Flying Experience
My first time flying the freestylist was after a chat with Jon Trennepohl about it and straight out to the beach. The winds were in the 13-15mph range and my first impression was based on the heavy pull of the kite. On the edge of the window there was a lot of fun to be had. Watching some other fliers do tip stabs on rooftops certainly was a treat. Later the next day as the winds came down it was a lot clearer how nice of a kite the Freestylist is to fly.
There's something relaxing about the Freestylist. During a 540, while the kite cleanly and flatly rotates, you don't lose feel on the lines like with many kites. I completed neglected to try any "advanced" tricks for the first 2 days of flying the kite. It was so much fun just to do cascades, 540's, yo-yo's, axels and simple groundwork. No struggle with the kite to get a clean trick.
As later outings came I began going on with the various tricks out there today. I was very pleasantly surprised to see how easy the kite wapdowaps. You can pull off very 'dirty' wapdowaps and the kite will exit cleanly. Yo-fade and crazy copter are not easy, but they are doable. Backspins are great and can be thrown in reverse without much ado. Tip stabs and 2-point landings are clean and elegant and jacob's ladders roll form position to position with grace.
The one thing that I noticed, is the comete is very hard to execute on the Freestylist. With good execution the positions are choppy and sometimes under-'rotate'. On the other hand the torpille is very easy to execute.
I enjoyed flying figures in lighter winds more so than with other standard kites. There is still a good feedback on the lines and the kite does not become squirrely or unmanageable like many kites do as the wind comes down. I personally get bored very quickly if I'm not practicing tricks or relaxing and tricking, but with the freestylist I very much enjoyed flying the kite. This is even with it's reputable tricking abilities. |