3rd Avenue Kite Safety - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

3rd Avenue Kite Safety

Description:

3rd Ave Site-Specific Issue #1. Never fly a kite over the bike path ... your feet many people have been hogtied in their lines while still attached to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:58
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: POUL49
Category:
Tags: 3rd | avenue | hog | kite | safety | tied

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 3rd Avenue Kite Safety


1
3rd Avenue Kite Safety
  • Ken Poulton Rick Cavallero

2
3rd Ave Site-Specific Issue 1
  • Never fly a kite over the bike path

Never fly a kite over the bike path
Never fly a kite over the bike path
  • Never fly a kite over the bike path
  • Never fly a kite over the bike path
  • Never fly a kite over the bike path
  • Never fly a kite over the bike path

3
Never Fly a Kite Over the Bike Path
  • This includes the windsurf ramp
  • Risks injury to the kiter by hitting the riprap
  • Risks injuring civilians walking or cycling on
    the path
  • This could put the whole 3rd Ave site at risk for
    closure
  • Instead
  • Land your kite in the water 300 feet away from
    the rocks
  • Wrap up your lines before you get to the shore
  • On the bar or in a ball, just dont let your
    lines catch on the riprap

4
Landing a Kite
  • Be careful not to let a non-kiter catch a kite
  • Most ways of grabbing a kite are wrong and
    dangerous
  • Use the hand-on-head signal to ensure that the
    catcher is a kiter and knows your intent
  • If you cant reach the beach, put the kite in the
    water long before you get to the rocks!
  • If you need to get back upwind in too-light wind,
    use the board-retrieval body drag. If you hold
    your board against your chest, you can go upwind
    even faster.

5
Launching Your Kite
  • Make sure the person holding the kite knows what
    to do
  • When unsure of conditions, ask for someone to
    hold you down
  • Preflight check
  • Kite leash attached
  • Chicken loop attached and secured
  • 200 feet of space downwind clear of obstacles
  • Scan for other kites in the air
  • Wait for a 150-foot clearance
  • Kites landing have right-of-way
  • Check that kites lines are not twisted
  • Kite canopy is filled
  • Give the thumbs-up signal
  • Shouts are not clear enough
  • Once flying, walk into the water ASAP reduces
    risk to you and others
  • Walk around the wet spots (slip and slide)
  • When a launch goes bad, hit the release
    immediately
  • You will reduce the chance of injury to both you
    and the kite

6
Launching Someone Elses Kite
  • Dont do this without instruction!
  • Do the preflight check
  • 200 feet of space downwind clear of obstacles
  • Scan for other kites in the air
  • Wait for a 150-foot clearance
  • Kites landing have right-of-way
  • Check that kites lines are not twisted
  • Kite canopy is filled
  • Insist on the kiter giving the thumbs-up signal
  • Shouts are not clear enough (did he say no or
    go ?)
  • When a launch goes bad, run to catch the kite
    again

7
Holding a Kiter at Launch Time
  • Be ready to hold on or decline to do it
  • Make your own pre-flight checks
  • Kiter has a chicken loop safety release and knows
    how to use it
  • 200 feet of space downwind clear of obstacles
  • Scan for other kites in the air
  • Wait for a 150-foot clearance
  • Kites landing have right-of-way
  • Check that kites lines look right
  • Hold the kiter down (dont pull backwards)
  • You want to hold the kiters feet on the ground
  • Hold on with both hands
  • Youll need both hands if the kite goes wild
  • Walk the kiter around the wet spots (slip and
    slide)
  • When a launch goes bad, tell the kiter to hit the
    chicken loop immediately

8
Walking on the Path
  • We need to avoid creating problems for other path
    users
  • Walking in the duck pond (when dry) avoids
    problems
  • Walk on the downwind edge of the path
  • Step off the path when pedestrians or cyclists
    approach
  • Keep watching for cyclists approaching from
    behind
  • No loose bridle lines!
  • Connect them together or hold them so cyclists
    cant snag them

9
Necessary Safety Equipment
  • Helmet
  • Rocks and even the ground at launches
  • Your board
  • Quick release on chicken loop
  • Friction releases are lousy, esp pinrope models
  • Spring-loaded ones are much easier and more
    reliable
  • Practice using this with each hand!!
  • You don't choose which hand gets wrapped in a line

10
More Safety Equipment
  • Kite Leash
  • You can use your release without losing your kite
  • A loose kite endangers others on the water
  • Knife
  • Has to be accessible with either hand
  • Check for rust!

11
Safety Equipment
  • Wetsuit
  • Stuff happens - dress for a breakdown
  • The water temperature may be comfortable for a
    short time near shore
  • But being in the water in the channel WILL cause
    hypothermia
  • Death from hypothermia estimated at 16 hours in
    60 degF water, even in a full steamer wetsuit!
  • Unable to function or THINK well at 5 hours
  • If you ever go to the channel mark, you need a
    full suit, at least 4/3 mm
  • Crissy Field and the ocean (and the Bay in early
    spring) are another 10 degrees colder you need
    a 5/3 and booties and a hood
  • A hood will help keep you a lot warmer I carry
    one as a backup

12
Safety Equipment - Signalling
  • Reflective Tape
  • A strip on your helmet can make you a lot more
    visible to a searchlight
  • Flasher
  • the way to be seen at dusk or dark
  • 30 at West Marine
  • Submersible VHF Marine radio
  • the way to call for help if no one else sees you
    (Channel 16)
  • Coast Guard can locate directly on this signal as
    well as talk
  • 200 at West Marine
  • Get an alkaline battery version, not rechargeable
  • Use a waterproof pouch (found at REI)
  • Cell phone
  • Only indirect contact with Coast Guard units
  • Will die if your waterproof bag fails (100-200
    to replace)
  • Much better than nothing!
  • Program this number Coast Guard Emergency
    415-556-2103

13
Optional Equipment
  • PFD/Impact Vest
  • May save a rib bruising
  • A Board Leash is a risk
  • Use a helmet

14
Buddy System 3 Versions
  • Best Kite with a buddy
  • Keep each other in sight at all times
  • Next Best Make sure someone at the launch site
    knows you are out and will wait for you until you
    return
  • Adequate Make sure someone somewhere knows when
    and where you went kiting and will call the Coast
    Guard if you dont return by sunset.
  • Can be a message on their machine if they are
    sure to see it before night.

15
Kite Down in the Water
  • Keep trying to relaunch it often takes a while
  • Try different ways
  • Wait for a puff of wind
  • When you cant relaunch, pull to your kite and
    roll up your lines
  • Loose lines wrap around your feet many people
    have been hogtied in their lines while still
    attached to their kite
  • Keep your kite inflated for flotation and
    visibility and power
  • Self rescue
  • A kite lying on its side can pull you about 45
    degrees from straight downwind
  • Hold both wings of the kite and point the top of
    the kite towards shore. Shift your grab point
    around to just fill the kite canopy for best
    speed and angle
  • If the wind is too offshore for kite-drawn
    self-rescue, you must choose between
  • Wait for a rescue hold onto your kite for
    flotation and visibility. As long as there is
    light, it makes a good distress signal.
  • Swim to shore - abandon the kite to allow you to
    swim faster.

16
Weather Conditions at 3rd
  • Common pattern wind gets lighter and slightly
    offshore late in the afternoon
  • Your kite can still drag you back to shore
  • Occasional pattern wind goes very offshore, even
    if there is normal wind in the channel
  • Dont launch in SW wind conditions
  • If caught in this, you may have to roll up your
    kite and swim, or even abandon it

17
Attitude
  • We have a great community at 3rd Ave. A major
    part of that is based on helping each other out.
  • Offer help when you see the need
  • When you see something unsafe, approach the
    person and offer your advice in a friendly manner
  • When youre unsure of what youre doing, ask for
    help or advice
  • When someone asks for help, say yes!
  • Keep On Shreddin!

18
Resources
  • Weather, discussion, site information
  • poulton.net/windsurf
  • Iwindsurf.com
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com