Kiteboarding Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/kiteboarding/ Live Bravely Mon, 05 Aug 2024 18:04:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Kiteboarding Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/kiteboarding/ 32 32 国产吃瓜黑料 Sport Athletes Pay a High Price for Olympic Glory /outdoor-adventure/olympics/adventure-sport-athletes-pay-a-high-price-for-olympic-glory/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 20:13:47 +0000 /?p=2675361 国产吃瓜黑料 Sport Athletes Pay a High Price for Olympic Glory

Think Olympic medals bring you fame and fortune? Think again. For many Olympians competing in Paris, simply staying financially afloat requires constant struggle.

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国产吃瓜黑料 Sport Athletes Pay a High Price for Olympic Glory

Have you ever heard of ? The two-time world champion in canoe sprint won听Olympic gold at 19 in Tokyo. Now 22, Harrison is again a medal favorite in Paris. She鈥檚 taken a break from her other job, tending bar near San Diego, to train five hours a day for her 45-second Olympic race.

Does the name Daniela Moroz mean anything to you? She鈥檚 the fastest female kiteboarder in the world, and she won her first of six world championships when she was just 15 years old. Now 23, Moroz will be the sole American woman ripping through mistral winds off the coast of Marseille when kiteboarding makes its Olympic debut on August 4.

Familiar with Evy Leibfarth? America鈥檚 best female whitewater paddler, who is just 20, is competing in three events in Paris: kayak slalom, KayakCross, and canoe slalom. On Wednesday, July 31, she won bronze in the latter event.

These three American Olympians have the international victories and charisma to attain rock-star status in Hungary or France鈥攏ations where sports like kayaking and canoe sprint attain mainstream attention鈥攐r in countries with fewer Olympic medalists. Yet in the United States, they are largely invisible鈥攅ven during the Games. This summer they will join 589 other U.S. athletes at the Paris Olympics. No matter if they win or simply compete, they will likely be overshadowed by heavily-marketed stars on the track, basketball court, and in the pool.

Stars of lesser-known Olympic sports face challenges that mainstream heroes such as swimmers Katie Ledecky and Caleb Dressel do not. In addition to training and competing, they must run their lives like businesses, managing their own costs and logistics for travel. They must constantly seek out sponsorship and financial backing. Many grapple with the psychological burden of asking friends and family for cash, and of winning with little fanfare. This lifestyle comes without a playbook, and managing it requires creativity, hustle, and plenty of luck. Moroz, Leibfarth, and Harrison have offered a rare look at how it’s done.

I Thought It Would Be a Full-Time Job

Harrison claims gold in Tokyo (Photo: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

Victory came quickly and unexpectedly for Harrison, a Seattle native. Six years after learning to paddle at summer camp, she shocked herself by winning a world championship in the 200-meter canoe sprint at age 17. 鈥淲hat do I do now?鈥 Harrison told听国产吃瓜黑料 about the eye-popping result. Two years later, she became the first American ever to win Olympic gold in the discipline.

Canoe sprint has been on the Olympic program for men since 1936, but the International Olympic Committee only added women鈥檚 events in 2020. It takes most athletes years to perfect an efficient paddle stroke through the water. With no collegiate pipeline for up-and-coming athletes鈥攁nd scant funding鈥攖he discipline attracts few athletes in the United States.

The discipline requires explosive strength. Harrison kneels in a lunge position in a shallow boat and propels the craft with a single blade across a 200-meter body of water. She takes 90 to 100 strokes per minute, and the boat boat is so narrow and unstable that it feels like she is balancing on a tightrope. In Eastern Europe, the sport is beloved and taught in schools, but not in the United States. Harrison knew that her sport wasn’t popular, but she also assumed an Olympic gold would bring more attention back home.

After Tokyo, Harrison pursued what she called 鈥渁 real life.鈥 She moved to Southern California, bought a motorcycle, made friends, and pursued a biology degree at San Diego State University. She debated whether or not to continue competing鈥攗ltimately decided to stay in the sport. She declined to disclose how much she earned from her sport.

鈥淚 was expecting it would be like a paid full-time job if I were to win in Tokyo,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 thought there would be more financial opportunities.鈥

She did ink several deals with sponsors Deloitte, Oakley sunglasses, and Plastex boats, and she earns a monthly stipend from the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee. She supplements that with revenue from public speaking and from tending a bar near San Diego. She described her total income as “not super impressive numbers, but together it’s OK.”

Harrison has had to work part-time jobs to help her cover her expenses, even after winning gold (Photo: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

The Paris Olympics could have a major impact on her financial standing. Canoe sprint athletes target just four major international events a year, and sponsors often offer cash incentives at major races like the Olympics and the world championships, which she won again in 2022.

鈥淔irst versus fourth place determines what apartment I live in next year,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 extra pressure. It鈥檚 like: do I pay my bills or not? A medal will mean tens of thousands鈥攊f not over $100,000听in direct money you鈥檙e going to get versus not get鈥攑rimarily based on your sponsors and what鈥檚 in your contract.鈥

This summer in Paris, the USOPC will also award $37,500 for each Olympic gold; $22,500 for silver, and $15,000 for bronze. But the difference between placing third and fourth can be 0.3 seconds, as it was at the 2023 world championships, Harrison鈥檚 first major loss.

Now that she’s a gold medalist and has experienced competition overseas, Harrison has recalculated her desire for mainstream attention and fame. In Germany or Hungary, for example, she’s mobbed by fans. That’s not the case in California.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what made me realize I don鈥檛 want that level of attention in my life,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 like the every-four-years you get your time to shine, then you cango back to being a human being. I have a new level of gratitude for America not caring about my sport.鈥

CEO of Her Own Show

 

Daniela Moroz is the only American woman competing in Olympic kiteboarding (Photo: Clive Mason/Getty Images)

Moroz sometimes hits 45 miles per hour on her kiteboard, which is elevated about three feet off the water on a hydrofoil. She harnesses the power of the wind with a kite, and during a race, she must dodge other competitors and navigate buoys on the course.

When she’s not in the water, Moroz faces different challenges. She must do her own fundraising, and she manages six figures worth of expenses for competition and training. She books her own travel to competition in Spain and Oman, and also to training camps at coastal destinations where the wind is favorable. When she flies from her home in California’s Bay Area to competitions and camps, she must pack and transport a massive array of equipment: 25 kites, three boards, and five hydrofoils.

“I’m essentially the CEO,” she said. “It’s super hard, but you can learn so much.”

She’s been managing this lifestyle since she was 15 years old.

Moroz does have some help. Kiteboarding’s national governing body, U.S. Sailing, pays for her coach. Her family also chips in. During her recent training camp for the Olympics, Moroz’s mother, Linda, who is a judge for the city of Oakland, flew to France and helped cook meals and do grocery shopping for her. The meal preparation was necessary, so that Moroz could gain crucial weight during her preparation period.

But Moroz pays other costs鈥攊n 2023 she hired an equipment manager to help her oversee her gear, and she still pays him an annual salary. In 2022 she brought on an agent, who helped her attain a sponsorship with fashion brand Ralph Lauren. To help her stay sharp for kiteboarding鈥檚 Olympic debut, she hired a male kiteboarder as her training partner, and paid his travel and living costs in Marseille, where they spent more than a month preparing.

In total, Moroz said the year leading up to Paris cost her about $150,000鈥攖riple what she spent in 2021.

鈥淵ou tend to spend more and more because you鈥檙e getting more coaching, more experts, more equipment, or you鈥檙e traveling more,” she said.

The international governing body, World Sailing, contributes no funding to top athletes, and the events operated by the governing body do not pay prize money. Instead, Moroz finds other ways to generate steady income. She negotiates performance bonuses in her sponsorship contracts and relies heavily on sailing foundations to help her mitigate expenses through grants or donations. She temporarily operated a GoFundMe donation page, and also sells merchandise on her personal website.

Over the years, Moroz has learned to ask people for money鈥攁 skill that she still finds challenging.

鈥淚 really struggle with asking donors for money,鈥 Moroz admitted. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so weird. They鈥檙e getting nothing in return other than being part of your journey, kind of. It鈥檚 super-awkward to be like, 鈥楬ey, I鈥檓 in this Olympic campaign. I need $150,000. You want to give me $20,000?鈥欌

Fundraising of this nature has helped keep Moroz financially stable for several years, but it also nearly sank her career. In 2023, during the qualification process for the Paris Olympics, Moroz began to struggle with burnout. For the first time in her career, she didn’t feel like training.

鈥淲hen people are giving you hundreds of thousands of dollars of their money to check these boxes, it gets really hard to justify not training,鈥 Moroz said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not training, then what are you doing?鈥

Eventually, she talked to a sports psychologist to figure out when to take a break.

鈥淓ven now, I鈥檓 not making any money,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 happily breaking even鈥攂ecause any time you鈥檙e making money, everything鈥檚 just funneling back into the campaign.鈥

Life-Changing Sponsorship

Leibfarth is already a star in her sport (Photo: ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP via Getty Images)

Of the three, Leibfarth seems to be the most financially secure. She turned pro at age 12 and signed a sponsorship deal with Red Bull energy drink at 17, a few months before she competed in the Tokyo Olympics. Leibfarth said brand representatives began speaking with her two years before they made an offer.

The deal has reshaped her position in the sport. Red Bull pays her to endorse the brand, and also gives her access to a sports psychologist and a nutritionist. She’s also made connections with other Red Bull-sponsored athletes, from video gamers to snowboarders. She said a conversation with a Swiss BMX athlete reshaped her attitude toward the Olympics and the increased media attention that comes during the games.

“She told me to say yes to everything,” Leibfarth said.

“It’s the reason I do what I do,” she said.

In addition to training for three disciplines and attending college online, Leibfarth is training to be an emergency medical technician. Fortunately, her Red Bull contract takes care of her expenses鈥攖here’s no time to squeeze in another job.

Leibfarth is coached by her father, Lee, and grew up near North Carolina’s famous Nantahala Outdoor Center, a paddling school and guiding company. The facility is now one of her sponsors.

In Paris, Leibfarth will be the first American woman to compete in three whitewater events in the same Olympics. First, she will paddle a kayak through a series of gates on a whitewater slalom course. Days later, she will do the same thing in canoe slalom鈥攗sing a different boat and a single-bladed paddle to navigate a similar course. And finally, she will race in the newest whitewater event, KayakCross, in which four paddlers race each other down the rapids simultaneously .

It’s an arduous schedule, but competition isn’t Leibfarth’s only focus in Paris.

鈥淭here is, of course, so much media,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 love doing social media. I鈥檝e had Instagram since I was 11. I鈥檓 on all platforms, and trying to get into YouTube.鈥

The Quest for Growth

Leibfarth competed in the Tokyo Games in 2021 (Photo: Getty Images)

Leibfarth听hopes to win a medal, and she’s excited by the prospect of bringing more attention to her sport. But she knows that winning won’t overhaul the American kayaking scene.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the sport will explode overnight,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o many kids don鈥檛 know it exists. No matter how I do, all it鈥檚 going to take is people seeing it and getting inspired. This is the first step.鈥

It’s a sentiment echoed by other athletes in other sports that operate outside the mainstream. But this type of exposure alone won’t change their situation.

Harrison, who already has one Olympic gold medal, knows that growth in her sport will require more than victory, attention, exposure, and time. 鈥淚鈥檓 only one person, one athlete. There鈥檚 only so much I can do,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to completely change the game.鈥 But if she does claim gold again, she said, 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to help people try to get this sport in a better place.鈥

For Moroz to win her sport鈥檚 inaugural gold medal after grinding so hard on the business and athletic side, she would be steeped in gratitude.

鈥淚t would mean everything to me,鈥 she said. “But also to so many people who helped and, like, let me stay at their house or let me park my van in their driveway when I was training. I want to do it for them as well.鈥

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Kiteboarding on the World’s Bluest Water /video/kiteboardering-turkey/ Fri, 16 Aug 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /video/kiteboardering-turkey/ Kiteboarding on the World's Bluest Water

'Home of Turquoise'听chronicles an unnamed kiteboarder's search for the clearest water around Turkey's southwestern shores

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Kiteboarding on the World's Bluest Water

Home of Turquoise, from filmmaker ,听chronicles an unnamed kiteboarder's search for the clearest water around Turkey's southwestern shores.

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A Dedication to Movement /video/dedication-movement/ Tue, 30 Jul 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /video/dedication-movement/ A Dedication to Movement

Kiteboarder Fabian Muhmenthaler has centered his life around movement on the water

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A Dedication to Movement

Kiteboarder has focused his life around movement on the water;听this film, from听, documents that pursuit.听

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Robby Naish Knows How to Pivot /outdoor-adventure/water-activities/robby-naish-windsurfing/ Tue, 12 Feb 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/robby-naish-windsurfing/ Robby Naish Knows How to Pivot

Windsurfer Robby Naish is doing everything. Still.

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Robby Naish Knows How to Pivot

Robby Naish doesn鈥檛 know what he鈥檚 going to do today. The 56-year-old might grab his shortboard and find a lonely break off Maui鈥檚Honolua Bay. He might hook up the kiteboard and search for strong wind or windsurf Hookipa Beach. It all depends on the swell, the听wind, the weather. The听important thing is that Robby Naish鈥斺攈as options.

The first professional windsurfer, Naish听dominated the sport for two solid decades beginning in the late seventies.听He then transitioned into kiteboarding and quickly rose to the top of that field, too. Later听he helped pioneer stand-up paddleboarding, becoming one of the first people to surf Maui鈥檚听Jaws听on one. Along the way, he earned 30 world-championship titles, started his company,听Naish Sails, in 1998, and helped define what it means to be awaterman. But his ability to evolve is what鈥檚听most impressive, the way he moves听effortlessly between disciplines, always an early adopter of the next wave of board sports. 鈥淚 want to surf my whole life,鈥 Naish says. 鈥淭here will be some point where my body or mind won鈥檛 allow me.听Until then, this is what I鈥檒l do.鈥

Today, it鈥檚 not unusual for a watersports athlete to be proficient in a variety of activities;听, Naish鈥檚 prot茅g茅, is skilled at SUPing, big-wave surfing, and kiteboarding. But when Naish, inspired by new challenges and innovative technology, started picking up new skills in the eighties听and nineties, he was an oddity. 鈥淎ll my contemporaries thought I was crazy when I got into kiteboarding, but it鈥檚 been fun to reinvent myself and be involved with these sports on the ground level,鈥 Naish says. 鈥淜iteboarding was a complementto windsurfing, and so was SUP. You鈥檙e riding waves a little different, sure, but you鈥檙e still riding waves.鈥

This preternatural ability to evolve could be exactly why Naish鈥檚 career has lasted so long. Not only has he been able to stay in the thick of things competitively (he鈥檚 been sponsored by Quicksilver since 1982 and ), but he鈥檚 managed to avoid some of the physical and mental burnout that鈥檚 often associated with purists sticking to one sport. 鈥淎thletes will get to a certain point where they鈥檙e over it. They get disinterested and no longer put in the time to be competitive,鈥 he听says. 鈥淔or me听there鈥檚 no way to get bored, because the environment is always changing, and the equipment is always changing.鈥

鈥淚 want to surf my whole life,鈥 Naish says. 鈥淭here will be some point where my body or mind won鈥檛 allow me. Until then, this is what I鈥檒l do.鈥

To stay in shape for this shifting landscape, Naish听adheres to the same fitness principles he developed as a teenager. 鈥淭he modern approach to fitness is different than what I鈥檓 used to. I鈥檝e never had a trainer and never really had a set plan. I鈥檓 not into yoga,鈥 Naish says. 鈥I don鈥檛 want to go to the gym, but I make sure I do certain things throughout the day.鈥 This includes听several hundred push-ups, pull-ups, and sit-ups,听broken into five-minute sets wherever he has the time, whether that鈥檚听in his office or hotel room. 鈥淎nd I鈥檒l curl whatever desk chair is near me,鈥 he says. With some TRX work and jump-rope for cardio, Naish鈥檚 routine keeps him fit for long days on the water, regardless of what board he鈥檚 using at the time. 鈥淚t鈥檚 created a balance between the power of wind sports and the endurance of SUP. I鈥檓 probably in better shape now than when I was in my twenties听because of it,鈥 Naish says.

The latest piece of equipment to catch his听eye is the hydrofoil, a blade at the bottom of a board that raises it above the surface of the water.听The technology was first developed for the Navy in the fifties听and then adopted by competitive sailors in the seventies听and eighties, but Naish Sails and other brands are听finding new听applications for the blades, using them as a way to go faster and longer on SUPs and surfboards. Naish is most excited about the opportunity these blades present to recreational athletes. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been focused on making that gear as accessible as possible,鈥 he听says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 surprising. You鈥檒l see guys that can鈥檛 surf their way out of a paper bag get on a foil and just rip.鈥

Almost 40 years after he jumped on a board, Naish is still innovating鈥攚ithout ahint听of slowing down. 鈥淚 turned pro when I was 18听and didn鈥檛 know if it would last six months,鈥 Naish says. 鈥淚 deferred admissions to college and hoped I would get a solid year out of windsurfing. The first year ended, and I hoped I鈥檇 get another year. It鈥檚 still going like that.鈥

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A Kiteboarding Trip to Scotland /video/kiteboarding-trip-scotland/ Wed, 17 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /video/kiteboarding-trip-scotland/ A Kiteboarding Trip to Scotland

鈥業sland of the Strangers鈥 features a team of kiteboarders riding on the coast of Scotland.

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A Kiteboarding Trip to Scotland

In wetsuit company 听latest film, Island of the Strangers, their team heads north to Scotland鈥檚 Lewis and Harris island听for a few days of cold-weather kiteboarding.

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SOS in the Age of Smartwatches /outdoor-adventure/exploration-survival/sos-age-smart-watches/ Wed, 22 Nov 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/sos-age-smart-watches/ SOS in the Age of Smartwatches

As companies like Samsung, LG, Huawei, and Apple have offered increasingly sport-friendly tech, watches are becoming something more: rescue devices.

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SOS in the Age of Smartwatches

John Zilles moved to California after college for the warm weather and the promise of outdoor adventure. He fell in love with kiteboarding, and even after he had a family, the 49-year-old cinematographer always made time to get out on the water. Earlier this month, Zilles was about a mile off the coast of Ventura, in a light wind, when he crashed making a turn and couldn鈥檛 get his kite back up.

Zilles struggled for 45 minutes to fill his kite with wind with no luck.听At first, he was more frustrated than panicked. He鈥檇 been in this situation before and figured he had two hours of swimming to make it to the shore. Ditching his gear鈥攁 new hydrofoil board and kite鈥攚asn鈥檛 an option, not just because it would have been an expensive loss, but because Zilles could use the kite and board as a makeshift raft if his situation got worse. He swam for 30 minutes, and when it didn鈥檛 seem like he鈥檇 made any progress, he thought about the sharks recently spotted in the area, and then about swimming for hours and getting nowhere.

Then Zilles remembered he was wearing his Apple Watch, which he had purchased because its cell connectivity let him stay in touch with his family even without his phone. 鈥淚 can be out kiting and the kids can reach me if something goes wrong,鈥 he says. He just didn鈥檛 expect that he鈥檇 be the one in trouble.

All this connectivity brings positives and negatives when it comes to search and rescue.

As companies like Samsung, LG, Huawei, and Apple have offered increasingly sport-friendly tech, watches are becoming something more: rescue devices. Some even feature a built-in SOS button that will call emergency services. Meanwhile, third-party apps have sprung up to enhance the watches鈥 rescue capabilities. Strava lets you share your location on runs with friends so they know where you are. Similarly, but geared toward backcountry explorers, Cairn听 with selected contacts, allowing them to see your location and alerting them if you鈥檙e overdue.

All this connectivity brings positives and negatives when it comes to search and rescue.听One worry is that people might fall back on the technology, taking risks they shouldn鈥檛, or even calling search and rescue in a situation where they could have self-rescued. Lost the trail? Push the button. Robert Koester, author of the search and rescue guidebook , says there was a similar concern when satellite-linked personal GPS devices hit the market. Everyone thought it would be catastrophic for SAR because it would overload the system, Koester says. 鈥淎nd they sometimes do. But it also takes an incident where someone fell off a cliff and sets the search beacon鈥攁 rescue that might have required a four-day search鈥攖o a situation where rescuers just go and get the person,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o while there may be an increase in incidents, there will also be a decrease in personnel hours.鈥

And that鈥檚 pretty close to what happened with Zilles. A mile off the coast, he was able to dial the Ventura Harbor Patrol. He even guided rescuers directly to his location.

鈥淭rying to find a small target, like a person in the water, on a rough day like that could鈥檝e been tough,鈥 says Eric Bear, one of the Ventura Harbor Patrol officers involved in the rescue. 鈥淗e made a smart decision in deciding he couldn鈥檛 make it back into shore and calling for help. We always recommend kayakers and kiteboarders carry marine VHF radios so they can radio for help, but they rarely do. The fact that he was able to call from his watch was key.鈥

That might be the upside of technology invading every element of life these days. It鈥檚 always there when you wish it wasn鈥檛 and when your life may depend on it. 鈥淚鈥檓 always struggling to find ways to make this technology work for me without letting it rule my life,鈥 Zilles says. 鈥淚鈥檝e had these 鈥榢itemares鈥 before when shit goes wrong, and this was the first time I had this sort of tool to help me take care of myself.鈥

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Kiting Ice Lagoons in Iceland /video/kiting-ice-lagoons-iceland/ Thu, 21 Sep 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /video/kiting-ice-lagoons-iceland/ Kiting Ice Lagoons in Iceland

The folks at Manera know that kiteboarding paradises are often warm, windy, and serve great margaritas, but for their most recent trip, they ventured into the far north of Iceland.

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Kiting Ice Lagoons in Iceland

Kiteboarding paradises are usually听warm, windy, and full of great bars serving great听margaritas. But on the听听crew's most听recent adventure, they ventured into the far northern region of Iceland, where they played on听icy lagoons and in arctic temperatures鈥攁nd found a new kind of paradise.听

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The Faroe Islands By Bike, Kayak, and Kite /video/faroe-islands-bike-kayak-and-kit/ Wed, 12 Jul 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /video/faroe-islands-bike-kayak-and-kit/ The Faroe Islands By Bike, Kayak, and Kite

When the folks at NorthSouth decided to travel to the Faroe Islands and make their film Silent Odyssey they wanted to do it without the assistance of motors. Armed with two bikes, one kayak, and one kiteboard they explored the 18 islands that make up this archipelago.

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The Faroe Islands By Bike, Kayak, and Kite

When David Fletcher and Jason Stirling at decided to travel to the Faroe Islands and make their film Silent Odyssey, they wanted to do it without the assistance of motors. Armed with two bikes, one kayak, and one kiteboard, they explored the 18 islands that make up this archipelago in the North Atlantic. Located听between Scotland and Iceland, these islands are home to 50,000 people,听100,000 sheep, and no end听of unspoiled adventure. Check out more from NorthSouth on their and .

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Whale Watching In Norway Under the Northern Lights /video/whale-watching-norway-under-northern-lights/ Mon, 01 May 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /video/whale-watching-norway-under-northern-lights/ Whale Watching In Norway Under the Northern Lights

When photographer David Gonzales Buendia learned that the expedition sailing ship Barba was looking for a resident photographer he was all aboard.

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Whale Watching In Norway Under the Northern Lights

In our ongoing Weekly Escape series, we aim to transport you from your desk to an incredible place in two minutes or less. When photographer learned that the expedition sailing ship was looking for a resident photographer, he was all aboard. Two modern day Vikings, an arctic adventurer, and a world class kiteboarder were all drawn听together for one mission: to document human interactions with orcas. They had a brief window of about six听hours to get all the shots they needed of the whales. What followed an incredible day of playing with whales was a display of northern听lights that illuminated the night sky. That's when kiteboarder rigged up and ripped around under the arctic sky.听

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A Look Into the Wild World of Snow Kiting /video/look-wild-world-snow-kiting/ Fri, 02 Dec 2016 00:00:00 +0000 /video/look-wild-world-snow-kiting/ A Look Into the Wild World of Snow Kiting

Deep in the heart of Jackson Hole's backcountry, a new snow sport is emerging; snow kiting. With a combination of sailing and flying it allows kiters to fly high above the treetops.

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A Look Into the Wild World of Snow Kiting

Deep in the heart of Jackson Hole's backcountry, a new snow sport is emerging: snowkiting. From filmmaker , Mountains of Wind follows the story of two pioneer kiters named Pascal and Cedric Joubert. Their insatiable appetite for skiing and flight leads them to some spectacular summits. Watch as these听pioneers听push flight to the limits.

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