Dave, I must have just missed you...I saw Bob but I never spotted you and you are not hard to spot. I was on the Pink Best Waroo so I was not hard to spot either.
It's wierd 2 days ago, it was a little smaller swell and there were a couple locals up there when Clinton and I got there. They seemed to have their fill by the time we got there and CLinton and I got it to ourselves for an hour...couple of surfers but the wind shadow had us outside their spot anyway.
Yesterday, there were at peak time 8 - 10 kiters, 6 - 8 Windsurfers and 15 surfers...all in eachothers way for the most part. After a while, it actually seemed as though the surfers were enjoying the chaos. A couple surfers were actually really helpful (some might say life-svaing) when Clinton's kite hit the crain above the wind shadow when he tried to go to deep on the wave. His kite landed on the rocks and instantly got torn to shreds by the waves.
Clinton was drifting out past the gate fast on his board, in his 2mm shorty and a surfer on a long board paddled out to rescue him. Then two others pulled his kite and bar out of the rocks and put it in the parking lot for him. Another rescued his board. I would have never expected it but it got to a point that they seemed to recognize that we could all have fun out there without getting in their way. When they saw what we had to deal with when we break down out there and how we worked together to save boards and such, they seemed to accept and somewhat respect it.
That said, there was a ton of chaos out there yesterday. Many who seem to have no idea of wave riding protocol. Many windsurfers who have been riding that wave for a long time and never had to deal with kiteboarders, some Kiters who know and follow wave-riding protocol, and then just some who didn't seem to care about protocol.
Unfortuneatly, I fell into more than one of these categories yesterday as it became a bit frustrating out there.
What many of us don't understand, sparing Bob and Dave and maybe a couple others is that a windsurfer cannot enter or exit that wave the way we can on kites. They can't slow their speed toe-side, on starboard like we do to stall for a wave. If they don't come into the pit with speed, they can't jibe in there - there's no wind. They need to come in with speed, jibe onto the wave and use the wave to get back inot the wind. That's why we saw windsurfers not baring off some of our waves. I was pissed a couple times as windsurfers put me in some pretty sketchy situations (I even yelled at a couple of them, which I don't feel very good about) but hindsights 20/20, right?
While it is fun to ride toe-side, starboard in, the wave is a left and blows side shore to the left. So, when a rider is going toeside, know that he will eventually throw his kite back and expect to have an empty wave to go down the line on. Timing with the kite is critical when you get to the point that the wave is actually walling up and having another kite behind you can really F$#%k you up.
All that said, I think the only reasonable solution is to treat it like they do at a surf contest when it's crowded out there. Once you get a wave you have to go out around the buoy then you have priority on anyone coming out or coming from behind you. If you slow down to line up a set, the person behind you slows down too. This would atleast let each rider approach a wave with their style -windsurfer or kiter-
This would obviously take some serious communication between windsurfers and kiters but maybe some people down at the beach who know both well could start soliciting opinions.
Myself, I tried to follow good wave riding etc... but as it seemed that the sstems applied to the coast don't necessarily work at this spot, I just took any wave I could get and tried not to snake anyone.
Thanks to Marcello for getting my board after my kite went down in the impact zone...I love my Waroo re-launch system!
Check out the video that goes up from yesterday on
Best Bus Tour Page