Kiteboarding: ride and respect the safety procedures | Photo: Shutterstock

The International Kiteboarding Organization released the "Top Ten Safety Directives for Public Kiters."

The useful document features information on safety systems, using a kite leash, flyovers, position on-board leashes, right-of-way rules, and more.

"No kiter should take a kite without knowing how to ride safely," explains David Dorn, IKO's training director.

"Every kiter from beginner to advanced should at least know these ten safety directives brought to you through the IKO."

1. Always Use a Kite Leash

The kite's leash is the primary safety device. It keeps you attached to the kite and the kite attached to you.

When you have your kite attached, you can use it as a floatation device and a lifeboat (means of getting back to the beach). It is highly visible, allowing you to be seen by would-be rescuers.

Even if you cannot re-launch it, you can use your kite to do a self-rescue and pull you to shore. This will save you from some very long swims.

But the kite leash's main function is to protect the people around you from getting taken out by your lost kite.

When you are riding, always remember that your leash is there for everyone else's safety. A properly functioning leash also activates the kite's safety system and depowers it.

But be careful: A leash in a suicide configuration is pretty much a liability to everyone, including the rider.

2. Know Your Safety Systems

You would be surprised by how many people do not know how to use their safety systems.

There is really no excuse for this. Maybe you are renting a kite, testing a new kite, or borrowing a buddy's kite for the first time.

But, any time you are about to use a kite, you must know the safety systems. Each system is slightly different.

While there are some similarities between most systems, there are some systems that are totally counterintuitive to use and could be the opposite of what you are used to.

For example, there are chicken loops that release by pushing them away.

Some release by pulling on them, while others release when you twist the collar, and to top it off, there are even some systems where the chicken loops are fixed and do not release at all.

In an emergency, you should be able to release from your chicken-loop instantly and without looking.

So, if you do not thoroughly know the system you are using, you will have a big problem. This applies to every part of the safety system.

Kite leashes, too, have different quick releases as some pull, some you push, and some you have to pull a special release pin.

3. Never Fly Over Non-Participants

This seems obvious, but on any crowded kite launch site, you will see people breaking this rule every day.

The reason that you never want to do this is that you are endangering the persons below the kite.

The kite can suddenly power up and can hit, cut, slice, drag, drop, or knock down any person within the kite's wind window.

This can happen to anyone. Even the most experienced kiteboarder does not have 100 percent control of their kite 100 percent of the time.

The wind can suddenly gust, lull, or some other factor, like a line breaking, can cause a momentary loss of control, and then the kite can injure someone.

Even experienced kite launchers must be extremely careful when getting beneath a kite. 

4. Never Use a Board Leash

Many old kiters have stories about kiting in the old days, and many have a sad tale about the board leash.

The board leash is for surfing, not kiting. There have been hundreds of kiting accidents that the board leash has caused and a few fatalities.

Serious injury can happen from the board sling-shotting at your head or face, and even a helmet cannot prevent many injuries.

Also, the board leash can tangle in the bar and lines, causing a plethora of other problems.

The high accident rate caused by board leashes prompted most kite schools to ban using board leashes long ago.

However, some people may still think that they can get away with using one.

But, our hard-won experience has taught us that there is no safe way to use a board leash, and there are no reliable types of board leashes either.

Simply don't use one. Instead, learn how to kite better so you won't need one. If you are a beginner, try using a "go-joe" device.

They look a bit funny, but they really work great.

If you are still tempted to use a board leash after reading this, just Google "kiteboard leash injuries" and see what comes up.

5. Do Not Jump Over Obstacles

What goes up must come down. Remember that anything you fly over can become your landing place.

And, you could always land on your head. Kiting is better when done on water because this gives you a soft, forgiving medium to crash into.

On the water, you can try stuff and know that you will fall with a splash or a splat.

By comparison, just try landing on a pile of rocks, a jetty, or a gnarly sharp tree.

These aren't as forgiving. Kiting is a numbers game. Sooner or later, you will crash.

Whatever risks you take will eventually catch up with you. Whatever you jump over, you will ultimately land on. It is just a matter of time.

There are many examples of skilled kiters making crazy jumps over stuff, but there are also many examples of them crashing hard.

You should weigh the risks against the reward and ask yourself if it is really worth all the pain and time off the water to do some macho stunt.

Jumping over stuff is kind of dumb. Why not do a really technical trick or a really big jump instead?

But, just do it over water, so when you do wipe out, you can get back up and try it again.

Plus, if you do get seriously injured and or killed trying to jump stuff, you will probably get your local kite spot shut down in the process as well.

6. Look Before You Jump

This is just as important as the look-before-you-jibe rule. Looking before you jump is vital for kiters because when you jump with a kite, you can travel large distances and stay aloft for a long time.

The traffic in your landing area can change between the time you take off and the time you land.

You should always look in all directions before you jump, including upwind of you, because someone else could already be in the air or about to jump behind you.

Also, try to look at the traffic patterns and think about where people will be while you are in the air. Maybe they do not see you take off and ride into the clear area that was your intended landing zone.

We generally recommend that you should have a minimum of at least 50 meters of clear area downwind and 30 meters of clear area upwind of you before you jump.

But, many kiters jump further than that, so they will need to allow even more room to move.

When the wind gets stronger, people kite at greater speeds and will have less control. So, in strong winds, you should allow for larger safety buffers around you.

Always look in all directions before you jump, and if that area isn't clear, then wait for the right time and place to jump. 

7. Keep a Safety Buffer

A safety buffer is what you create to keep some distance between you and something dangerous. A safety buffer is both distance and time.

When you are moving faster, you will need to make your safety buffers bigger.

You should create a safety buffer whenever you see something that you do not want to hit.

This could be the beach, some rocks, other kiters, or obstacles.

When creating your buffer, you should also consider how far your kite reaches out ahead of you, keeping in mind that your safety buffer starts at your kite and extends beyond that.

A safety buffer between two kites (or two kiters) is ever greater.

If you have 25-meter lines and the other kiter has 25-meter lines, you need a minimum of 50 meters between you to ensure that the kites don't touch each other, but that still does not allow for any separation between the kites.

The safety buffer is the extra area/distance between the closest possible points of contact.

Sometimes, kite instructors recommend a safety buffer of two or three kite line lengths away from an obstacle on full-length lines that translates to 50-to-75 meters.

But, in strong winds, the buffer should be increased.

Sometimes, the buffer needs to be five line lengths and, in extreme conditions, up to 10 line lengths (10 line lengths = 250 meters).

Whatever safety buffer you leave downwind of you to keep out of danger and stay away from objects should be the same for the guy riding upwind of you.

So, if you like a 75-meter buffer downwind of you, then the guy riding upwind of you probably wants to stay about that same distance away from you because you are now the obstacle that he is trying to avoid.

If I am kiting in extreme winds at my limit, I can assume that anyone upwind of me is possibly kiting at their limit, too.

So, I do not want to let them get inside my upwind safety buffer. And I do not want to ride into their safety buffer either.

Always try to consider the amount of reaction time and stopping distance you would need to avoid an accident.

In strong wind, there is less reaction time. Because things happen faster and you are moving faster, the stopping distances will also need to be increased. 

8. Avoid Bad Weather

One thing is certain in kiteboarding. You cannot control the weather.

But, what you can do is recognize bad weather when you see it and try to anticipate bad weather by using forecasts and weather services.

Weather services are not just for finding good wind.

They are useful for helping you to avoid bad weather as well.

Different weather conditions make for bad kiting conditions, but storms are the most common and easily avoided weather phenomena.

If you get to the beach and it is raining or cloudy, there is a thunderstorm, it is extremely windy, or you see a cumulonimbus cloud approaching, then don't go out.

Of course, you should have already known that there was bad weather because every good kiter checks the weather before going to the beach.

But, sometimes, the weather changes quickly, and you will have to keep your eyes on the sky for telltale signs of change.

Clouds are good indicators of weather change, and so are rapid drops in temperature or sudden shifts in wind direction.

And, if you hear thunder, get out of there fast.

Many serious kiteboarding accidents are attributed to bad weather.

But you cannot blame the weather. It was the fault of the kiter himself, who is ultimately responsible for deciding to go out in bad weather conditions.

When you are kiting at a new spot, it is always a good idea to ask the locals if there are any special signs of approaching bad weather to watch out for.

9. Know the Right-Of-Way (ROW) Rules

The right-of-way rules are a way of reducing accidents on the water because all kiters need to know how to react when they get into some kiting traffic.

The first ROW rule is simply, "Avoid accidents at all costs!" This means don't crash into anyone.

Unfortunately, beginner kiters generally do not know any rules, and they are highly focused on watching their kite.

So, they are not usually aware of their surroundings. The next rule should probably be, "Avoid beginners at all costs!"

Once any kiter gets beyond the basics and starts mixing in with the general kiting population, they should also know the most common ROW rules.

There are the basic rules for sailing that also apply to kiting: "port gives way to starboard," "upwind gives way to downwind," etc.

There are some kite-specific rules as well, like "the upwind kiter keeps their kite high when passing another."

Many good websites explain the rules.

Some also explain the rules for kiting in the waves and also for kiting with other types of watercraft.

We have to learn how to share the water with each other and how to share the space with other water users as well.

And, most of all, know the ROW rules to help you to avoid accidents.

10. Do Not Kite Further Than You Can Swim

Another way to put this is to "always know your limits."

By not kiting further away from shore than you can swim, it puts into perspective that no matter how good at kiting we are, we are just a swimmer when we lose the kite.

Kites can get away from us or break down and become useless.

Eventually, every kiter will have to swim back to shore.

Think about this before riding far away from the beach or traveling long distances. At any moment, you could lose the kite, and you will have to swim.

Also, think about the time it takes to swim; what if there are tides or currents, or maybe you will be swimming back after sunset and no one will see you; what if you are hurt and cannot swim; what if it is really cold and you start to get hypothermic?

So, the real message is to know your limits and think about your vulnerability.

You can usually have a great session and stay relatively safe by managing the risks, thinking about problems before they occur, and staying close to shore.

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