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eppo said..IanInca said..north_kiter said..
those that don't have the skill to kite or kite foil should try winging, but if you can twin tip kiting, I advise to learn kite foiling first and your progression will be so much faster.
Once you master foiling, any discipline with the foil be it: kiting, winging, prone will be easy
Not sure I agree with that.. I've seen plenty of kiters at my beach not stick with Winging as its "too difficult.." I'd say Wing foiling is more difficult (but safer) to learn than twin tip Kiting..
Which is why he said learn to kitefoil first which I agree with. A wing is far easier to learn and safer than a kite, but the foiling part is the difficult part. I think that is what he meant anyhow.
to add the basics that is. Jumping, tacks, rotations and all that jazz is harder on a wing. That's why I see windsurfers who did this kind of trickery progress more quickly. than a dude who came from say kitefoiling only.
I learned kitefoiling and wingfoiling at the same time, and have to say winging is easier. For the first consistent meters maybe kitefoiling is easier because you can lean against the power more than with a wing, which will require you to be far more upright. A foiling waterstart is very much different from a twintip or even waveboard waterstart though, with a lot of beginners shooting up / foiling out every time they send the kite because they are used to loading the back foot. Winging speed changes are also farmore gradual which increase foil control. In addition, I think learning kitefoiling often results in "bad technique" once you try to get into transitions. Transitions require a way more upright stance than most beginner kitefoilers have, which means you will kind of have to unlearn leaning into the foil. Also once you start going into transitions in winging you pretty much park the wing and make the turn, in kiting you have to do a lot right at the same time. Its very easy to overtake your kite downwind for example, and have not managed to do a tack kitefoiling yet, while I have a pretty much 99% successrate both heel to toe and toe to heel tacking with the wing.
To be honest, what I've found from giving a lot of wingfoil clinics is that the best crossover sports are to start winging from surfing, or maybe even snowboarding, as they require the upright/over the board weight ditribution to begin with. This means people coming from these sports have a lot less problems with the board rolling out from under them once they get on the foil, even while they often dont have any "wind" experience.