From: nlameqqb@ibmmail.com Subject: Ben's Fano experience Date: Fri, 21 Jun 1996 01:24:01 -1000 Organization: Division of Applied Sciences, Harvard University Message-ID: <199606211124.HAA12023@endor.harvard.edu> This is what I experienced at Fano '96. WARNING! ==> 126 lines! We, 8 Dutchies, left on sunday the 9th and just made it to the boat we reserved in time (10 minutes) after an 8 hours drive. At the Feldberg family camping we met the other 14 Dutchies. Monday was a beautiful day with sun and warm. I had a big tractor-tube with me of about 1.75 meter in diameter when filled. We had the plan to go on the water with it and let us be pulled by a kite. So a friend and myself put our wetsuits on and walked as far as possible as we could into the sea, which was quite a distance. This day the wind was coming from South-West-West direction with about 4 beaufort. We tried several positions in the tube to get the right balance for creating speed. It must have looked like we handled several chapters of the Kama Sutra before we felt comfortable to go for it. He laid flat on his stomach while I was poking my knees in his back to put as much weight on him as possible to prevent him from slipping off the tube. He steered his Quad competition downward and off we went...for a few seconds. The tube was making too much water causing enormous resistance and he was just pulled off while I fell in the centre of the tube. He bodysurfed back to the shore and that was the end of the tube-experiment. Later it did work on sand I skidded across the sand while restraning myself in the centre of the tube. I am going to make a bottom on the tube to created more surface and hope that that will create more lift on the water. Made quite some distance by buggy that day and made a lot of fun buggying into the water as fas as possible. Tuesday was about the same weatherconditions. A little colder though. I buggied as far to the south as possible. I started about 150 meters from the entrance to Norby-beach and finally stopped 11 kilometers more to the south. By then the original beach had stopped and went into a landscape I have never seen before. All around me there was something which can be best described as dry sea. The tide was out and there was nothing but pools of water and little hills of a few centimeters high of which seaworms came out. That landscape went on till the horizon where you could see a few silhouets of people walking off off the earth There was no kite or other buggier in sight a that time as I stood still for a moment to absorb the immenseness of this outerspace-experience...or in other words..WOW! Then I realized that if something would happen to my kites or buggy I would have to walk back the distance and I speeded back. As soon as I had returned to the 'camp' a thick fog came rushing in from the sea. Everything vanished out of sight. I saw buggiers flying with nothing but lines as it seemed and if that was not enough...out of the mist came a herd of COWS over the beach. By that time everybody stopped and went to their dinners. Wednesday we had strong winds from the North-West and lots of fun but the real exiting thing was my first night-buggy-experience. In the evening we went to a meadow nearby our camping to fly with our rev's but the wind was gusty so we went to the beach instead. There was even more wind than during the day. There was also a seven-man-team flying a ballet which was nice to see. It was actually two teams just having fun together. We decided to race back to the camping to get our buggies. It all went fine and we were speeding over 50 km/h on a pitchblack beach. We hadn't prepared for nightbuggying so we had no lights anywhere. I realized that this was dangerous as cars drove onto the beach to drive back to their hotels and they were speeding because they didn't expect anyone on the beach. I taped a big flashlight onto the buggy. Not to see but to be seen! Just as we decided to stop it started to rain. We returned to the camping at half past one where some worried people could finally go to sleep after waiting up for us. We drank some drinks to celebrate this successfull adventure before going to sleep. Great experience..almost madness. Thursday was another day with high winds. The wind direction was not ideal but with one Speedwing super I managed to get a speed well over 60 km/h. Because I am more confident with this relatively small kite I overtook a lot of buggiers with bigger kites. As they were holding their big kites higher to stop from drifting, I would turn another loop and get more speed. At 5 p.m. most of the gang went back to the camping in preparation of the official opening there. I wanted to break my previous speedrecord of 70 km/h and stayed longer. I took a speedwing progress and went for it. I looked up a flat terrain leading to the water where the sand was at its hardest. First try...66 km/h. On the soft sand part I was well into 50 and when you come onto the hard part you can accalerate further untill you reach the water. Second try...69 km/h. Shit!...1 km short of the record. When you drive well into 60 on soft sand it feels very fast but when you then come onto hard sand you suddenly go much faster but you don't noticed it because it drives more comfortable. Ok..one more try and then I stop, I thought.. Third try...speeding...onto hard sand...loopings..acceleration...big urn to stop..I looked at my speedometer and I couldn't believe it..it said 84! 84 kilometers per hour! Holy smokes! I gave a cry and jumped up and down on an empty beach. The reactions were all enthousiastic. I made pictures of my speedometer for proof. Just hope my speedometer is reliable! I missed half of the opening but there were a lot of people hangin' around after the 'speech', all Germans. It seemed more a german kitefestival than a Danish one. I spoke Ken Friis Hansen earlier on the beach who lives in Jutland and is editor of kitemagazine Dragesnoren and he said that there were about 20 Dane kitefliers on the beach and he knows them all! We had the privilige to meet the other of the two lawenforcers of the island. The first one we met in Norby itself when we drove into 'town' to get some groceries with a train of six buggies tied behind the car...oops. We got a warning. This lawman however wanted everybody of the street and was just annoying everybody. Later we met the first one on the beach when we had a train of 8 buggies behind the car and then he warned us that the next time we would get a fine of 500 kroner. Also the group of Uwe Maas got a reprimande. At the opening I was looking for someone who could sell me miniature skyclaws and finally found the man who had those things hanging on the inside of his coat. Friday also a lot of wind. There was a minor incident. After I stopped buggying I laid my Speedwing flat on it's back and burried it under a lot of sand. I secured the line to the car and had lunch in the car. Suddenly we heard a sissing sounds and I saw 3 little speedwing take off and then saw a buggy flying at 2 meters altitude pass my car at 1 meter and land 10 meters further. It seemed that the sand on my Speedwing was all blown off and took off, the lines picked up the line of other speedwings and on those lines was a buggy standing! That buggy was then catapulted. Nobody got hurt by buggy, kites or lines and the only thing damaged was a broken tube of my Speedwing. Previously I only experienced that there was more sand blown onto the kites, never off. So guys..if you stop..kites flat on its stomach, not back and maybe attach only one line to a stake, car of sandbag. Maybe this is something everybody already knows but I never had trouble doing it the ol' way. Saterday was the buggyrace. 120 competitors and I was rather filming it than competing. Of course Stefan Knickmeier won and his kitebuddy with almost the same equipment became third! The combination of Elegance-ish kite and his exceptional buggy came through again. I was also pleased to see various Hawks ending quite in the front. (I also fly a train of two Hawks with coupe) At night was the auction. Big prices! Big wursten! At the rec.kiters meeting I met Robert Pudlo again who already made a smaller NASA-WING from the plan I gave him two days earlier and Rolf v. Oestergaard who forgot to bring his foto's of his new kiteski-kit. (next time) Also Emiel more or less challenged me to a buggy-race I think. (C U at Oostvoorne Emiel!) Sunday was finally the day for the one-liners! I hardly did any buggying but walked the whole beach taking pictures and filming beautiful and funny kites. Saw two guys flying two dual-line kites at the same time. The first one was a nice guys flying one kite by hand and the other with his hips! The second guy use two quadline-handles. The first sentence he said was: 'didn't you read the big artikle about me in Drachenmagazine?' and the second.:'I was voted kiteflier of the year!'......we threw up and walked on! What an c@#$&! At night we tried some nightbuggying but there was NO WIND! Next day we slept long and packed in a relaxed manner and went to the beach for another two hours before taking the boat at half past 4 p.m. I was in bed at 3 a.m. at home Spent the entire next afternoon cleaning out my car. Next year?..Maybe..it was great. I have done it, it was radical. I did everthing I wanted to do. It was everything I hoped and expected it to be. Next year is a year later..we'll see. Ben Mulder (the Netherlands) (bugs bunny on blue fender of buggy) -- Marty Sasaki sasaki@das.harvard.edu = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =