Advertisement

Prepare to soar

2-MIN READ2-MIN
SCMP Reporter

People love to fly kites because it gives them a sense of what it must feel like to fly. But one sport goes further than mere imagination and lets you fly with the kite.

Kite flying has been around for thousands of years, but it wasn't until the early 1980s French brothers Bruno and Dominique Legaignoux considered using kites to beat sailing speed records.

Through the sailing enthusiasts' experiments, kitesurfing - also known as kiteboarding - was born.

Advertisement

They patented an inflatable kite, enabling kiteboarders to strap a board onto their feet, and use the power of the wind to skim the waves and even propel themselves into air.

Although it's an incredibly exciting sport, its popularity in Hong Kong is yet to take off, mainly due to the limited number of instructors and specific weather conditions required.

Advertisement

'You need a stable wind to start with - the best weather for kiteboarding in Hong Kong is an east or southwest onshore wind at a speed from 10 to 20 knots,' says Keith Tang, international kiteboarding instructor and chairman of the Kiteboarding Association of Hong Kong.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x