a power source.
Through every level of your learning curve you can always take more instruction, practice and choose the gear you want to kiteboard on. With these three steps and a little dedication, you will be a kiteboarder in no time.
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Liked this article kiteboarding here i come yewww
Practice Practice thats very true
just amazing….
this site sucks. damn near every paragraph pushes lessons. OK, I GOT IT, GET LESSONS. but do you have to beat the fucking topic to death? you come off like you're getting paid by an instructor's association to push that shit. used car salesmen…
there are lots of video on youtube for everything. Watch them each video 100 times and try then you will know..
To Anonymous Coward…Yeah well when there are people out there trying to learn the sport on their own, possible putting themselves and even worse Others in harms way, which could close off areas to kiters, you too would want them to take lessons to learn things faster and safer… Besides, some people need to have messages like "take lessons" beaten in their head and told what to do!
how long does it take to become amaizing?
To Anonymous Coward…If you want to learn faster and become a good, responsible kiter the best way is taking lessons. Sorry, there's no shortcut, unless your buddies are instructors the best way to do it is putting safety first. Then you and the people around will enjoy without you being a hazard to the beach community.
I wish there was some video here. Something that shows basic kite control to help understand how to steer a kite. I would like more in-depth information before I fly my buttocks from kansas to some tropical beach for lessons. Those lessons just are not offered at my local pond.
There are instructional DVD's that are very good available for purchase.
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Everyone is saying to take lessons. I can see how if you were just starting out with this why you would want someone to take lessons. However, i'm good on a wake board i have many summer getting dragged behind a boat. On top of that i'm a pilot and understand the concepts of a wing and how it works with the wind. I also have some limited paragliding experience. I'm not saying that i'm against taking lessons but it really does seem simple enough. Especially with all of the safety features that there are on the bar and harness i feel like as long as i respect my limits i'll be ok. Lessons may quicken the pace of learning but i don't think there is a bettter way to learn than going out there and learning.
I've seen the steps to follow learing body dragging and self rescue. as long as i follow the steps i should be ok. I've seen videos on youtube of a guy riding and catching air with his kid not harnessed and standing between his legs. Most of the comments were about how cool it was and not that it was a safety risk. It seems like there is alot of grey area in this sport when it comes to safety. to me it seems like rule 1 is know your limits and don't go past what you can do. 2 is respect the power of the kite. It's a little weird to me a whole community can push for safety by taking lessons but then once you are capable anything goes. By the way, i'm from an area where this is not popular and i will probably be the only one on the water doing this so i'm not putting anyone at risk. looking for some feedback. thanks
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