
Having attended the
Berkeley Kite Festival at least six times myself
since 1992, I was a bit anxious at the possibility
of missing this years event... With things working
out for me at the last minute, my kite partner Moon
and I took the trip down to experience an event
that has been one of the most consistent ongoing
cornerstones of west coast kite festivals.
Arriving late Friday
night at the Oakland Airport we met my old friend
from Berkeley, Dan Gray who took us down to the
event host Doubletree Hotel for a late check in...
And a few precious hours of sleep.
One major difference
this year was that the sport kite competition was
moved to the lower field in order to provide more
"up front" exposure of demos and displays
for the thousands of spectators that attend Berkeley
every year.
Run completely by Susan
Skinner and her BASKL staff this year, there were
40 entrants as opposed to only 30 in 2002... Despite
a premature rumor that there would be no comps at
Berkeley this year. Regardless, there were excellent
performances from quite a few loyal fliers, local
and otherwise.
On the upper field
there was a full sky thanks to Al Sparling, David
Gomberg, Dave Hoggan, Dan Whitney and others...
On Saturday they had six Takos in the air... Upping
the ante to eight on Sunday!
Also on display were
giant inflatable Teddy Bears which are always a
huge hit with the family-oriented spectators.
Talking with the Bay
Area Sundowners in Brookings OR the previous weekend,
they had asked me to join them in a six-person team
demo flying 12-stacks of Hyperkites... Not having
flown Hypers in more than a couple years, I was
a bit worried however, we ran through the routine
with sticks a couple times to get the idea and went
out to fly...
As you'll see from
the pictures in the separate gallery we managed
to avoid a tangled mess, with me dodging all over
the place and trying not to hit anyone... It really
was the best time I've had in a while, we even went
out and did it again on Sunday! A huge thanks to
Jeanette, Mark, Barry, Gordon and Ken for letting
me play on their kites... It really did feel like
a "Big Show".
With the crowds having
started coming quite early, I saw them coming into
the park in droves of 30-50 at a time... Just coming
down the street like mice to a piper! There were
so many people, you had to zig-zag through the families
camped out to get up to the sound tent! It wasn't
congested, but there were a lot of people sitting
down to stay a while and enjoy the show as well
as partaking in some some excellent food vendors.
Ray Bethell was also
on hand to demonstrate his world famous skills flying
3 kites at once... His custom red, white and blue
Kestrels were the hit of the day! He was assisted
as always by good friends Fred and Gerry Adler.
On Saturday night there
was a reception at the Doubletree with a good spread
of appetizers and the ever-present cash bar.
Although the crowds
arrived slightly later on Sunday morning, they were
back in full swing by 1 o' clock... Coming back
for more demos were the Bay Area Sundowners, Too
Much Fun, Air Zone, Ron Despojado, Avispados and
many others.
With as many kites
as there were in the air on all fields, there were
surprisingly few entanglements... Even the kids
from J.R. Tolman's kite making workshop were having
a blast!
After getting back
to hotel and cleaning up, we headed down to dock
behind our hotel where the Princess Hornblower was
waiting to take us on a sunset cruise banquet around
the beautiful San Francisco bay... With two levels
and a deck around the outside top and bottom, there
was a silent auction and some seating upstairs.
Downstairs was the primary seating, stage and a
cash bar.
Having been a part
of the Bay Area kite culture for over a decade myself,
it's always nice to see so many people having done
so much for the event for so long... There were
many sentimental thanks all around, bringing a tear
or two to say the least. One of the most notable
was a special award for Susan Skinner, who with
the Bay Area Sport Kite League devoted a great deal
of time and energy to making sure there would still
be sport kite competition at this years Berkeley.
Having taken nearly
600 photos at this event, I must have been up and
down that field a hundred times! I've picked some
of the best and included them in the photo gallery
in this issue... There will be more coverage included
in an upcoming issue of the AKA's
Kiting Magazine.
Thanks for reading,
John Barresi
Check out the separate photo gallery in this issue!
John Barresi is the editor and publisher of Kitelife Magazine, involved in the greater kiting community since 1990... He is also captain and co-founder of the Revolution sport kite team, iQuad.
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