Mile of Hope

Yesterday the kite club helped out at the annual Mile of Hope event. Mile of Hope is a weekend at the beach for the pediatric cancer patients and their families from three major cancer centers in the state. Yes, I did say pediatric. These are children who have cancer and whose lives revolve around cancer treatments and hospital visits. They are children who just want to have fun like any other children. And this weekend gives them time away. Time to have fun.

Saturday morning they spend time on the beach, building sand castles, swimming, and flying kites. The kite club members come to fly some our bigger kites and put color in the sky for the kids. The local kite shop provides free kites for the children to fly.

Mile of Hope Kids Kites

The winds were not cooperating for the kite club this year. Blowing eight to ten was just fine but blowing from the north was a headache. This meant the wind was coming across the island and over the dunes before it reached the beach. Can you say “turbulence”? Not to mention the fact that there were also motels and buildings blocking the wind, too. We got a couple of larger deltas up but they wouldn’t stay up very well. The winds would die unexpectedly and the kites would come down on the beach among the people. Not good. The attempt to put up a HQ flowform with several Koi wind socks as line laundry was a flop. Even the lighter wind kites, like the Wala, wouldn’t stay in the air. So, all our plans for lots of color and lots of fun line laundry was for nought. Our local KAP (kite aerial photography) flier was even having trouble with his Sutton and KAP rig. The winds were so light, his rig was acting more like a kite anchor. So no KAP shots this day.

Sutton for KAP

Was it a lost day? Not a chance. The kites that were handed out to the children flew like champs. They had a ball with their small deltas. It was kind of embarrassing. Those plastic kites flying great while our ripstop creations lay in the sand. Ah well, the kids didn’t care, they were having fun. One thing I notice every year, the children start flying the kites and the parents end up flying the kites. A universal truth.

And what did I do during all of this? I concentrated on a ground display. I put up the kite club banner and five other banners of varying sizes. Then I unleashed my troupe of crabs, three yellow crabs and two red crabs, and my husband’s green frog and pink pig, all from HQ Kites. In case you aren’t familiar with a kiting ground display, the animals are ground bouncers which are filled by the wind and move around on the ground. They are usually tethered by a long leash to a single stake so they may move around as the wind changes direction. Kids love these and so do adults. The display was topped off by a collection of wind bubbles or petals by Gomberg Kites. Teardrop shapes in varying colors on a thin stick which bob and weave and dance in the wind.

After a few hours, we packed up our kites, banners, and animals and went back to the kite shop. As usual, time was spent commiserating about what wouldn’t fly and analyzing what did. Then it was off to do other things which for us was eating lunch and taking a nap. All that fresh air and sunshine can really be draining. So until the next good flying day…

Fair Winds All.

Sunburn!

The past two days have been beautiful.  We flew both days in moderate winds and sunny skies.  Yes, very sunny.  And tonight I am radiating heat and glowing in the dark.  I should know better than to stay out on the beach for up to three hours a day and not expect to get burned.  But it’s only April-May and, for me, it’s too early in season to worry about sunburn.  So, lesson learned.  The sunscreen comes out as soon as the weather gets warm enough to wear short sleeves without a jacket.  Now I’ve got to get my legs caught up with my arms so I can wear shorts.  Well, maybe not.  My legs are in no way up to wearing shorts, even tanned.  Let me rethink things.

As for flying, we had two great days.  Forgoing the lawn mowing, the furniture moving, the laundry and the dishes, we went to the beach Saturday morning.  The forecast was for the winds to get lighter in the afternoon so the morning was the best time.  Or so we thought.  The morning winds were light and gusty.  Changing directions every fifteen minutes or so it seemed.  We put up three smaller single line kites but they just wouldn’t stay up for long.  Couldn’t turn our backs or they would be on the ground.  Talk about a tease.  They would hang in the sky just long enough to give us hope and then slowly drift back to earth.  And each time we would put them back up it would be in a different direction.  I finally gave up on the dragon kite with the dolphin.  Back in the bag it went.  I also tried to fly the white owl by Premier.  With some bridle adjustment, it flew pretty well.  The best flyer of all yesterday was the turtle easy flyer delta, also by Premier.  It would lose the wind for a bit and drift downward but then gather it up again and mount into the sky.  Guess that’s why they call it an easy flyer.

Dolphin Dragon by White Bird

Despite the weather forecasts, the wind picked up as it drew closer to noon.  I took the Spirit Quad out for some practice.  I was doing pretty well except for trying to do some inverted hovers and tip stands.  The hovers were turning into hard upside-down landings.  No broken spars, thank goodness.  But I did notice that the center vertical spar was starting to stick up above the sail higher and higher.  Didn’t seem to affect the flying any so I decided to check it out when I was done for the day.  Well, when I was packing the kite up, I saw where the spar had punched through the upper pocket.  A very nice small hole.  Now I have a repair to do.  The decision is whether to merely patch the present pocket or to remove the pocket entirely and make a whole new pocket.  My present thought is to make a whole new pocket and re-enforce the top so it doesn’t happen again.  Another in a list of things to get done.  An ever-increasing list.

This morning was the weekly club fly.  Again it was a gorgeous day.  The wind was twelve to fourteen.  And there were several people out to fly.  Regulars and new-comers.  We filled the sky and had dual liners and Rev fliers performing.  There were large deltas up with long tails and a sled with matching pennant tail by Gomberg Kites.  Both of these carried lots of line laundry.  A couple of ghost deltas and Merlin the Wizard dragon, which flew better upside down, were also in the air.    Add to that my three Xelons and some miscellaneous sleds and deltas and there was quite a show today.   We don’t understand the Wizard kite.  It would fly for a while normally and then, for no apparent reason, it would flip over and fly with the bridle on top and the spars down.  Most unusual.

I received a Mother’s Day present early and really wanted to see it in the sky.  It is a Buka-Dako-Esche by Premier.  It is a very large rectangular kite with a looped ribbon tail that has an aboriginal representation of a lizard in browns, black, yellow and white.  The first time I saw it I knew I had to have it.  It is a companion kite to my Gecko Totem, also by Premier.  The same aboriginal style and colors.  My thought for the day was to fly the pair and get some photos.  Well, we had trouble with the lizard.  It would go up and stay for a bit, then tilt to the side and fall to the ground.  At one point, I thought I was going to take out a beach-walker.  Not to mention the neighboring kites.  Not wanting to cause an accident, we put it back in the bag and would try for a solution at a later time.

 

Then I got the Vamp Devil out again.  There were a couple of Rev fliers on the beach with me and so I was a little nervous.  I am only a beginner with the quad line kites and didn’t want to embarrass myself.  At first, it flew rather sluggish.  Almost as if the brakes were on it continually.  I readjusted the handles and then removed the devil tail.  Having no better place to put it, I wrapped the tail around my waist a few times and tied it so it wouldn’t blow away.  I know it sounds silly and probably looked silly, too.  But I only had a couple of pockets and stunt kites require two hands.  Anyway, the kite flew much better and I had fun practicing side slides and hovers.  Tried some spins but not too many.  I was working mostly on control not show.

All in all, it was a great weekend.  Except for the sunburn.  The second day did nothing but increase my red glow, so I sit tonight bathed in aloe.  And, by the way, we found a problem with the bridle on the lizard.  That may or may not be the solution to the nose-dives.  We will find out the next good flying day.

The Xelons by HQ

Fair Winds All.