Apologies to you Steve for making the improper leap from "hyping" to "personal gain". You're right on that one. Despite the rest of the vitriol thrown in my direction, through, I otherwise have a valid opinion and everyone of course has a right to disagree. The language and attitude displayed in responses to my opinion say more about the posters than they do about me. I sense some kind of orthodoxy and group-think about this whole thing, and I've never been one to back-down just because my opinion is unpopular.average_male wrote:Steve has a great point. Apples to Apples bro. Keep them oranges off the table. Let's not get off the subject, we are talking kiteboarding here. I am almost certain they have hang gliding forums out there is cyber space.
And until you can get 22+ seconds of hang time, any thing you say has the taste and sound of sour grapes. Until then, enjoy yourself.
The very fact that somebody was doing a tow-up from a jetski is (though not directly related) the reason I'm so concerned about safety. Somebody posted/hyped this practice with a video, many many folks discussed it and agreed that it is an extremely dangerous practice (just ask Neil Hutchinson), and now people show up trying it in our back yard.
Of course gliding is a completely different sport . . . That's exactly my point. The 22 second jump starts to blur the distinction, and if folks really concentrate on longer and longer hang times, then eventually the distinction will get very blurry. Don't be surprised if somebody next year shows up with a FS Speed or modified paraglider with the sole purpose of setting a new world record. What do the organizers do then after the new record is 120 seconds? Where exactly do you draw the line? Eventually the "record" becomes meaningless exactly because you can't draw the distinction anymore. To be honest, it kind of bums me out, because it would be awesome to have a "longest hangtime" record to pursue that doesn't end up in this conundrum.
I have one idea for a rule that could keep such a competition more viable in the long-term: once you have reached the peak of your jump, you can't cause yourself to lift back up again (I.E. the jump goes up, then down, and that's it). Now I'm going to duck before I take another direct hit of nasty invective :-)
Cheers,
Gideon