Sure spend as much time as possible with your kid, but keep in mind that your kids NEED you to be a happy parent, and if kiting makes you happy and balanced, then don't stop that. Make some cuts somewhere else if time is an issue, post work beersies for example. Kids will fit seamlessly into that watersports lifestyle. They'll get to spend more time by the water instead of more time by the football pitch or racetrack or near a pub, or whatever it is that normal people do...sflinux wrote: ↑Mon Feb 22, 2021 8:56 pm
If you decide to get into a different sport, I would advise you to sell all of your current gear that you don't love, especially the gear that still has resale value. After a decade of child-rearing, you may see the light at the end of the tunnel getting smaller as to your own physical abilities as you age, increasing your desire to get sessions while you still can.
wise wordssflinux wrote: ↑Mon Feb 22, 2021 8:56 pmWhen I had kids I gave up motorcycle riding and rock climbing. I bought life insurance and both of those activities would have increased my premium. Surprising to me, kitesurfing was off the life insurance radar.
I think it is ok to put kiting on the back burner now that you are a parent. I wouldn't be surprised if there is an evolutionary change in brain chemistry when you become a nurturer. The first 10 years of a child's life are the most influential and go by fast. I would brainstorm and map out all of the things that you want to expose your child to in the next 10 years (like a parental bucket list) and try to map it out. Their interests will be constantly changing. Go with the flow, but try to expose them to things on your list as you go.
I agree with Peter_Frank on trying something new. It keeps the stoke alive, and many times is cross-sport relative in terms of muscle groups.
For my kiting career, I would always be trying new combinations of equipment. Early on, I tried flying all of the different types of kites that I could get my hands on. I even built a few of my own. Then I moved on to boards and tried all of the different designs I could get my hands on. I even built a few of my own (which I liked better than production).
For light/ultralight winds days, I got into flatwater SUP. Then I eventually tried it in the surf and it was one of the hardest sports I have ever tried. It lit a fire under my arse and I dedicated a year to get good. Now I find that I rarely visit my flatwater kiting spot, in favor of my local surf spot. With kites and SUP, I am covered for any condition, any day. Surf SUP eventually got me back into prone surfing, so I try to dedicate a day out of the week for prone paddling. If you try to surf SUP in 15-20k conditions, you will quickly miss flying a kite, as it is tough.
If you decide to get into a different sport, I would advise you to sell all of your current gear that you don't love, especially the gear that still has resale value. After a decade of child-rearing, you may see the light at the end of the tunnel getting smaller as to your own physical abilities as you age, increasing your desire to get sessions while you still can.
And remember alcohol is a depressant. Covid has been enough of a downer. If you can find positive influences in your life, follow that path.
Whow...Hugh2 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 23, 2021 5:40 pmWe live in one of the least likely places for kitesurfing, but we have multiple ways to keep the stoke. The most obvious is we have a nearby little lake that is the cooling system for a nuclear power plant, so it warms up earlier in the spring and stays warmer into the fall, extending our season. It also has exposure to the major prevailing wind directions we get here, which is great. It is not a beginner spot, however, so most of us learned elsewhere, primarily at Cape Hatteras. Our group does at least two group trips to Cape Hatteras in the spring and fall, and most do a family summer trip as well. These are great opportunities for socializing, meeting others from Indiana who started these group trips for windsurfing more than 20 years ago, and exposure to new equipment and people and kiting tricks and solutions. And others do more far-ranging trips, Cape Town, Baha, SPI, Florida, Dominica, Caribbean, Gorge, Hawaii, Brazil, etc. But most of us also sail, on everything from lasers to cabin boats, and in the winter we skate, snow kite, and most of us have iceboats (great ice this past weekend, as usual just a couple of days a year unless willing to travel north). And most of us ski, cross-country and downhill. So by the time spring comes around again we are very much stoked to be kiting again. Maybe the OP just lives in too nice a place (and yes, I've been to Melbourne, pre-kiting, and it is a great city).
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