Wes,
Sorry to hear about your accident. However, I'm glad it wasn't worse (Head injury for example). Yes serious accidents are the downside to kiting, especially early on in the learning curb. If, next year, you still the miss being on the water, I'll gladly teach you how to windsurf. Serious injuries are rare if ever, and with plenty of accessible launches, you'll greatly expand your time on the water.
CM
BTW, If you're so inclined, keep the weather forecasts coming! --- On Wed, 11/18/09, wes <wes.br...@noaa.gov> wrote: |
Wes,
I am considering retiring from kiting for safety reasons. In my opinion, the sport is particularly risky when one is a beginner and then, perhaps even riskier, when one does not practice it regularly, as is now the case for me. Presumably bones get brittler with age, so that should also be another consideration.
I would imagine most permanently crippled athletes or those with chronic pain regret having partaken in the sport that injured him or her.
That said, I believe sports that require the combination of strength, aerobic intensity, coordination, and balance are usually very risky, but greatly benefit individuals as they age, assuming they avoid permanent injury. Unfortuately luck probably plays the biggest role in avoiding injury in these types of sports.
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Marcos,
I had noticed that you were no longer joining me in kiting a while back, when it was just you and me with kites. That's the first time I heard of your kitemare. What happened specifically?
Having only kited Carlyle, Creve Coeur two or three times, and the Gorge, I can say I have had too many close calls to count, including ones away from shore. I believe the sport is much riskier than we let ourselves believe. |
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The human body has 206 bones.
You have a way to go Wes.
CM |
Bones break falling down stairs, falling on ice, auto accidents and on and on. Wes, you'll have to explain the other five to convince us the broken bones were due to machismo. :-)
Let me start. As you may recall from a previous post by me, I broke my left fibula at the Gorge windsurfing a 3.8 sail one year ago Aug 30. No other broken bones before then, so 205 bones to go for me.
Rich
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