
You got a
favorite Kite? No, not that new one you
bought a couple of months ago – an
OLDER favorite? You know the one I’m
talking about… The one you keep hidden
in the bottom of your kite-bag - the one
you swear you’ll never sell…
- It might
be the kite you took to the beach and loaded
with line laundry for the first time –
it was Soooo pretty.
- Maybe it was your first real stunt kite…
the one you first learned to axel. Wow,
what an incredible feeling!
- It could be the one that got you into
power kiting – the one that gave your
first huge grin, and the road-rash too!
- How about the one you used in your very
first competition? You won so often you
had to “move up” the next year.
- Could it be that quad that you just clicked
with, the one you could use for rock-steady
dive-stops 2 inches off the dunes?
- Or maybe it was the kite that all the
kids and grandkids learned on - the one
that’s really “part of the family”
now.
Well, if you’re
feeling guilty about that kite – DON’T!
If we’re honest here, we’d all
tell you we have one. There’s a name
for these wondrous critters. They’re
called “Princess Kites.” Yep
– rarely flown anymore, honored beyond
all reason, and loved to death. The kite
might be a brandy-spankin’ new one,
but it might show some signs of wear too.
I’ve seen a few that are so tattered
and worn that they’ll hardly fly at
all. And we’ve all got them hidden
away… waiting… Yeah –
our kiting “Royalty!”
--- +++ ---
I bet you have
some fond memories of kiting people too!
Nope - not the folks you fly with every
weekend. And I’m not talking about
the in-laws that baby-sit the kids while
you’re flying either. Or the spouse
that says “You deserve a little time
to yourself, honey – go fly a kite,”
even though spouses like that are certainly
gems. I’m talking about the ones that
got you into the sport in the first place,
infected you with “the kite bug,”
and showed you how much fun it really was…
- Your spouse
bought a big Rokakku, three tube-tails and
a pair of spin-socks – and you flew
them together at the beach.
- An acquaintance showed you a stunt kite
and let you fly it - and you bought one
just like it the very next day.
- Your pal put you in a buggy, handed you
a foil, and said “GO!” And you
“played with the wind” for the
first time.
- The guy who showed you punch-turns, speed
controls, and stalls? And he came in second
to you in a ballet competition a year later?
- How about the quad pilot who could “paste”
it anywhere - and you could too after only
an hour’s help. Incredible!
- Maybe Dad or Grandpa just put a line in
your hand and said, “Here… Hold
this!” and you flew that diamond -
awestruck.
Good memories
– Strong memories. Memories of flying
kites. Yeah, maybe you still see some of
these folks everyday; at least we hope you
see your spouse that often. And, maybe some
of those folks aren’t around anymore
too. They all share something pretty special,
though – they helped you get into
kiting, helped in a big way. Yes, they’re
certainly your “Kiting Friends.”
--- +++ ---
Princess Kites
and Kiting Friends. Can we ever have too
much of either? Hey - can you ever really
get enough? Together, they make up a very
special part of kiting. Call it “tradition”
if you will – or maybe it’s
really “nostalgia?” In any case,
the will to care for both kites and kiting
people is strong, and it’s good and
honest to care about these things you value.
So how do we
make sure the kites and the people will
be there forever?
How do we
maintain a firm grasp on that history, that
“Heritage,” if you will?
How do we
offer our joy and delight, in both people
and kite – to our kids and their kids?
How do we
share our special “kiting” times
with our family, our friends, and our community?
Well, believe
it or not, there’s an organization
that specializes in exactly that…
Looking back, and using the past to ensure
there’ll be a strong kiting future.
It’s the only one of its kind on the
North American Continent, too. It’s
name?
“The
World Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame”
The name says
it all: the first part covers those Princess
Kites and the second part takes care of
our Kiting Friends.
--- +++ ---
Yes, it’s
a rather unique place, this museum. Like
most museums, they specialize in collecting,
documenting, and displaying stuff –
in this case, our favorite kites. But they
also offer the kiting fraternity a whole
lot more, too.
“Oh,
sure... Another museum with a few artifacts,”
you say. No, not really... Here’s
what this museum (and Hall of Fame) really
does:
- The museum
owns a unique collection of over 1500 kites
- including oriental paper and bamboo kites,
historical kites such as Paul Garber’s
Target Kite and World War II “Gibson
Girl” kites, a wide variety of traditional
single-line kites, various multi-line stunt
kites (2, 3, and 4 liners), and an excellent
collection of paper “advertising”
kites.
- Of course,
the museum displays their kites too, although
the majority of the collection is usually
in storage due to exhibit space restrictions.
Yes, the displays are changed regularly.
- The museum
also shares the archives of the American
Kitefliers Association (AKA), so they have
access to all of the AKA’s publications
- including all the “how to”
articles, the minutes and notes of meetings,
the competition rules and schedules and
results, and a whole host of AKA historical
documents.
- In addition,
the museum has acquired copies of nearly
all of the kiting magazines ever printed
in the USA - some in printed form and some
on film – so kiting’s printed
“history” is there, intact,
and available.
- The museum
doesn’t just keep printed history
either. They’re recording the “voices”
of kiting too, in a unique “oral history”
program where long-time Kiters discuss their
past contributions to the sport. Yes, the
designers, manufacturers, retailers, competitors,
and the kite innovators. Real Kite History
recorded live! These recordings are available
for study by researchers and authors, and
they offer unique viewpoints on our favorite
pastime.
- In addition,
the museum runs various “educational
programs.” They teach “kite”
classes in local and surrounding school
systems. They offer a variety of programs
for adult touring groups, local organizations,
and Elder Hostels.
- And... the
museum also offers six full-weekend hands-on
kite workshops each year.
- Finally,
the World Kite “Hall of Fame”
honors those unique individuals who have
“Made A Difference” in our sport,
by inducting new Hall Of Fame members annually.
--- +++ ---
Whew…
All right, so this “World Kite Museum
and Hall Of Fame” is really a going
concern, then? Yes, it certainly is! It’s
located in Long Beach, Washington, and is
open to the public daily.
But I guess
you’d like to know how all this relates
back to our discussion regarding “Princess
Kites” and “Kiting Friends,”
right?
Obviously,
there’s a tie between the “Princess
Kites” we love and cherish and the
museum’s kite collection. And, if
you’d like, the museum will gladly
take your “Princess Kite” and
add it to their collection – and give
you a tax-deduction receipt for it too if
you’d like.
But we should
also mention that the museum’s collection
represents our “Kiting Heritage,”
both for the USA and the world. As such,
it acts as the “keeper” of 1500
“Princess Kites” and associated
paraphernalia and documents, representing
the sport of kiting as a whole.
Well, how about
our “Kiting Friends?” All right,
I’m sure you can draw the parallel,
here too... The “Hall Of Fame”
members represent everybody’s “Kiting
Friends” – from Francis Rogallo
who invented the first controllable delta
kite back in the 40s and 50s, to our favorite
kiting pal of comic-strip fame, Charles
Schultz’s “Charlie Brown!”
(Sorry – there’s no “oral
history” from Charlie Brown.)
Yeah, Kites
and People... They’re the real substance
in kiting that we value, aren’t they!
Just enjoyable times with a kite in the
air, surrounded by good friends and family.
What could possibly be better?
--- +++ ---
Now I want
to give you sort of “the inside scoop”
on The World Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame
if you will. Oh, there’s no “dirt”
or anything like that, if that’s what
you’re thinking. Heavens! These folks
are “the keepers of kiting’s
heritage” for cryin’ out loud.
As such, they’re simply above reproach.
No, this is
something quite different. It’s just
that “The World Kite Museum and Hall
Of Fame”...
...needs your
help!
What?
Yeah, it’s
true. We need you!
Oh, Boy...
Here it comes... Another membership solicitation...
Nope –
nothing could be further from the truth
here (We’ll get to that later). This
is much more important than a membership.
The museum needs to grow, and to do that
– they need your help, pure and simple.
Let me explain,
and you’ll see what I mean...
--- +++ ---
The World Kite
Museum and Hall Of Fame got started about
fifteen years ago, and after some organizational
stuff, moved into a small single-floor “beach
cottage” in downtown Long Beach and
opened the doors to the public. The initial
donation of some 700 oriental kites started
the museum’s kite collection. Traffic
was low, and the staff consisted mostly
of unpaid volunteers.
After all these
years, the kite collection has more than
doubled in size and is stored in a space
cramped to overflowing. In addition, the
museum started collecting kiting documents
and other paraphernalia, including the AKA
archives and all those kiting magazines
and publications - so that just adds to
the museum’s storage problems.
The museum
also began to offer educational programs,
workshops, and conferences. Well, where
do you hold them? Yeah, space problems again...
Well, how about
working space then (building displays and
refurbishing kites, for examples)? And how
about office space? How about a conference
room? How about gift shop space?
Okay –
now you’re beginning to get the picture...
In fact, here’s
a truly “World Class” kite museum,
with the best collection of Japanese kites
outside of Japan, with the USA’s largest
kiting archives, and with a very large kite
collection... still struggling along in
a thousand square foot bungalow!
And to make
things worse, I suspect they’re still
struggling along with one or two paid staff,
and existing mostly with wonderful volunteers.
Nope - I haven’t looked at their budget...
I didn’t ask, and they didn’t
offer.
--- +++ ---
Well, how do
they keep going, then? Not very well, would
be my guess... but I do know a few facts
– enough to indicate the true state
of affairs.
- At any given
time, 95% of their kite collection is in
storage. They simply haven’t the room
to display any more. Yeah, the storage costs
them money.
- If they hold
a conference, workshop, or gathering –
they rent the necessary space. Yeah, that’s
pretty pricey, too.
- I suspect
lots of work is probably done out of peoples
homes, including much of the “office
work.”
- I could fit
their “office space/conference room/gift
shop” in my bathroom, for cryin’
out loud! Yeah – it’s THAT small,
THAT tiny really...
- Employee
“training rooms” and “lunchrooms”
and the like? Naw... they eat out. There’s
hardly enough room in there for a microwave.
Simply put,
“The World Kite Museum and Hall Of
Fame” has outstripped its space, and
probably its budget, too. It’s time
to either grow, get bigger and better, offering
more to the kiting community – or
resign themselves to these “limits”
the building sets.
Well, bless
the keepers of kiting’s heritage for
making the right choice. They’ve chosen
to represent us into the future. Boy, have
they chosen!
--- +++ ---
Okay, The World
Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame currently has
an expansion plan going… and it’s
a real doozy! When this campaign is done,
the museum will truly have a masterpiece
that ALL of kiting can be proud of...
They’ve
worked with Washington State and the City
of Long Beach to select a site for a new
museum. It’s a “done deal”
folks. They have their name on nine acres
right off the main entrance to the beach
– located directly between the city
itself and the Pacific Ocean!
They’ve
worked with an architectural firm. They
have a completed design, ready to go, for
a new building that includes:
- Display space
that’s more than tree times the space
in their entire current building.
- Climate-controlled
storage space for up to 5000 kites, plus
storage for additional print and recorded
archives.
- A small auditorium
for lectures and film viewing.
- A real gift
shop.
- Office spaces
and workrooms for the staff, plus some workspace
for visiting researchers.
When all is
said and done, the museum will have over
12,000 square feet of space overlooking
the Pacific Ocean. And, they’ll also
have the staff to run it!
--- +++ ---
And you know
what else? They have a pretty hefty “target”
for this Capital Campaign, too! I hope you’re
sitting down as you read this. I mean, this
is no small undertaking, here...
The World Kite
Museum and Hall Of Fame has a fund-drive
running. They’re calling this campaign:
Building a
Legacy for the Future…
and the price
tag is $3.35 million. Yep – Million!
See, I told
you it wasn’t small potatoes. No,
we don’t expect you to mortgage your
house. No need to cancel the kids’
college educations, or raid your retirement
fund, or live on cat food for the rest of
your lives either... I told you I’d
explain it. So - here’s how the museum
raises the funds:
- They stay
constantly active in the hunt for government
and Foundation Grant funds.
- They build a constituency of Kite-flying
people across the continent and around the
world.
- The constituency joins the Capital Campaign
in helping to raise funds.
- The museum will happily accept any personal
donations you wish to offer, and will work
with you if you wish to make a multi-year
Campaign Pledge.
By the way,
the museum has already raised $420,200 toward
their target, so they’re already roughly
one eighth of the way home. A large grant
came from Washington State, but there’s
also some City support, a museum building
fund, and contributions from museum directors
and a bank as well – all specifically
donated to fund the museum’s expansion
plans.
All right...
For a bunch of folks like us who usually
put a few nickels and dimes away to save
for that next new kite, the whole thing’s
kind of daunting, isn’t it? Yeah,
you’re not alone, there...
But before
you just close out of this article in dismay,
I’d ask you to consider this:
- Remember
those “Princess Kites” we all
have? Wouldn’t it be a shame if nobody
cared about your “Royalty” after
you’re gone? Maybe a little bit of
history isn’t a bad thing after all...
- And, remember
those “Kiting Friends” we discussed
way up at the beginning? Tell me –
who’s going to teach your great-grand-kids
the delights of kiting? So, do you think
calling a few great kite innovators “Our
Heroes” might help a little here?
- And what
about your Kiting Heritage? Yeah –
the history that was already there when
you got into kiting… Without a few
innovative kites and the special people
to build them, we’d all be flying
paper and pine-stick diamonds on cotton
string. Isn’t that Heritage worth
a little bit to you?
So, I’m
gonna ask you to seriously consider two
things. First, there are simpler ways raise
money than the museum’s list above.
Here’re just a few I’ve thought
of:
- Just put
a check in the mail to The World Kite Museum
and Hall Of Fame (Their snail-mail address
is shown above). For the amount, use 25%
of the price you’d planned on paying
for that kite you’re saving for. Shoot,
use 50% if you’re feeling flush...
- Instead of
eating at a fancy restaurant after the next
kite festival, buy sandwiches at a deli,
go out for pizza, or (God forbid) eat fast
food instead. Just donate the difference
to the museum, will you?
- Does your
local Kite Club host an event? Maybe you
could run an auction or a raffle on the
museum’s behalf, or set up a card
table and pass out museum Membership Forms...
- Next time
you’re out flying with your pals,
tell them about this article and ask them
for a few bucks to help out. Send in whatever
someone cares to donate.
- Last time
I heard, PayPal still worked. I expect The
World Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame would
get the money if you decided to send some
just on a whim... Try it and find out!
- I’ll
bet you have better fund-raising ideas than
I have... Think up your own ways. Send them
to me, and I’ll put them in KiteLife
and we’ll share them around a little.
The other consideration
is to think about a membership in The World
Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame. Yeah, just
think about it, that’s all... As part
of the membership benefits, you’ll
get their newsletter. It’ll be a handy
way to keep track of the museum’s
expansion plans...
Enough! I’m
done... and you? Well, all right, that’s
it, then. The Membership Form link is right
below.
Fair Winds
and Good Friends –
MEMBERSHIP FORM
- Share
your ideas in the Kitelife Forum! -
The
World Kite Museum and Hall Of Fame
112-3rd St. Northwest, Long
Beach, WA
Phone: (360) 642-4020
http://www.worldkitemuseum.com/
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As one of our regular and most prolific contributors, Dave "Geezer" Shattuck is a driving force here at Kitelife and a regular at many NW events as well as other locations throughout the year.
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