I was already extremely old when I started.Icharus wrote:Only kiting since 2003 ? I look forward to you giving way then!alexrider wrote:Simple rule: the oldest rider claims the wave. Respect for the elders.
I was already extremely old when I started.Icharus wrote:Only kiting since 2003 ? I look forward to you giving way then!alexrider wrote:Simple rule: the oldest rider claims the wave. Respect for the elders.
I am only a little younger than Robbie Naish - i see he managed to break his pelvis - this has to be a message - maydays of boosting in 40knot winds may be over.alexrider wrote:I was already extremely old when I started.Icharus wrote:Only kiting since 2003 ? I look forward to you giving way then!alexrider wrote:Simple rule: the oldest rider claims the wave. Respect for the elders.
Great until you get people ride from 200meters in the opposite direction of the wave on the swell and then meet you after you have already been riding the break for 100+ meters and somehow claim the wave. Or the guys that bail last minute because their strategy of riding out back can't get them in the right position.plummet wrote:
Short answer who ever turns onto the wave/swell first claims it. Whether tacking in or out
This works for cross on to cross off. You can't ride swell while tacking back out upwind.foilholio wrote:Great until you get people ride from 200meters in the opposite direction of the wave on the swell and then meet you after you have already been riding the break for 100+ meters and somehow claim the wave. Or the guys that bail last minute because their strategy of riding out back can't get them in the right position.plummet wrote:
Short answer who ever turns onto the wave/swell first claims it. Whether tacking in or out
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