Well done if you were able to ride and others not.
Last snow kite season on a very light wind day a young local kiter (at least 20lbs lighter than me) came to spot and rigged his 14m LEI. He was suspicious for the wind but he wanted to try anyway. After some time it was obvious he couldn't get his kite properly in the air, it just back stalled down before he was ready to go or at best dropped after couple of seconds when he was moving. He cursed another missed opportunity out loudly, there had been a couple of weeks of light wind only.
I was finishing my session (17m LEI) and after packing my kite and watching his attempts I asked if I could try. My intention wasn't to embarrass him but to show him how to pull kite up and immediately loop it to create power and get going. I did a short trip out and back, it wasn't good kiting but I wasn't yet struggling too much. He was a bit amazed, but there wasn't much reason to. Actually it was far from my real fights with low wind, once it took couple of hours constant looping to get some miles done back to my car. One mistake and kite would have dropped leading to difficult or impossible relaunch.
Reasons why this young guy couldn't do it: he didn't have enough strength for long steady pull, he didn't know how to loop it correctly and to use generated power, he didn't know which is correct direction to go after start and he let kite too far to the edge of the WW.
Low wind kiting needs precision, it punishes from mistakes. How well it finally goes depends on many things, kiter skill is one of the most important factor.