Door Breeze Results

MoWind has posted the results and a couple reports from last summer’s Door County Windsurfing Regatta in Ephraim.

Long Drive Worth While

Check out this review by a man who traveled from Ohio to enjoy the 2008 Door County Wind Surfing Regatta in Ephraim.

Door County Kite Boarding Video

Chris Miller, one of Door County’s most avid kite baording enthusiasts, has posted a video showing some of the wicked air and great wind there is to ride in Door County.

An Outdoor Attitude in Door County

Efforts grow to increase county’s active elements

By Myles Dannhausen Jr.
This article was originally published in the Peninsula Pulse in July, 2008.

Twenty eight year-old Coloradan Chris Kates meets his Washington D.C. based brother Zack, 33, each July at their parents’ place in Ephraim. They’ve been doing so for 25 years, and though they acknowledge the scenery is fantastic, they’re not interested in just sitting back and soaking it in from the shore.

“Every time we come, it’s nothing but watersports,” Zack says.
They’ve been wind surfing for 15 years but also own kayaks. They were launching in Ephraim July 2 when Zach was trying to sum up the draw. On cue, a kayaker paddled lazily along the shore, unknowingly providing all the illustration necessary. “How can you beat that?” Zach said as he looked on in envy.
The Kates brothers are just two of a growing population of Door County visitors who’ve found the peninsula a haven for increasingly edgy recreation, a trend flying in the face of the peninsula’s gray-haired, sweat-free reputation.
For decades the cherry served as the undisputed symbol of Door County, the ripe red fruit beckoning to visitors, summer job-seekers, and marketers throughout the region. But as the prevalence of orchards has dwindled to a fraction of its once grand stature, new images have risen to the fore. Kayaks strapped to minivan roofs, mountain bikes departing for Peninsula State Park, and kites flying high above Baileys Harbor are becoming ever more common signs of summer to a new generation.
Today’s travelers are seeking more than quaint visual stimuli, seeking out ways to engage with destinations through education and activity as never before. Bob Dickson, owner of the Shallows Resort in Egg Harbor, has recognized the need to attract a different visitor.
“You always have to reinvigorate the guest base,” he says, cognizant of the fact that Door County’s visitor base has been getting older for the past decade. Dickson is president of the Door County Silent Sports Alliance, a group formed last year with an aim toward improving access to outdoor activities and raising the county’s profile as a destination for active, challenging recreation.
Dickson said the group was sparked by a desire to improve ski trails in the county’s five state parks, but has expanded to include the promotion of kayaking, road and mountain biking, hiking, and all manor of outdoor activity, a rapidly growing industry and an ever-larger factor in attracting tourists.
“Don’t we want to attract the younger, more active visitor?” he says. “Those are certainly the people I’d like to attract to the Shallows.”
The alliance is trying to partner with the state parks to enhance skiing opportunities in the winter by expanding trails, improving equipment, and providing volunteer opportunities for grooming.
“The winter season is totally under-utilized,” Dickson says. “We need to get Door County to go grow a reputation as a place for good skiing.”
The peninsula has the assets to improve its standing, he says, but the access to amenities and the quality of existing trails has to be enhanced, then it can be marketed to a much greater extent.
“Look at our neighboring states are doing to promote mountain biking and skiing and you see we are way behind in Wisconsin,” he says. “With five state parks in Door County, why can’t we be among the best places to go?”
In 2000, Stein Gabrielson brought kite boarding to the county en masse, giving lessons and demonstrations on the Ephraim shore. It wasn’t long before people started catching on to the latest way to enjoy Door County’s geographic good fortune.
“Door County has the best wind in the state,” says Gabrielsen, owner of Door County Surf and Kite Club. Baileys Harbor has become a Midwest mecca for kite boarders, where on a windy weekend hundreds of cars can see the kites rise above the shore off Anclam Beach as they enter the village, enticing them to stop and check it out rather than pass straight through.
Gabrielsen says there are more than 20 places on the peninsula to go, ranging from beginner level to expert. He isn’t giving away all his favorites, but says young kids can get up on a surf board at Ridges Beach, while adults can kite surf and board in Ephraim, Rowleys Bay, and several other great spots.
The major reason the sports have grown, Gabrielsen says, is the lowering level of risk involved for the novice.
“The equipment has finally evolved to the point where it’s a lot safer to learn and do,” he says. “From the design of the boards to even the design of the life jackets. It’s much easier to learn, and more people are doing it so there’s an infrastructure of support.”
In short, “it’s gone from a fringe, wild sport to a mainstream, safe sport.”
Dickson and Gabrielsen emphasize increasing access as the next step in generating a new clientele for Door County.
“The best thing we can do is enhance the beaches, carve out a couple more spots, truck in a couple loads of sand,” Gabrielsen says. “People don’t go to Vail for the mountains and snow. They go because Vail has provided access to the mountains and snow in terms of ski lifts, lodging, good restaurants and services. If we build a skateboard park we’ll see massive growth in a different type of tourism.”
Dickson said a lot of work needs to be done to educate the public and especially local government on what silent sports are and what they can mean to the local economy is a big part of the group’s efforts.
“We have to let them know what a minimal environmental impact a sport has,” Dickson explains. “And in this day and age when gas is so expensive, silent sports are self-powered, green recreation.”
Forming the Silent Sports Alliance has given an often disparate group of activities a common voice. The group has already provided meaningful input to the Door County Comprehensive Plan, the Transportation Consortium, and the Egg Harbor Road planning in Sturgeon Bay.

Kiteboarding the County

By Allison Vroman

When people envision extreme sports, Door County usually is not the backdrop in their brain; however, there is a group of individuals who have rejuvenated the notion of what Door County could be.

No longer just the picturesque surroundings for fine dining, art galleries, and antique shops, this crew has found a new vitality in the natural resources by hitting the water and tapping into the power of the wind. Kiteboarding – the next craze in water sports – has found a niche in Door County’s splendor.

The sport of kiteboarding, or kitesurfing, made its debut in Door County in the summer of 2000, a year after the sport’s first-ever World Championships were held in Maui. Steinerik Gabrielson, a windsurfing instructor and lifeguard known by many throughout the county simply as Stein, was covering the 1999 event for a windsurfing magazine. Pros at the event convinced Stein to take a chance and make the switch from windsurfing to kiteboarding, realizing the need for quality instructors to promote the potential of the sport, but also to heed its inherent risks. For perspective, a 12-meter kite (considered a mid-sized kite) has as much surface area as the sails on a 15-foot Precision sailboat, a boat with a 450-pound hull and the capacity to carry five passengers.

Even though the sport of kiteboarding could be considered in its stages of infancy, its history runs deep. The use of kites for transportation dates back all the way to the 13th century when both the Chinese and the Polynesians utilized kites to propel their canoes and barges throughout the Pacific Rim. Since those crude configurations, many have experimented with kites as a mode of transportation over land and water. George Pocock, a British inventor, used groupings of kites in the early 1800s to pull carts and boats, shattering all land and water speed records.

In 1977, Gijsbertus Adrianus Panhuise of the Netherlands patented a device which prefaced the notion of kiteboarding today. His idea was a water sport whereby a pilot stands on a floating board, similar to a surfboard, and is pulled by a wind-catching device of a parachute nature that is tied to his or her harness on a trapeze-type belt. Although Panhuise’s system never reached the commercial realm, people continued to experiment with the concept.

Kiteboarding emerged onto the worldwide scene in 1996 with the help of two professional windsurfers. Laird Hamilton and Manu Bertin showcased the sport to other ardent windsurfers, radical wake boarders, gnarly surfers, frenzied media, and awe-struck bystanders on Maui’s North Shore. Hamilton and Bertin’s display opened up the possibilities of what could be achieved with kites and cracked the pre-conceived ideas of their limitations. The two harnessed the abundant power of the wind and sparked the kiteboarding revolution.

After trying kiteboarding and developing an instant affinity Stein decided he would come back to Door County in the summer of 2000 to teach the sport to his friends. The perfect place to begin in Door County was Baileys Harbor; its shape provided a cocoon-like learning environment on days with a south wind. After launching from Anclam Beach, even if someone crashed their kite in the middle of the harbor and could not get it re-launched, they would eventually wash up somewhere along the beach of Baileys Harbor rather than floating all the way to Michigan.

Luke Peterson was the second person to take up the sport in Door County. From an outsider perspective, it might seem that finding the time to fit kiteboarding in would be difficult – with a wife, two children and a successful tile art business, extra time is hard to come by. On the contrary, Luke says, “Kiteboarding reminded me of skateboarding as a kid.” It is the type of sport that completely captivates a lifestyle. Each weekend Luke and his family come up to Door County and spend their days on the beach.

After Stein and Luke, it did not take long for kiteboarding to engulf others in the county. Essentially five years after making its first appearance, there is a core group of around eight kiteboarders who consider Anclam their home beach. When the wind is blowing, one can almost see the anticipation in their eyes, a sparkling reflection of their eagerness to be out there ripping it up rather than at their respective jobs throughout the county.

The word spreads via one cell phone to another when the wind is coming out of the south. Soon, the whole gang has arrived at the parking lot, their vehicles decked out with gear, the beach dotted with kites, and the sand draped with lines. The mood is, on the surface, almost as pure and simple as ‘the wind is blowing – today is a good day.’

They work together to safely launch each other’s kites, allowing and encouraging the physics of the bobbing and weaving, swooping and looping, dancing and dipping in figure eights to propel them across the water’s surface. The candy-colored kites aid the ability to effortlessly clear air space as large as the latest and greatest SUV. Their stunts and maneuvers seem to defy gravity as if they were meant to be floating in the clouds since birth.

Not long after the first kites peek above the treetops in Baileys Harbor, spectators start to arrive. They sit in their cars with binoculars perched upon their noses or walk the length of the jetty to get a little closer to the action. Onlookers cannot help but feel the passion and intensity that takes over; it is a sport that one truly has to respect whether a bystander or participant.

Kiteboarding is not for those who simply want to see if they like it. Even if one has the $1,500 to shell out for a beginner set-up including a kite, a board, a harness, lines and a bar, a lifejacket, and a helmet, the sport requires a certain mentality. Most kiteboarders would agree it takes at least a full season before anyone should go out on their own. Chris Miller, a 22-year-old kiteboarder was hooked on the sport in 2003 – a year he never even strapped a board to his feet and hit the water. He spent his time at the beach in July and August learning on a trainer kite, sometimes flying the kite for two or three hours a day, three to four days a week. “Now I can fly that kite without even looking, simply by feel.” Even after gaining the valuable time and testing their skills on the water, kiteboarders can still have accidents. Luke Peterson explains, “Everyone has their own little story [of a near disaster]…It’s entirely up to you when you’re out there.”

Where the future of kiteboarding lies is hard to tell – a sport still so fresh to the world scene and even greener in Door County. While the band of kiteboarders at Anclam Beach would love to see the peninsula become a destination in the Midwest for the radical sport, the prospect is also a reason for apprehension. The last situation any of them would want to happen would be for a flippant outsider to come in and blemish their standards of integrity and safety. The core group of kiteboarders truly appreciate Door County for the harmony of its wind and water and want nothing more than for others to appreciate them not just for their showmanship, but also for their ardor and virtue within this extreme sport.