From Deseret News archives:
Utah Windriders: Sailors go where wind takes them
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Keeping access and improving the environment is one of the stated missions of the UWA.
Twelve years ago, Rush Lake (near Tooele) was one of the best windsurfing spots in the country. The shallow water and its location in windy Rush Valley was ideal in setting up perfect waves. Now the lake is usually dried up but can still be a favorite spot for kiteboarders who will sail there in the spring with as little as 8 inches of water.
"Losing Rush Lake was like Michael Phelps losing his pool," recalls Heninger. "It was as good of wind as the Columbia River Gorge."
The UWA has been aggressively trying to make certain it doesn't lose access to some of Utah's other prime sailing areas, particularly Utah Lake.
"Sailors generally have to do a balancing act over dangerous rocks at the Provo Boat Harbor, where there is no convenient access for swimmers or sailors," said Heninger.
He also points out that Saratoga Springs Marina on the west side of the lake has done a great job with rest rooms, showers, a grass rigging and a launch site.
"Utah Lake is one of the most underused and neglected resources in Utah," Heninger said.
Other favorite sailing spots include Deer Creek Reservoir (which actually hosted the National Windsurfing Championships in the 1980s), Grantsville Reservoir in Tooele County and Sulphur Creek Reservoir just over the border near Evanston, Wyo.
Kiteboarding and snowkiting
Kiteboarding is a relatively new sport where the sailor rides a wakeboard and is pulled by a kite, often achieving spectacular leaps and stunts through the air. Nationally, the ratio of windsurfers to kiteboarders is about 3 to 1.
Several years ago, Jacob Buzianis, a 32-year-old Salt Lake City resident, was visiting his brother, Micah Buzianis, a professional windsurfer in Hawaii. With his snowboarding background, Buzianis was intrigued with kiteboarding and quickly caught on to the sport, but what really captured his imagination was the possibility of what could be done on snow.
"In Utah, there are all kinds of terrain, and snowkiting is different every time you go," says Buzianis. "There is powder, fast snow, steep slopes and big air."
He explains that because of the little resistance of snow, as opposed to water, it is easier to get around, and you don't need as much wind. For Buzianis, now a professional snowkiter, Utah is the premiere spot in the world, particularly above Fairview Canyon on the Skyline Drive. Up there, he claims, the good kiters are getting air over 100 feet on a regular basis and you can go "as big as you want."
Kiters use the same sails and rigging for snow and water but simply trade their wakeboard for a snowboard (or skis). Five years ago, the UWA Web site had very little traffic from kiteboarders and snowkiters. But now, there is as much activity in the wintertime as in the summer months.
And for Heninger, after 30 years of riding the wind, it is still "one of the greatest sports to take you out of daily stress and put you in the moment while being in tune with the wind, water, balance and speed."
E-mail: smart@desnews.com
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Recent comments
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Get off the sofa | Sept. 9, 2008 at 6:59 a.m.
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Utah Lake Enthusiast | Sept. 4, 2008 at 9:44 p.m.
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