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![]() Click for sports events Blowing in the wind Go fly a kite
A few years back, I tried flying a dual-line stunt kite at the Eiffel
Tower. It was a violently hot day and the only wind was an occasional
dry wheeze. The standard launch technique of backing the kite off the
ground by yanking the grips doesn't work in such conditions. At best,
it
stays aloft a few seconds before crashing to earth. There's simply not
enough wind.
While the Eiffel Tower may have been just for the birds, summer in
the Windy City attracts kite fliers from all over the country.
Chicago's
a natural for the pastime. But there are some unique challenges to
kiting in the city: power lines are everywhere, all the parks are lined
with trees, there are very few wide open spaces. FAA rules don't
permit
flying above 400 feet and it's rainy enough to deter fliers who know
that: even though they're flying with a cloth line, it's still
capable
of conducting electricity when damp. Nonetheless, throughout
mid-summer,
the sky above the city's lakeshore gets dotted with everything from
traditional diamond kites, four-line "quad" sport kites, parafoils
and
seven-foot Japanese Rokkakus, or "roks," octagonal kites with richly
illustrated sailcloth front panels. Occasionally an inflatable lizard
or
an octopus kite shows up floating across the ether in Astrobright
orange, as if it just crawled up out of Lake Michigan and took to the
skies, trailing tentacles of wind-whipped Mylar.
There are several kite groups in town, ranging from amateur clubs
like the Chicagoland Sky Liners to corporate-sponsored sport kite teams
like the Chicago Fire. Charlie Sotich, a member of the Sky Liners since
1982, used to spend his free time building model planes. He started
making kites in the 1970s after friends asked him to help them build
miniatures to fly at a local festival. Sotich acquiesced and made a few
out of paper napkins, usually no bigger than a postage stamp, rigged
with strips of bamboo split out of a wok brush. Miniatures are still
his
specialty. "If I come out with a kite that's bigger than 10 inches,"
says Sotich, laughing." I get made fun of." The Sky Liners were most
active throughout the nineties, but Sotich says it's been difficult to
motivate members recently. Locally, members of the Sky Liners prefer
Cricket Hill at Montrose Park though fliers grumble that "lots of
soccer
playing" interrupts their open space, a predictable bump in kiting's
relationship to a crowded metropolis.
Five or six years ago, for instance, a kiter named Dave Kennedy
helped the Mayor's Office of Special Events organize the first-ever
Kids
and Kites Festival. Even though it was an immediate hit for kids, the
event didn't pass without controversy. Held alternatively in Lincoln
Park at Montrose and at the Museum of Science and Industry, for some
dedicated fliers, Daley's contribution to kiting has been a mixed
blessing.
"It's a terrible place to fly," the 74-year old Nelson Borelli says
of the Museum of Science and Industry location. As Borelli tells it,
the
festival wasn't at all what professional fliers had in mind. After
paying airfare to fly in professional instructors to help kids build
kites and put on demonstrations, enthusiasts realized their passion for
flying was being written off as kid's stuff. "That whole festival
promotes this idea people have that kiting's just for children.
Serious
kiting can't be done by small children--it's like sailing, for
instance.
You have to follow rules, exercise patience. They distribute very cheap
kites every year."
A professor emeritus of Northwestern's Department of Psychiatry in
the School of Medicine, Borelli spun off a division of the Chicagoland
Sky Liners to focus his passion for single-line sport, or "Fighter"
kites. Borelli describes Fighter kites as "a bit of a stepchild" in
the
kiting world, at least compared to dual- or quad-line sport kites.
"Dual-liners with their stunt kites have been prima donnas," Borelli
snarls. "They buy their kites, often as much as $500 apiece, from
companies that manufacture them for competition. It's exciting because
there's money involved." Borelli builds his own kites and sees
Fighter
kiting as requiring a more intimate facility with the craft. Distinct
for their rhomboid-shape and lack of a tail, Fighter kites have two
bridles, a spine in the center and a bow across the top. "Their main
feature is maneuverability," explains Borelli. "It's a single line
that
you pull and that causes movement in the direction of the nose. Slack
in
the line causes instability in the kite and that's how you change its
direction."
Fighter kite competitions are pretty much exactly what they sound
like: originating in Southeast Asia, opponents would coat their lines
with a mixture of glue and ground glass called "manjha." Then
competitors would take to the skies a distance of a mile or so from
each
other and attempt to sever one another's line. In the American version
of Fighter kite competitions, players don't coat their lines and fly
in
much more constricted airspace, usually less than 100 feet. A judge
announces whether contact with an opponent's line will be scored from
above or below and competitions are won by accumulating points.
As a serious pursuit, the honor for the ultimate kiting locale
belongs not to Chicago, but further north. Dispelling the myth that
kiting's just a warm weather sport, Borelli cites Kites on Ice as by
far
his favorite kiting event. The festival takes place the first weekend
of
February at the University of Wisconsin Memorial Union in Madison. With
major sponsorship by department stores and airlines, kiters are flown
in
from as far away as Switzerland and Japan for synchronized, Fighter and
sled kiting on the frozen surface of Lake Mendota. Kites on Ice is the
kiting world's version of the Iditarod, without the danger of sled
dogs
devouring the corpses of their fallen masters. "It's one of the best
festivals in the world," says Borelli.
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