Ride what you ride.... be happy. My thoughts on foiling and the industry.

Limited progression once past the mowing stage. Yes I know its technical to get to that stage, but after 10 hours of learning, whats next?
- If you are after speed, that makes sense.
- If you have bad knees and can't handle the chop, I get that.
I did try it once for about 15min at Pinneroo, I failed and cut my little toe. It is tricky.
But once you have the muscle memory, it would be pretty simple.
I'll probably take up foiling, one day. However- Im mid 30's, still have two ACL's and 1.5 rotator cuffs, so no rush just yet to hang up the boots.
This
'hype' around foiling that people talk about is
'fake hype' - It's all conger-ed up by the marketing spend by the big kite brands.
Margins on foiling equipment should still be healthy, and an obvious focus for the struggling kite companies. Same could be said on SUP 666 equipment.
Interesting that they are both marketed to the Baby boomer. If I ran a business, I'd do the same thing too. You can't blame kite companies for that.
I did feel that the foil marketing strategy was getting rather saturated about 6-12 months back, I had to follow 2 of the largest kite companies. Foil adds after foil adds.

Flame away.