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How to try to avoid lofting

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RickI
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Postby RickI » Wed May 15, 2002 4:43 pm

The document of lofting has been revised and updated based on new incidents and information. There are also photographs that show various ways of getting lofted and potentially avoiding it from happening at:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kitesurf/ ... formation/

Rick Iossi

How to Try to Avoid Lofting - May 15, 2002

Lofting or involuntary lifting can be a serious hazard to kiteboarders. Lofting used to be relatively rare a couple
of years ago but it is becoming more common around the world. Some riders are being lifted out of control and
slammed downwind with varying injuries, largely depending on luck. It is important to note that MOST LOFTING
INCIDENTS ARE AVOIDABLE by using proper technique and judgment. See the Kitesurfing Accident
Database for more information on specific incidents at the link listed below. In reading these accounts please
note that the majority of victims are well experienced to very experienced kiteboarders so skill doesn't appear
to play much of a factor in avoiding lofting.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kitesurf/ ... 0Database/

Essentially if your kite is at or near the vertical or the zenith and you are hit by a strong enough gust, you will be
lofted. If you are already airborne in a jump when the gust hits, you will likely fly even further and harder downwind.
Kites lift very efficiently, so setting yourself up for lofting is relatively easy to do if you use improper technique (please
see the photos below). Serious lofting incidents have occurred with gusts of LESS THAN 10 KTS. above background
wind speed. A minor lofting is pictured below in only 10 to 14 kt. winds. Once you have been lofted into the air, you are
blown downwind, largely out of control and often at high speed to a hard to very hard impact. Several riders have not
been able to unhook while loaded up and airborne so once you start you may be in for the complete ride and bad landing.
The severity of the experience will depend heavily on your speed and correctness of reaction, surroundings, the gust velocity
and luck. Lofting has happened to riders on their boards out on the water relatively near shore and to many kitesurfers while
still on the beach.

Gusts are the most common cause of lofting such as the sudden 35 to 51 kts. squall gust that carried a rider an
incredible 820 ft. (250 m) and 100 ft. high (30 M) in Cabarete, DR. More rare causes could include the
apparent dust devil lofting that occurred in Spain, or the uplift lofting that carried a rider up the windward face of
a dike in Holland both of which resulted in rider fatalities. Another less common cause includes thermals such as lofted
a rider to an incredible height of 225 ft in Oahu, HI. Of course these examples represent lofting extremes. It is
quite possible to have a serious accident under much more commonly encountered circumstances, IF you
permit it to happen.

The following reasoned precautions have been assembled to try to reduce the chance of lofting. Input is
welcome, particularly from kiteboarders who have been lofted. Information on lofting and the means of avoiding
it is still coming in.

1. Pick your weather carefully and if it looks like it is going to change for the worse, come in promptly. The wind
can gust suddenly with very little warning before a squall. If the weather radar, wind plots imply squalls or
unduly gusty weather in your area or if obvious storm clouds or other signs of unstable weather are moving in,
don't go kiteboarding. If you are already out and squalls are moving in, come in early and unrig well in advance of
the storm. You should be onshore with your kite adequately anchored before either the wind or temperature changes.
When in doubt, don’t fly, wait for stable weather. Squall induced wind gusts are the most common cause of lofting.

2. If you are on land or near hard objects such as rocks, boats, shallow water or other people, try to keep your
kite at the edge of the wind window and near the surface. Get offshore without delay., NEVER LEAVE YOUR
KITE NEAR THE ZENITH OR THE VERTICAL WHILE ON LAND OR NEAR HARD OBJECTS. When near hard
objects, keep your kite low and near the surface. "Near" may mean within 100 ft. (30 m) or even further from the hard
objects. Of course if you are hit by a strong gust with your kite low, you may be violently dragged as opposed to lofted,
so plan accordingly. Be ready to depower your kite at the earliest opportunity if hit by a strong gust to try to avoid extended
dragging and potential serious injury. If you are hit by a strong enough gust it may pop your kite up into the center of the
power zone from near the ground. The trick is to not make yourself vulnerable to violent squally weather in the first place.

3. If you are near hard objects or if pronounced gusty conditions are developing, stay unhooked and be prepared to let go
of your bar. It is also a good idea not to snap shackle to your bar under these conditions. In order to be able to hold your
kite bar it may be necessary for you to pull in on your trimming strap or line to depower your kite until you are safely offshore.
It may also be necessary for you to rig down in kite size to be able to manage the depowered kite without connecting to the
chicken or centerline loop. If you are using a snap shackle, it is important that it is rigged properly to improve reliability of
release. A metal ring or shackle should connect the snapshackle to the chicken or centerline loop. Under no conditions
should the shackle be directly connected to the chicken or centerline loop. A center release snapshackle may provide a
more reliable release under the kind of tremendous loading that comes with lofting. If you do use a snapshackle, rehearse
mentally, frequently, " if I get lofted, pull the snapshackle release cord". In the shock of lofting, your reactions may be slow, so
rehearsing may help. Of course if you are already high over land, this one is a very tough judgment call as riding things out may
be the wiser course. To avoid having to make such critical decisions in very little time, which mayresult in injury regardless of
the decision, the best course is to work hard to avoid circumstances which may lead to lofting in the first place.

4. Always carefully and methodically preflight your kiteboarding gear. One suggested preflighting procedure
and set of guidelines for trying to avoid lofting are given at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kitesurf/ ... formation/
If you are launching in higher wind speeds, say 20 kts. or more, if your lines are uneven or your gear is
otherwise not correct at launch you can be lofted very rapidly. The speed can be so great that you have
insufficient time to react to correct the situation. If you aren't attached to your bar you can simply let go and
defuse the situation.

5. Avoid or simply don’t fly with onshore winds or kiteboard within 300 ft.(100 m), upwind of hard objects. If you go out
in onshore winds, which is NOT RECOMMENDED, kiteboard more than 300 ft. .(100 m), offshore until it is time to come
in. Come in without delay, keeping the kite low and be prepared to let go of your bar if lofted. This technique
generally requires assisted landings shortly after you make it to shore. Do not jump within 300 ft. .(100 m), of shore or
hard downwind objects. If feasible it would be a good idea to have assisted launches and landings at least 200
feet, (60 m), offshore in onshore winds if the water is shallow enough.

6. Be particularly cautious while upwind of bystanders and hard objects. If circumstances seem to support
possible lofting, it would be best not to launch at all. If the rider decides to go despite this recommendation and
prudence, he should move a substantial distance (300 ft. or more), away from the bystanders.

7. Try to use shorter line sets if you are expecting stronger winds. Also do not fly a larger kite than supported
by the probably conditions. Make sure your kite depower system COMPLETELY depowers your kite and will
not break under normal loading.

8. Always wear a good well padded, close fitting and light helmet! Wearing an impact vest is also a good idea.

9. Do not come within 100' of substantial vertical surfaces or walls with onshore winds to avoid potentially
being lifted in the slip stream that runs up the face of the vertical surface. In theory even relatively minor winds
could cause substantial uplift along the face of buildings, cliffs, hills, etc.

10. Do not fly your kite near thermal generating conditions. Please see
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kiteboard/message/34927 for more info on thermals.

Of course, kiteboarders can break all of the above guidelines and perhaps be perfectly OK for hundreds of
hours on the water, then again, maybe not. One kiteboarder I know made it through two years of going out in
virtually every kind of weather including two hurricanes, before he smacked into a very bad landing and critical
injury onshore. There is one small launch area in Florida where three riders had avoidable loftings over a 7
month period with two riders going to the hospital. Unfortunately, sad experience has shown that given enough
time, bad things have a way of catching up with us if we go a little too extreme, too often. Again, most lofting
incidents are avoidable but only if proper technique and good judgment are used. The number of lofting cases
is currently increasing around the world. We really need to avoid lofting, particularly near others, for both our
own good and that of the sport.

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Postby Toby » Wed May 15, 2002 8:52 pm

once again thx for your great help, commitment and effort!
Really good points!

Toby

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Postby RickI » Thu May 16, 2002 4:59 pm

I just had a good question about all this from another forum. The answer follows below:

Hello Carlo,

It is not a stupid question in the least! Having a raft of kiteboarders waiting to get lofted into who knows what in the face of a looming squall is definitely something to avoid. This happened in Oz recently, in Cabarete weeks ago and I have no idea how many other times.

One definition of a squall is: A sudden violent gust of wind often attended with rain or snow.

Basically it is a cloud mass, often dark black to grey with evident strong storm potential or maybe no obvious evidence in some cases. This as contrasted to other clouds that may not offer any rain, lightening or substantial change in wind conditions. There are cumulonimbus clouds, the 10 mile high ones with the anvil on top, that present an obvious hazard. There are lower cloud formations that may be less dramatic but still dark and threatening. Locals should have a feel for what clouds have the potential to toss out sudden violent winds and those that don't.

Here in Florida, particularly during the raining and warmer thermal wind months, I check the weather radar before going out. If I see clouds moving towards my area with strong embedded storm cells (brightly colored areas as a rule), or abundant mapped lightening, I will force myself not to go kiteboarding. Also in checking internet wind recordings if I see violent swings in wind speeds, e.g. gust spikes to 40 or even 50+ mph in the middle of storm clouds or squalls for my area, I will not go kiteboarding.

This suggestion is probably wasted on kiteboarders, wind junkies by nature, but pay attention to the weather. That is what winds come with what clouds, weather systems, times of year,etc. for your area. It will help you anticipate good times to go and to stay home.

If in doubt about conditions, don't go kiteboarding. The gratification you get from some extra time on the water can easily be eclisped by hospital recovery time, if you are fortunate, speaking from personal experience. It isn't a matter of skill or experience whether you can handle the sudden violent conditions. Good judgment is what will keep you in one piece.

I would like to repost this on some kiteboarder forums if that is ok with you?

Fly smart,
Rick Iossi


<< Hi Rick

I have a question to ask, and hope it's not a stupid one.

What is a squall and how does one identify / avoid one? Is it just a bigger
version of a gust?

Regards
Carlo
http://www.kitesurf.co.za

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Postby murdoc » Thu May 16, 2002 5:31 pm

hey rick!
here's just another nice one, i've took part last saturday:

some kitesurfers were riding in a bay, wind was slightly offshore (NorthEast) (no danger, shallow water and nowhere to drift :wink:) about 4bft. straight from south came some really dark clouds - but most guys probably thought - hey it's in south, wind is north east ... so it'll be blown away ...
but it came nearer - it took about one minute
for the wind to drop down, turn to southwest direction and shoot gusts of about 6bft.

by this time not one single kiteboarder was left on the water - i was one of the last to go cause i was riding upwind of some rookies i had to get trough to find someone to land my kite ...

a few kites (also mine) were blown away by the strong gusts from the new direction, but no damage to any riders or material.

:smile:

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RickI
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Postby RickI » Thu May 16, 2002 10:24 pm

I just heard about a serious gust related kiteboarding accident that happened in Florida yesterday.

Hello Jeff,

Thanks for passing the news on. That is awful, I hope Brian heals rapidly
and is back on the water in no time. Checking iwindsurf for the Skyway
yesterday, it looks like the wind was 15 to 28 mph, average 20 gusting to
almost 30 mph at one point late. Do you know what size kite he had up,
whether the gust was squall related and roughly what the wind speed was and
the horizontal distance he was dragged over?

Your points about carefully checking your kite depower leash are very
important. I would add to check that it doesn't look like it will break
under normal loading. One of the weakest areas of many leashes is the
swivel. I am not aware of anyway to evaluate that visually other than to
replace them periodically before hidden corrosion weakens them. The
possibility of the tree interferring with the safe depowering of the kite is
silvering. I generally like to say not to rely excessively on your leash as
it may not properly depower your kite under some circumstances.

Thanks again for the information and Brian, feel better!!!

Rick Iossi


-----Original Message-----
From: kitemaredotcom [mailto:jeff@k...]
Sent: Thursday, May 16, 2002 4:13 PM
To: FLORIDA-KITESURFERS@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [FLORIDA-KITESURFERS] Desoto accident


Yesterday, a local rider, Brian ( green slingshot kite ) was blown
downwind close to the mangroves at east-tip (east bch) he was walking
back upwind with his kite overhead. Hit by a big gust and dragged
closer to the tree line... he let go of his bar and was still
dragged by his kite leash into a tree ( mangrove ) breaking ribs and
collapsing a lung. He is in stable condition and sounds great on the
phone considering what happened.
I was really surprised to hear that this happened even "after" the
bar was released. He thinks the bar or line snagged on a branch
preventing the bar from sliding the full length of the safety line.
He also said the kite was spinning after engaging the leash. ( at
this point, it hard to know for sure what went wrong) Brian, is
safety conscious, has taken a lesson, and knew when to let go.
He'll probably be off the water for a few months... but his is
already talking about riding, and getting some more instruction in
the fall.
We wish Brian a speed recovery.

Remember, check your leash system... attach leash to a "front line"
if possible to reduce or eliminate spinning, and check that your
leash allows your kite to open up to its FULL wingspan.

Jeff
http://www.Kitemare.com
"learn fast, kite safe, get amped, go huge, and share the stoke"


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