Nice! The guy I saw had the mast pinned straight to the cup ( Hobie 16) which keeps it from going up far enough to pin the forestay of course, so from a distance I saw the stick go up...down Up....down about 12 times so walked over to see what was up, thats when the shroud problem got obvious. Boggles my mind that people are ready to go to a place you can die ( the ocean )with such gaps in just the basic ideas of what has to happen to even get going...Same thing with hang gliding, for awhile ball tips were a fad, there's a big delrin ball screwed to the cloth of the wing tip, fitting into a socket in the end of the leading edge tube so that the tip can float up and down easier. Anyhow this guy comes up to launch at a 1300 foot cliff launch, normally somebody holds the nose while the pilot lays down to check the harness straps, so while I do this for the guy, it was pretty obvious one wing was all crumpled and saggy, like a main hoisted 90% of the way up. I go check it out 'cause he's hooked in, and the ball is out of the socket with the tube ready to pop out of the cloth! I go tell him, and he just looks up and says "Yeah something seemed funny, but I couldn't figure it out , so I thought I'd check it out when I broke down in the landing field." He would have launched and spun right back into the rock face, but a couple hundred feet lower from where he started, then tumbled down into some trees that would taken a trained high angle rescue team to get to...