SkyBurner Kites and Progressive Line kites were both in
attendance with John Davis and Jon Trennepohl representing them. Jon brought some of
Goodwinds Kites' POP KANs to try and buy. Several fans of the Cube Kites were
quickly hooked. Others
got a chance to fly the NASA Para Wing that was built by
Peter de Jong, They walked away with their arms a little longer than when they started.
Club president Nels Olsen III was seen being dragged
around a reasonably
dry field in his buggy. Other highlights of the day included some friends and your
faithful, if not foolish, correspondent successfully getting MY six foot Rok out of the
ONLY tree in the huge flying field. Yes, if there is only one tree, for acres,
someone will get a kite tangled in it. And it was a lot of fun having many kiters of
various skill levels getting my errant toy untangled from the tree.
The club got many of the neighborhood kids
and parents involved by handing out "el-cheapo" plastic keeled delta kites to
all kids that showed up. A public address system played a
wide variety of music for demo flying by several talented dual line kiters. Quad
liners were also represented by the club "new-kid" Brian White. Brian can make a
sled kite from fast food bags quicker than you can eat the donuts out of his favorite
"bakery sacks". Jim Imperi kept things moving with a variety of kites in
the air, while Randy Johnson and Al Shurkey flew pairs.
The Mid-Michigan Kite Club has several meetings and "club
fly" events all year long, but this was the first event aimed at the general
public. Broome Park has soccer fields, baseball diamonds and several acres of flat
land to accommodate
hundreds of kites. This is an ideal area for flying. The
club set up a demo field and single line area to give best terrain to all forms of
kites. Several days of rain the week preceding the event had organizers anxious
about how the Michigan weather would be. The worries were wiped away by steady,
reliable winds and sunny skies. Plans for a "port-a-john" never did quite
come together. Next year, the club WILL NOT depend on the Flint Parks Board for that
necessity.
The real joy of the event was getting together with all the long
time kiters that showed up to fly with the neighborhood kids. A 20 year old Cody Box
kite was brought out of storage to show some of the things that have been flown in the
city's parks over the last 2 decades. People that haven't flown in months or years brought
out their favorites and got tangled, tanned and tired by the end of the day.
