Monday, August 27, 2012
 
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Wisconsin Kiters fly high over Lincoln

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[August 27, 2012]  Saturday afternoon, kites were a dominant feature of the activities going on at the Logan County Airport during the annual Lincoln Art & Balloon Festival.

The Wisconsin Kiters Club returned for the second year to show off the beauty and excitement of kiting.

Mike Wagner, club president, said that having the kites in Lincoln both this and last year is due primarily to Jim Phelan, a popular balloonist at the Lincoln festival.

Wagner explained that he met Jim and his wife, Theresa, last year at a festival in Wisconsin. The Phelans were there with their balloon Good Greeph. Wagner said they spent time together during that festival, and then a couple of weeks later he received an email from Phelan asking if the club would be interested in coming to Lincoln.

Wagner said the club came last year and spent Saturday afternoon flying kites at the Logan County Airport. At that event, there was no evening launch because of wind conditions, so the club kept their kites up until right before the glow, and they did a kite demonstration.

When all was said and done, they were asked to return to Lincoln again this year.

This year was much the same scenario when the kiters arrived at the airport on Saturday.

At the Saturday morning fly-in, the winds had been calm and balloons had flown, but as the morning progressed, winds picked up and continued to be strong throughout the afternoon and into the evening.

Wagner said that though some may believe strong winds are good for kiting, that isn’t necessarily true.

Saturday afternoon Wagner and the other club members had several kites in the air, but Wagner said there were a lot more left in their bags in the vehicles because the winds were too strong.

He explained that with kiting, there are safety concerns just as there are with balloons. The larger kites are often anchored in the ground to keep them from getting away. If the winds are too strong, the kites can pull up the anchors and take off.

As though to prove his point, at that moment a member of the club shouted that a kite was loose, and other members took off running across the grass runway to try to catch it. Fortunately the kite encountered one of the portable lights along the runway and its impromptu journey was stopped.

Wagner said kiting is a very popular sport around the world, and there are hundreds of clubs consisting of folks like the Wisconsin Kiters who enjoy designing, building and flying all kinds of kites.

The Wisconsin club has approximately 75 member units. Wagner said the memberships in the club include all the members of a household, so, including spouses and children, the total number of people involved in the club exceeds 200.

In the United States, the two most active clubs are the Kansas City Kiters out of Kansas City, Kan., and the Wisconsin Kiters. Wagner said the membership roster for the Wisconsin club includes folks from Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Kansas.

Wagner said becoming a kiter can be a pretty expensive venture, or not. He said many nice kites have a starting price of around $25, but some of the intricate and complicated kites can run as high as $2,500.

Most of the kites flown by the club are made of a product called ripstop nylon, which is somewhat similar to parachute material. Wagner said that in the club, there are those who make their own kites, those who design them and have someone else make them, and those who purchase pre-made kites.

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He said two of the major manufactures are companies called Premier Kites and Into the Wind. He also noted that in the Wisconsin membership are Tony and Ann Killip of Galesburg. The Killips have a shop in the Galesburg area called Our Kites Fly Too, where they design and sell kites.

Wagner pointed out his own creation, Baby Bertha, a blue and white kite with long tube tails, and said it was one he had made himself.

Another member of the club pointed out a pair of legs floating in the air. The kite appeared to be a soccer player from the waist down, complete with athletic shorts, knee socks and black shoes. He explained that this is the product of a British company that specializes in making legs.

Wagner said there is a national association for kiters, the American Kitefliers Association, which holds a convention, and there are some competitions for kiters.

Competitions include sport kiting and kite building, and there are also awards for other things such as kite design.

In addition to flying their kites, once again this year the club helped fill a gap when it because too windy for the balloon launch. At a little after 7 Saturday evening, kites took to the skies and "danced" to music. The kiters manning the kites kept them in the air with two strings, one in each hand. They steered the kites into a variety of maneuvers, including swoops to the left and right, deep dives toward the ground that suddenly turned back upward and soared toward the heavens, and tight loops where the tails formed perfect circles in the sky.

At the end, the crowd, which consisted of thousands of folks Saturday, was enthralled as they clapped and cheered for the beautiful show.

In addition to all this, the club also offered an afternoon of fun for youngsters as club members taught kids how to make and fly their own kites, using basic materials like butcher paper, lightweight wood, and of course plenty of string. LDN has separate coverage of this activity in today’s edition.

Wagner said he and his wife came into Lincoln on Wednesday. They spent time in town and attended some of the activities uptown on Friday. He said they very much enjoy coming to Lincoln and are looking forward to returning next year, as they have already been asked to do so.

He also said he wanted to express appreciation on behalf of the whole club to the chamber and the kite sponsors who made it possible for the club to make the journey to Lincoln for the weekend.

According to this year's festival guide book, the sponsors who helped bring the kites to Lincoln included Advanced Eyecare of Lincoln, Farm Credit Services and Liberty Tax Service.

[By NILA SMITH]

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