Help keep kiting access at Goose Spit
Posted: Fri Sep 27, 2013 12:08 am
Most kiters come to Goose Spit to ride the flat water of the lagoon, but some see the wind-swell rolling in on the Baynes Sound south side and want some of that too.
If the tide is middle or higher as it often is during the windy season, launching & landing on the south side of the Goose Spit park is sketchy - it's zero margin-for-error, with power lines, cars & roadway downwind and very close, well within one kite-line length.
However, if you walk a few minutes west along the beach, out of the Goose Spit park and in front of the HMCS Quadra cadet base, then no more power lines, and the road in the base is farther inland and much less frequently travelled. Note that like everywhere in Canada, below the high-tide line is public access, so the beach in front of the base is open to the public. Still a zero-margin launch in front of the base, just significantly less risky.
Now I know there are excellent kiters that never have a launch or landing go bad, but why risk it when there is a safer launch/landing spot a few minutes walk away ? If the good riders are launching and landing on the south side of the park, soon enough a not-so-good rider will try it, and some dog-walker will snap a picture of the kite in flames on the power lines or wrapped around a car ( hope he hits the safety or horizontal lofting ) and it'll be on the front page of our local paper, and kiting access at Goose could be history.
A two-minute walk is not much to ask. Why risk it ? Stay out of the red zone, launch and land in the green zone.
If the tide is middle or higher as it often is during the windy season, launching & landing on the south side of the Goose Spit park is sketchy - it's zero margin-for-error, with power lines, cars & roadway downwind and very close, well within one kite-line length.
However, if you walk a few minutes west along the beach, out of the Goose Spit park and in front of the HMCS Quadra cadet base, then no more power lines, and the road in the base is farther inland and much less frequently travelled. Note that like everywhere in Canada, below the high-tide line is public access, so the beach in front of the base is open to the public. Still a zero-margin launch in front of the base, just significantly less risky.
Now I know there are excellent kiters that never have a launch or landing go bad, but why risk it when there is a safer launch/landing spot a few minutes walk away ? If the good riders are launching and landing on the south side of the park, soon enough a not-so-good rider will try it, and some dog-walker will snap a picture of the kite in flames on the power lines or wrapped around a car ( hope he hits the safety or horizontal lofting ) and it'll be on the front page of our local paper, and kiting access at Goose could be history.
A two-minute walk is not much to ask. Why risk it ? Stay out of the red zone, launch and land in the green zone.