Well as further clarification, I’ve been watching the storms at Strawberry now for over five years; being up here on a daily basis for months at a time, throughout the year. I study the local storms and climate. The implication of the safety statement made, that I took away, is that I do not know what I am doing, or that I am kiting irresponsibly. I have to disagree with the presumption; and such blanket statements can unnecessarily dissuade others form kiting in such conditions. There were no cumulonimbus (thunderhead) clouds that I observed yesterday, only Nimbostratus/Stratocumulus in nature, of the Fractus verity. They were moving easily over the ridge line, well above 10,000 ft with light under bellies, and not growing vertically.
True this is not the east coast, but recognizing cloud formations transfers. Too, I’ve done my share of local climbing and alpine treks in the area over the last 15 years I’ve been coming out here. I feel comfortable in my decisions to climb and kite, and when not to, and when to bail or seek cover. I’m all about “acceptable risk”. I've declined to kite in conditions other more experienced friends have kited in. You should never undertake kiting, or any outdoor activity, in weather you do not understand, or are even slightly uneasy about. And even though I was comfortable with the weather conditions yesterday, regarding lightning, and would have kited had it not been blowing above 22 Kts, exceeding my kite’s wind range, and my comfort zone, there are no guarantees that the outlier discharge will not zap me, or that I got it wrong. Make your own decision; best judgment; be informed; kite at your own risk. Below are a few NOAA web pages that are good references for clouds, and storm and lightning safety that may help some in their decision making process.
http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lmk/?n=cloud_classificationhttp://www.lightningsafety.noaa.gov/