Snow Flake
Built by Bill Wilson in December 2003More soon
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More soon
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Check out this video on youtube, crazy number of Revs …
Finally have put my photos together from Niagara, I have missed a few of the days as I left/forgot my camera back at the hotel a couple of times.
Bill’s Photos
Don Brownridge’s Photos
Ted Shaw’s Photos
David Gomberg’s Photos
Carlos Simoes’ Photos
Pete Rich’s Photos
Lucy Jonkman’s Photos
John’s Photos
Man that’s a ton of photos..
The AKA convention kicked off earlier this week. Steve Ferrel, from kitebuilder.com, is providing day by day blog posts about the event. Yesterday was ground scoring for the kite making competition, check out the pictures in the post below…
Check out some of the news footage from the first day of Niagara.. man these guys were up early, cold, wet and very little wind…
Niagara gets off to a good start.. we have some rain today but hopefully it will clear up for the weekend…
Buffalo News - Kite-flying icons to abound
2007 festival opens three-day stand in Niagara Falls today
By Pam Kowalik - NEWS NIAGARA BUREAU
Updated: 09/27/07 7:06 AMNIAGARA FALLS — An 82-yearold man who holds multiple world records for kite flying — one for flying three kites while standing in the back of a moving convertible — will take part in the 2007 Niagara International Kite Festival this weekend.
And Ray Bethell, a kite flying icon who has won numerous awards all over the world as a master kite flier, is the person who will give the festival its international flavor as it takes off today for a four-day run along the Niagara Gorge.
The event starts today in Niagara Falls State Park and moves to Reservoir State Park in Lewiston.
Bethell, who lives in Vancouver, B.C., started sport kite flying in 1980. For many years he flew in team competitions with the Vancouver High Flyers, often placing first, second or third in North American competitions.
He is the holder of 11 world multiple kite records.
“One of the very special [efforts] to me was flying three full-size sport kites . . . simultaneously standing in the back of a red convertible down the main street of Long Beach, Wash., with a police escort with hundreds and hundreds of spectators that lined the sidewalks including the mayor, chief of police and the fire chief,” Bethell wrote in an e-mail.
Bethell was inducted into the World Kite Hall of Fame in Long Beach three years ago, and is among about 40 people who have been honored for kite building, promoting and flying.
“It pleases me that I have been given the opportunity to share my love of kite flying to the people of Niagara along with so many other kite fliers that have come from every part of this planet,” Bethell wrote The News.
The theme for this year’s Niagara International Kite Festival is “Con-
necting the Past, Present, and Future with a Kite String.”
Some of the festival’s highlights include a ceremony from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and Friday. The event will take place somewhere along the gorge in Niagara Falls State Park and the exact location will be determined by the weather and the wind speed each day.
A kite made of organic materials will be “sacrificed” to the cascades in hopes of appeasing the wind and weather gods today and Friday. Actors also will display a Homan Walsh 1848 re-enactment contest, trying to connect a string of kites across the Niagara River between Prospect Point on the U.S. side and Victoria Park, in Niagara Falls, Ont. This is how construction started on the first suspension bridge across the river.
Ted Shaw, a director of the Great Lakes Kitefliers Society of Western New York, said he will be flying kites at the event.
“I just enjoy seeing all the color in the air, all the shapes,” Shaw said. “It’s amazing to me to be able to fly all the kites in the same area.”
Shaw spends a few hundred dollars a year on his kite passion.
Kate Scaglione, director of marketing and communications for the Niagara Tourism and Convention Corp., said people of all ages will have the opportunity to make kites in free workshops. She also said the festival will go on, even if it rains. “These kite fliers are so into what they’re doing that it doesn’t seem to bother them in the least.”
On Saturday and Sunday, the festival moves to Reservoir State Park. There will be kites of all descriptions — large inflatable show kites, artistic kites, sport kites, historical kites, indoor kites and fighter kites.
Activities run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. There will be kite making workshops from 1 to 3 p.m. both days.
Events include a discussion on kite history and exhibitions on kite aerial photography, miniature kites and kite stamps, and demonstrations of kite buggying and kite mountain boarding are scheduled for both days. For information on these activities and more, go to www.niagarakite.com.
pkowalik@buffnews.com
Great festival coming up this weekend with over 100 kite flyers coming from around the world. Check it out here… niagarakite.com
Join the worlds premier kite flyers as they bring the magical delights and awesome wonder of kiteflying to the Niagara region end of September.
The Homan Walsh 1848 kite contest re-enactment on Thursday and Friday which will be followed by an attempt to connect the USA and Canada with an arch of kites.
On Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 29 & 30th, activities will be at Reservoir State Park in Lewiston. There will be of kites of all descriptions- large inflatable show kites, artistic kites, sport kites, historical kites, indoor kites, fighter kites, and more! A variety of exhibitions - kite history, kite aerial photography, miniature kites and kite stamps- and demonstrations of kite buggying and kite mountain boarding are scheduled for both days.
Because of both popular demand and the remarkable success of the last year’s Niagara International Kite Festival, we; the Niagara Tourism Convention Corporation and Sky’s the Limit; have come to the simple conclusion that we must do our best to make this festival an annual event.
We have no doubt the event holds enormous potential for both the kite world and the regional community. The annual theme for the Niagara International Kite Festival is “Connecting the Past, Present, and Future with a Kite String”. This year’s program highlights the Myths, the History, and the time-honored tradition of Daredevils lured to Niagara Falls.
Keep in mind that both the event and web site are current works in progress. Details will be posted as promptly as they are available.
Here is a huge list of the kiters that will be there..
Over 107 Confirmed Flyers from 10 Countries will be in Attendance
Canada
Vania Beaubien
Robert Trepanier
Bob White
Vaino Raun
Gary Mark
Michelle Welsford
Don Brownridge
Carlos Simoe
George Paisiovich
Ray Bethell ( Watch Master Kite Flyer and World Record Holder Ray Bethell Fly )
Dolores Taylor Bethell
Doug Isherwood
Ziggy Racek
Pete Rich
Mary & Paul Kort
Bill Wilson
Anne Sloboda
Eric Curtis
Royal City Fun Flyers , Guelph, Ont.
Bill Peart
Kerry St Dennis
Kathy Holt
Lucy Jonkman
Jessica St Dennis-Jonkman
Niagara Windrider Kitefliers Association – Port Colborne
Toronto Kitefliers Association – Toronto
Wind Climbers Kite Club - Cambridge
England
Martin Lester
Dave Mitchell
Sheila Mitchell
Michael Howard
Linda Howard
Kelvin Woods (flying 20 of his beautiful hand made Butterflies. Each one of the butterflies represents an actual species)
Malcolm Goodman
Jeanette Goodman
Germany
Team No limit
Kisa
Israel
Eli & Shula Shavit
Japan
Makoto Ohye
Mexico
Jose Sainz
New Zealand
Jenny Cook
Switzerland
Iqbal Husain (Making the arch to connect the US & Canada this year)
Tasmania
Robert Brassington
United States of America
Berkeley Kite Wranglers (California)
Thomas McAlister
David Hoggan
Shaun Hoggan
John Kahn Jr
Michael North
Team Sky Burner (Michigan)
Wayne Brunjes
Jon Trennepohl
Michael VanCleve
Dan Welbaum
Aaron Fegley
Scot Skinner (Colorado)
Kathy Goodwind (Washington)
Bill Albers (New York)
Jim Day (Washington)
Steve & Sue Santos (Rhode Island)
Laurie & Richard Dutton (New York)
Charles Stewart (New York)
Dorothy Stewart (New York)
Cheryl & John Hall w/MAX (Michigan)
Ted Shaw (New York)
Meg Albers (New York)
Russ & Pat Mozier (Florida)
Chris Schultz (Texas)
Glenn Davison (Massachusetts)
Charles “AJ” Jackson (Texas)
Tim & Sue Boyle (Massachusetts)
Sue Edwards (Michigan)
Nancy Swift (Michigan)
Kathy Virgilio (Michigan)
Windjammers (Michigan)
Gary Maynard
Nate Williams
James Kinsey
Mike Carisle
George Wright
Team I-Quad (USA & Canada)
John Barresi (Oregon)
Steve de Rooy (British Columbia)
JD Fabich (Oregon)
David Hathaway (British Columbia)
Glenn Pedro (New Jersey)
Dooley (California)
David Gomberg (Oregon)
John Martin (Maine)
Ralph Reed (Massachusetts)
Jackie & Dick Maciel (Massachusetts)
Arnold Family; John, Suzette, John, Jace (Michigan)
Kaluzny Family; Walt, Sabrina, Alex, Nick (New York)
Team Skyjesters (Ohio)
Dean Proudfoot
Vickie Proudfoot
Don Tuff (Massachusetts)
Kim Linehan (Massachusetts)
Kyle Lemieux (Rhode Island)
Kyle Alves (Rhode Island)
Mark & Brenda Williams (New Hampshire)
Great Lakes Kitefliers Society (Buffalo, New York)
The BBC has provided some excellent KAP photos of India. The photos were taken by Nicolas Chorier, details of his rig and photos are below.

Nicolas Chorier is a Frenchman who specialises in “kite photography”. This image of the Jama Masjid in Delhi appears in a new book, Kite’s Eye View: India Between Earth and Sky, published by Roli Books.
Chorier makes 40-sq-foot kites from siliconised nylon and carbon or fibreglass rods. The camera sits in a cradle on a line beneath the kite, and can be raised to 1,000ft (300m). Chorier says lower altitudes are “more interesting”.
Chorier uses a Canon 5D camera and the whole rig can weigh about 2kg, with lens and extra battery. The camera cradle operates by remote control and can achieve a 360-degree rotation and 90-degree tilt.
Chorier uses an air-to-ground video link to provide real-time monitoring on a portable TV for accurate framing. “Once I feel my kite flying nicely, I rig up my camera on the line about 100 feet below the kite.”
Kite and camera can then be flown up to the required height. Chorier carries the remote control on his shoulder and the video monitor around his neck. He walks and raises and lowers the kite for shooting angles.
“Sometimes the kite comes down, but as the sail of the kite is big, it parachutes or glides down slowly. I have lost one camera, dropping it in the Yamuna river behind the Taj Mahal,” says Chorier.
“I have shot thousands of pictures above India. I love India, its sounds, smells, colours, people. Shooting India is so rewarding to my senses,” Chorier says.
The Kite Runner movie looks like it’s going to be very good.
Here is the trailer, It opens in theatres on November 2nd, I can’t wait.
There are better quality trailers on the Apple movie site..

Gary Mark has put together all of the news casts from the Alexander Graham Bell Cygnet Centennial celebrations.
Global Maritimes
CBC News Halifax
CBC News Ottawa
(My double star and lobster are featured in this one, too bad they called Bell’s kites Tetra-Hydrons haha LOL
)
CBC NewsWorld - Very good…
CTV News
I compiled a quick video of some of the footage that I took (with my point and shoot) at the Toronto International Kite fest…
It has some of the stuff from the very windy Saturday, and a lot of the dyna kite routines…