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 Titbits Menu  
 Previous Crossings
 From Kites to Parafoils
 100 years of Belgica
 Book on Anatrctica

When the kite became a parafoil.

It is virtually certain that kites first appeared more than two thousand years ago in China, but this has never been proved with any certainty. China is the country where the basic materials can be found for building kites: bamboo for the frame, and silk for the sail and bridles.

Kites were initially considered to be a magic link with heaven, used for finding out about the fate and future, as well as for celebrating births, happy events and victories. There are several legends in Chinese folklore which see the kite being used for many purposes, particularly military ones. The story goes that general Han Hsin used a kite to calculate the distance between his troops and a fortress that he was besieging. After measuring the line, he had an underground tunnel built and invaded the enemy through it, using the tactic of surprise. During the Han dynasty, another legend says that the Chinese used kites to frighten the enemy. They flew kites fitted with bamboo whistles over the enemy positions during the night; hearing strange noises and thinking that they were voices predicting defeat, the enemy is said to have fled, terrified. The story is also told of the famous Japanese bandit, Kakinkoki Kinsuke, who is said to have built an enormous kite to carry him over the castle at Nagoya to steal the golden fins of the dolphins.

Today in China and in other oriental countries, kites are used to evoke tales of folklore, with images painted on the sails recalling great battles and great legendary deeds involving heroes and the gods. From China, kites spread throughout Asia, arriving in Europe some time later. During modern times, they have also been used in the United States.

Although the kite is thousands of years old, kite traction is more recent. Some centuries old, to judge from old Oriental paintings the writings of Marco Polo, which mention canoes from Samoa being pulled by kites.

Kites were probably used as tractors in Europe and America in the 18th and 19th centuries. In England, William Peacock invented a coach pulled by a kite in 1826. The kite had several lines and enabled the driver to go upwind and downwind. Six years later, Ben Franklin created kites which were capable of helping shipwrecked sailors to stay afloat and to guide themselves at sea using another invention, human fins. In 1903, Samuel Cody demonstrated the stability of his kite by crossing the Channel aboard a boat pulled by it. The era of the Kite Brigade of the "Mounted Kites" during the 1914-18 war showed the attractions of the kite as a powerful method of traction. Between the wars, the Spa festival was the main meeting place for the world of traction kite-flyers. Enthusiasts from the four corners of the world came to Spa to take part in a series of manned flights. From 1980 onwards, Dan Eiseman crossed all of the Great Lakes in America aboard an inflatable boat pulled by kites.

The first adventurer of the modern age to use a parafoil on a polar expedition was the German, Udo Krieger, in 1998 during the expedition to commemorate the centenary of the first crossing of Greenland by Nansen. He used a 10 sq.m. parafoil, the Parawing, designed by the German, Wolf Beringer The same piece of apparatus - rather rudimentary when compared to modern parafoils - was used by Reinhold Messner and Alved Fuchs during their Antarctic crossing in 1989-90.

In 1996-97, the Norwegian, Børge Ousland travelled 1600 km using a parafoil (he had two of them), during his successful first entirely solo crossing of Antarctica over a distance of 2845 km.

Dixie Dansercoer and Alain Hubert used this same type of parafoil, the parawing, with a variety of sail areas during their first crossing of Greenland in 1995. It was during this expedition that the two Belgians came to realise that for their Antarctic adventure, they would have to find a system of parafoil which gave greater performance, but was also lighter (see section on parafoils).

 


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