I really didn't think the wind was going to be any good but the lakeviewcam helped by confirming that the thundercells going on in the valley and elsewhere were pretty much at arm's length in the distance.  None the less I waffled.  I didn't leave until 3 and hit the water after 4 but the usual fingery gusts were notably absent and so were most of the motor head crew along with their wakes and fumes.   Heck, there were even fishermen out.   All together a pleasant surprise.  It felt like a gift with the monsoon pattern that we've been suffering.  
The wind tailed off around 6 and planing demanded a bit of a pump here and there but once up on top the rides rarely sputtered out.  Unfortunately, in the end my Fiberspar wasn't interested in calisthenics and exploded 18" above my boom folding my rig awkwardly in half and into the water.   It happened dead upwind from my launch (Jordanelle's onshore flow has real benefits) and the water is warm now so board shorts were more than adequate for a short windswimming session.  
In the big picture maybe a couple more ounces of material might be a good tradeoff for durability in the larger rigs.  It's hard to believe it would hurt performance.  Whatever.   BTW, I really love how rock solid my HPL boom is, can't imagine a failure there.
			