How you hit the chop can make a difference--try to mix it up bit: (my knees were crap before I started kiting, yet they don't bother me much kiting):Mork wrote: Anyone have any tried and tested knee support solutions to at least take some of the chop pressure off?
Sometimes you need to suck up the chop like you're hitting a mogul field. That means bending your knees and waist before you hit that ramp. Yeah, it's a poo stance. Who cares--nobody's gonna photo you on the outbound tack. Sucking up the chop this way is physically tiring but eases the banging on your cartilage. Mix it in when you see some steep shit coming your way.
Corkscrew over the chop by bearing off as you go up the ramp then heading up once you're over--you lose a few feet of upwind progress, but it's another way to avoid taking a hit.
Sheet in a bit for some lift as you hit the chop, shift your weight onto your front leg and use your back leg to slew the board around--it's loads of fun and is another way to rest the usual wear spots on your knees.
Consider skipping the marginal inconsistent wind days (like the last two). Days where I have to work like a bastard in light wind tweak me out more than do fully powered and superlit days.
And yeah, softer boards with tons of rocker are fantastic on the ebb tide days. They also work on flood if you have enough wind. The LF pads don't suck either.