Photographer’s Note
The Chinese are credited with using kites for propulsion in the 13th century.
In the 1800s George Pocock used kites of increased size to propel carts on land and ships on the water, using a 4-line control system - the same system in common use today. Both carts and boats were able to turn and sail upwind.
The kites could be flown for sustained periods. The intention was to establish kitepower as an alternative to horsepower, partly to avoid the hated "horse tax" that was levied at that time.
In 1903, aviation pioneer Samuel Cody developed "man-lifting kites" and succeeded in crossing the English channel in a small collapsible canvas boat powered by a kite.
In the late 1970s the development of Kevlar then Spectra flying lines and more controllable kites with improved efficiency contributed to practical kite traction. In 1978, Ian Day's "FlexiFoil" kite-powered Tornado catamaran exceeded 40 km/h.
Through the 1980s there were sporadic and occasionally successful attempts to combine kites with canoes, ice skates, snow skis, water skis and roller skates.
Through out the 70s and early 80s Dieter Strasilla from Germany developed parachute-skiing and later perfected a kiteskiing system using self made paragliders and a ball-socket swivel allowing the pilot to kitesail upwind and uphill but also to take off into the air at will.
Strasilla and his friend Andrea Kuhn/Switzerland used this invention also in combination with surfboards and Skurfs, grasskies and selfmade buggies. One of his patents describes 1979 the first time an inflatable kite design for kitesurfing.
Two brothers, Bruno Legaignoux and Dominique Legaignoux, from the Atlantic coast of France, developed some kite designs for kitesurfing in the late 1970s early 1980s and patented a inflatable kite design in November 1984, which has since been used by many companies to develop their own products.
In 1990, practical kite buggying was pioneered by Peter Lynn at Argyle Park in Ashburton, New Zealand. Lynn coupled a three-wheeled buggy with a forerunner of the modern parafoil kite. Kite buggying proved to be very popular worldwide, with over 14,000 buggies sold up to 1999.
The development of modern day kitesurfing by the Roeselers in the USA and the Legaignoux in France carried on in parallel to buggying. Bill Roeseler, a Boeing aerodynamicist, and his son Corey Roeseler patented the "KiteSki" system which consisted of water skis powered by a two line delta style kite controlled via a bar mounted combined winch/brake. The KiteSki was commercially available in 1994. The kite had a rudimentary water launch capability and could go upwind. In 1995, Corey Roeseler visited Peter Lynn at New Zealand's Lake Clearwater in the Ashburton Alpine Lakes area, demonstrating speed, balance and upwind angle on his 'ski'. In the late 1990s, Corey's ski evolved to a single board similar to a surfboard.
In 1996 Laird Hamilton and Manu Bertin were instrumental in demonstrating and popularising kitesurfing off the Hawaiian coast of Maui.
In 1997 the Legaignoux brothers developed and sold the breakthrough "Wipika" kite design which had a structure of preformed inflatable tubes and a simple bridle system to the wingtips, both of which greatly assisted water re-launch. Bruno Legaignoux has continued to improve kite designs, including developing the bow kite design, which has been licensed to many kite manufacturers.
In 1997, specialist kiteboards were developed by Raphaël Salles and Laurent Ness. By 1998 kitesurfing had become a mainstream sport, and several schools were teaching kitesurfing. The first competition was held on Maui in September 1998 and won by Flash Austin.
By 1999 single direction boards derived from windsurfing and surfing designs became the dominant form of kiteboard. From 2001 onwards, wakeboard style bi-directional boards became more popular.
Model NIKON D40
Software Ver.1.10
Exposure Time 10/20000 sec
F-Stop f/5.6
ISO Speed Ratings 360
Focal Length 240 mm
Date Taken 2007-08-20 14:00
Metering Mode Pattern
File Size 180 kb
papagolf21, ribeiroantonio, kiwi_explorer, Cretense has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
Jeppo
(12100) 2008-07-09 3:05
ciao paolo,
bella immagine ricca di dinamismo con colori molto intensi e vivi
ciao
Silvio
ribeiroantonio
(21967) 2008-07-09 3:55
And in 2008 they are widely used in Australians beaches as seen here. Very good note.
Your shot is full of action and we do not need to see the kite to follow this guy around. Well done.
Antonio
kiwi_explorer
(12195) 2008-07-09 4:06
Hi Paolo,
That is one interesting piece of history in your write up ... well researched. Superbly captured action shot ... very dynamic shot and a very well timed shot. Excellent work! tfs
Cheers,
Renier
Cretense
(57010) 2008-07-09 11:11
Hi Paolo!
Great cropping and framing in this excellent and refreshing action photo! Great light managment, beautiful colours! congratulations!
Ciao, Hercules
papagolf21
(56733) 2008-07-10 0:39
Bonjour, cher Paolo,
Faire du ski nautique sans cerf-volant ou de la planche n'est déjà pas facile, si en plus, il faut se faire tirer par un cerf-volant la difficulté devient presque insurmontable !
Très bonne photographie accompagnée d'une note richement documentée.
Amitiés.
Philippe
UnTrained
(0) 2008-07-29 0:43
Ciao Paolo,
this one is the right addition for mine or mine for yours. Good framing in panorama format for that fast motion and fine blue and red colours also. Thanks for the history of kites, I thought this was a newer invention.
Lieben Gruss, Ulf
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Paolo Motta (Paolo)
(40753) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2007-08-20
- Categories: Daily Life, Transportation, Decisive Moment
- Camera: Nikon d40 dslr
- Exposure: f/5.6, 1/2000 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2008-07-09 2:50








