Why I Love Dead Onshore with Surf.

Yeah.  Incredible session yesterday.  The airport reported 32 G 41  at 5 pm.  Really solid wind.  Dead onshore at Jetties.  The North Shore can get very fun with these conditions if you can handle it.  I mean seriously.  I used to cut it off when the airport said gust to 34.  The following day continued with more of the same but in the “reasonable” zone.  Solid 9 but of course the surf was backing down as the wind decreased.

Water Tower Beach

Water Tower on a North East

As you know the whole North shore of Nantucket can fire off some pretty fun, punchy surf on any northerly direction.  But by the very nature of on-shore wind that type of surf is usually pretty blown out and mushy.  That doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of excellent, critical moments. You just have to work for it.

I like to set up above where it is breaking and troll back and forth in the rollers.  I’m looking for a wave that could develop into something good closer to the beach or the sandbar.  Being regular foot I like to surf with my right leg back so I’m cutting across the waves on port tack pretty perpendicular to the direction of the waves.  Basically I’m looking for a wave that I can get a couple of three casual turns on and hopefully get in position to be at just the right place at the right time.  Its going to jack up and break somewhere along the line and by turning on it while it is rolling in I’m increasing the likelyhood that I will be there at that critical moment and get one nice hack.

The other method that I love requires less patience.  It requires that you can make a really tight, snap turn right at the top of the wave, just before it goes critical.  I’m sailing along just along the edge of the break on port tack, pinching up and just looking for anything starting to jack up.  When I pick my wave I pinch right up into it and make a quick, snap turn at the top.  Its a turn with no carve, basically just switching the direction of the board 180 degrees and whipping the kite across.  Now I set my toe-side edge and check my options for what to do next.  If the wave is healthy I can just ride down the face toe-side.

If I look over my shoulder and it seems to be going left I can drop straight down, carve a tight, backside bottom turn and get a solid backside hack at the top.  This has been the most common scenario in the recent run of North days at Jetties.  Sometimes your timing isn’t perfect and you are just going off some whitewater but its all good.  The thing here is that it is pretty easy to do all your turns tight and stay really close to the wave.  This is important because the good, critical sections appear and disappear really quickly and you have to be on it.

The last option is available when it looks like the wave is healthy and moving to the right.  Drop straight down and carve your front side bottom turn and then just wack the heck out of whatever is jacking up in front of you.  The trick part here is not carving your bottom turn too wide and having a hard time getting back to the wave in time.  Its on shore wind so its pushing you away from the critical section and the front side bottom turns tend to be a lot more drawn out in front of the wave.  But it is so worthwile when you get that perfect front side hack.

So onshore wave riding is all about putting yourself in the right place at the right time.  I guess all wave riding is like that but with on shore the good opportunities tend to just pop up and then dissapear and the trick is to anticipate where this is going to happen and position yourself accordingly.  But if you do you will get tons of quality hacks from what looks like just a bunch of mush.

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Cool Video

http://www.naishkites.com/2012/s02e01-xlr8

Jesse Richman at One Eye for the pro wave event there.  I read about this in Kiteworld.  Insane wave.

They should have shown some of the riding from the contest.

http://www.jesserichman.com/index.html

 

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Naish Momentum (2012) 136 – Out of the Box

Looks Sick

Naish Momentum 136 top view. Nice straps.

New Twintip, Naish Momentum 136cm x 43cm.  First one for a few years.  Prior to this I have had 143 sessions on my Nobile 666 135 x 44 which was my first wide twin tip.

This board looks really nice.  The first thing I noticed was that it is pretty thick. It is noticable thicker than other twin-tips I am familiar.  When I say thick I mean it has noticeably more sidewall than I am used to.  It is a bright neon yellow also so it stands out.

The quality is high as I was expecting.  It came mostly put together so there wasn’t really any thing to do except put in the fins.  They were nice quality and I’d say about 5cm.  They are set pretty far out on the side of the board.  Everything good.  The foot beds are nicely contoured and I like the way the strap tightens.  You pull up from tabs on both sides of the strap and then lay one across the other and it secures with velcro.  The footbeds are shaped to your feet.  I was a bit concerned that they wouldn’t work well with boots.  I just got my first session on it and it wasn’t a problem. That said, I really can’t wait to ride this board without boots.  I think it will be really comfortable.

Wide sidewall on Naish Momentum

On the water the first word that comes to mind to describe the ride is “smooth”.  The hype is that this board will help you land your tricks better.  I don’t know about that but I will say that landings are much smoother and softer than other boards I have ridden.  There is something about the landings from tricks and jumps that just felt softer and more controllable.  The board is able to absorb the landings in some way.  Its wide and thick and I think that helps.

I also noticed a really nice ride through chop.  Again I would call it “smooth”.  I generally liked the board in all ways and had a really nice session.  It was pretty solid 12 and really good flat water.  I’d say that it was a perfect setup for this board considering its hype and its freestyle cred.

The only problem I had was that I wasn’t feeling excellent on sent jumps in flat water.  I think it was a timing thing and I’m sure I will work it out.  I found the pop decent but I was expecting better.  I think I just have to get a bit better.  But all in all I think I will get many good sessions on this board.

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Naish Kiteboarding TV – Season Two

They just posted the trailer for season two of Naish TV.  Looks sick like last year.  Nice.

Season 2

Season 1

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Best February on Record

Due to abnormally warm weather and pretty decent wind this February was my best on record for as long as I have been keeping track.  8 sessions with three Ocean days.  Two of them were killer and I missed a couple as well.  Plus I pulled out of Nantucket for the last week of Feb for vacation and didn’t bring my stuff so I probably missed a couple of days.  Could have gone over 10 days in February.  Nice.

Prior to this year 2011, 2007 and 2004 held the mark with 5 sessions.  So I am hoping this bodes well for the season.  Come on March!!

Not February but Quality Ocean

Not February but Quality Ocean

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Naish Park 9 – 2012

Notes on the Naish Park 9. A very nice 4 line kite with short bridles and 3 struts. It pumps up very quickly and once inflated, its profile looks exactly like a “c” style kite with a pretty deep canopy and bunt wingtips. It looks cool in the sky. Mine is red and black and one half of the kite displays some cool tiki god logo that you can see from the beach. It looks high performance and yet classic at the same time. Its nice.

Naish Park 9

Naish Park 9

My first few sessions I was surprised by how light the bar pull was. I felt like I might be underpowered but I was riding fine. It could have been a little light. But I think the bar pressure is less than my Torch or Helixs. Still it is very snappy and responsive. Its a modern kite with a great bar setup and handles well over powered. I think it is best at riding in the surf and I’ve had my best h feeling where it is in the surf. Good jumping and control during fight. These are the most noticeable performance characteristics that I have noticed so far. It whips nicely out of downloops but I haven’t looped it too much to speak on it. I haven’t unhooked yet either.

The Naish Park 9 rips it in the surf

The Naish Park 9 rips it in the surf

The Park has the solid, bomber construction that I have come to expect with Naish equipment. the octopus inflation system is still the best one pump system I have seen. This is the first Naish kite I’ve gotten with a stopper ball in the inflation valve of the main bladder. A good improvement. Of course it has the normal disadvantage that every 4 line kite has for self landing but it also has a real noticeable simplicity about it that I think makes it a really nice all around kite. I’ve only got 18 sessions on it since October but I like it so far.

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First Look – Naish Global 5’5″ 2012


After waiting more than two months I received my new board two days ago. (Naish Global 5’5″ 2012) Promoted by Naish as its all-around, high performance surf board, it looked good on-line and I thought it would be a good board for the more aggressive surfing I’ve been trying to get into lately.

The “out of the box” experience was excellent. It comes in a tight travel bag which unfortunately only fits when the fins are off but seemed to cut down on the amount of plastic packaging. The board looks sweet. Its got a wood grain look to it with a bold Naish logo on the nose. The rails are black and you can see the carbon weave through the top-coat. It looks really nice.

My first thought was that the shape is a little narrower than I was expecting. This is possibly because I’ve been riding the 5’2 fish lately. I didn’t compare then side to side yet. I was also suprised because the rocker line is really flat and even the nose flip looks minimal. Once I got it all set up and sat with it a while I got used to it and I’m stoked to get a day on it. It feels light even all set up. I’d like to check its weight vs other similar boards.

The fins are pretty sweet looking.

I was expecting 5 fins in the box because it has five fin boxes and can be set up as either a quad or thruster. But it only ships with 4 so out of the box you set it up as a quad. I’m not an expert so I was a bit surprised that the bigger fins go in the front and the smaller ones in the back slots. I will be very interested in how it feels on the water. I’m looking into getting a 5th fin so I can ride it thruster as well. ( I learned more about this, see the comment below) I’m sure it will rip either way but I am interested in seeing if I can notice the difference now that I am feeling more dialed in the ocean. It took me a little work to get the fins in correctly. The front edge of the larger fins extend well in front of the fin box and at first I was getting a noticeable gap between the base of the fin and the board on the leading edge. I don’t think there is a problem. I just had to mess with the way I snugged up the little barrels that hold in the fins. I think it turned out cool in the end.

All in all it looks like a typical excellent product from Naish and I can’t wait to see how it rides.

 

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Naish 2012 5 Line Bar (Shift) – Regression not Progression

I’ve got a mix of 4 and 5 line kites and I go back and forth.  I love the performance of my C kites and the utter reliability of the fifth line in solo situations.  On the other hand my 4 line bridle kites have helped me take my ocean kiting to a higher level and the simplicity of the 4 line bar is a benefit.  So I see both sides of the issue and acknowledge the valid points but what I don’t go in for is the “4 line kites have more depower” line of argument.  Depower is primarily in the bar setup, not the kite design.

In the past I rode Naish Torches a lot.  Its a well known and long standing C style kite on a 5 line bar.  Before that I had a bunch of C kites on 4 line bars as well, but there’s no reason to delve into ancient history.  Going back 5 years is enough to see the clear link between bar throw and overall kite depower.

I had a 12 Torch and its bar had a chicken loop line that was normal at the time.  About a foot of throw before the stopper ball with a depower strap above the bar.  When it was windy and you pushed the bar away it would often “max out” against the stopper ball and that was it for your depower.  I used the depower strap a lot to tune the kite but at a certain point, in a gust, you would use all your depower and then just have to dig hard on your edge and ride it out.

This was a little after the introduction of the 4 line Best Waroo, the first “bow kite” that was really popular in my area.  It was known as having its “unlimited depower” which was attributed to its new style design.  So the prevailing wisdom was “C” kite – grunty and hard to manage, “Bow” kite – unlimited depower and smooth performance.

Then later that year I got a 9 Torch and it came with a different type of 5 line bar.  It had a much larger throw on the chicken loop and its depower line was under the bar.  All of a sudden the 5 line kites had dramatically more depower.  A never used the depower adjustment any more and I haven’t really used it since.  Naish came out with retrofit kits for older 5 line bars to replace the chicken loop assembly.  It was a clear step forward in kite performance that had nothing to do with the design of the kite.

For the past three years, when I was visiting California a lot, I got a couple of RRD Type 9s for my West Coast quiver.  They are bridle kites but the bar that came with them was similar to the Naish bar I described above.  About a foot of throw on the chicken loop line with a stopper ball at the end.  And the result was the same limited performance.   On the west coast I mostly sailed the ocean and you can really see it clearly there.  If you are fully lit you need a lot of push away on the bar when you are doing your bottom turn. If you max out on it you can easily get pulled off your line and then not get set up correctly for your top turn. I always thought there was something that wasn’t right with those kites, although I had a lot of good sessions on them.  Then I brought them home to Nantucket and started riding them on Naish 4 line bars with more chicken loop throw and again the performance improved dramatically, especially in the ocean.  More evidence that the extended depower comes more from the bar design and less from the kite.

2011 vs 2012 Naish 5 Line Bars

Note the plastic coated chicken loop line with stopper ball on the 2012. About a 1 foot throw.

So I was very surprised when I unrolled my new 2012 Naish Shift 5 line bar and found that they had gone back to the old style setup.  The new bar is nice in every way but instead of the longer, double rope for the chicken loop line, it now has a one piece, plastic coated line with about one foot of travel and a solid stopper ball at the top.  I rigged it for the first time on a building 12 day on the ocean with my Torch and as the wind picked up I became more and more frustrated with the kite’s performance on the new bar set.  It was as I described above, you are making your bottom turn and you max out on the bar depower, then you get slightly pulled off your line and aren’t set up properly for your top turn.  Its nothing you can’t live with and work around but you know it isn’t optimal.  I was very surprised, shocked really that they changed the design like that.  To me it is a step backwards in performance.  The only reason I can think to do it is that they wanted to go back to a plastic coated chicken loop line because the non-coated lines were wearing through really quickly.  Its true.  I replaced the line on my last 5 line bar after half a season and it was even quicker on my new 4 line bar.  That one needed a new chicken loop line after only two months of hard riding.  So I can understand that people were probably complaining about that, especially when the replacement lines are like $45 or even more if you have to replace the whole chicken loop assembly, which I think costs around $125.  But you can’t go backwards in performance.  And once you’ve had it good you aren’t going to ride your 5 line kites that way.

I was pretty upset about it because a new bar costs almost $500 and it made one of my favorite kites pretty much un-rideable.  But we got it worked out. I wrote to Real Kiteboarding where I had bought the thing and they communicated with Naish and they send me a replacement line and swivel connector from last year and it seems to have all gone back together pretty nicely.  The actual chicken loop is the same on the 4 and 5 line bars, but on the new 5 line you don’t use the cleat because the depower adjustment is above the bar old school style.  But that makes it pretty easy to replace the chicken loop line and the connector to the flying lines and you are pretty much back in action with about 50% more bar through I would estimate.  Naish says that when you do that you have to move the back lines down one knot at the bar connection.

I haven’t had a chance to test it since I re-rigged it but it all looks good.  Hopefully it will fly right as well.  I think it will.  Thanks a lot to Tommie at Real Kiteboarding and his contacts at Naish for working with me to get it back to good.

 

 

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Seeking Content Creators and Editors

NantucketKiteboarding.com is looking for original content creators and editors to post on the site.  If you are into kiting on Nantucket and have an interest in posting Sesh Reports, News and Weather Reports, Photos or whatever please let me know.  Original content is preferred but reposts of Kite news and info is cool too. Register on the site and e-mail me at sky@ackisland.com.  Thanks.

Point Huck

Point Huck

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Quality Surf Session

When I checked Tom Nevers first thing in the morning it had the feeling of a sailing day.   It was sunny and the surf looked decent.  Dark blue corduroy sets and the foam was bright bright white.  Dead side wind and the tops were just being blown apart.  The sand was blowing down the beach low and hard.  My dog could barely walk into it.  He was sand encrusted when we got back to the truck.  The thermometer said 33.  I wasn’t sure if it was going to happen or not.

Small on the Inside

Small but fun on the Inside

Around 1pm when my window was opening I was driving to the bank and then to the beach.  My truck thermometer was bouncing around 39 – 40 – 38.  Whatever.  When I got to the beach it looked awesome and nice and sunny.  The sand was blowing around as I was rigging and I was thinking that I should be putting up 7 instead of 9 but it turned out ok.  I was pretty over at first but then it settled down a bit.  Later I checked the airport and it said 30 G 36 for that time period so I have to say my 9 handles pretty nicely for being that much over.

I am so happy with the surf conditions and the sessions I have had since the fall.  I’m really feeling comfortable on the ocean and my top and bottom turns are coming together nicely.  The hardest part no doubt is flying the kite properly through your bottom turn.  You are basically sailing towards the kite and it tends to slack the lines but you really need to stay powered up to stay ready for your top turn.  So it really takes timing and I also think that a good kite really helps.  What a great winter it has been so far.  I hope it continues.

South Shore

South Shore

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