REVIEW · SICILY
Private Kitesurf Lesson in Lo Stagnone Sicily
Book on Viator →Operated by Follow The Wind Kitesurf School Sicily · Bookable on Viator
A quiet lagoon teaches loud confidence. A private kite lesson at Lo Stagnone in Sicily is all about moving fast from first gear-handling to water-ready skills. I like the focus on safety and control right from the start, and I also like the way you get real progress with up-to-date equipment and instruction that stays on you. The only catch: this is a teaser-style 2-hour session—great for deciding if you want to kite, but you’ll likely need more time to ride independently.
Here’s what makes it interesting for your trip: you learn the basics in a calm, spacious lagoon setting, and the teaching moves through a clear sequence—equipment setup, safety routines, kite control in the neutral zone, then body dragging. One consideration: if your goal is board-on-the-water riding, plan to book additional hours after this first introduction.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Care About
- Lo Stagnone in Sicily: Why This Spot Works for Beginners
- Your 2-Hour Private Lesson Plan (What You’ll Actually Do)
- 1) Equipment assembly and safety methods
- 2) Kite control in the neutral zone
- 3) Body dragging (the step before full riding)
- Learning Strategy: Why “Teaser Lesson” Is Smart, Not Small
- Safety, Gear, and Instruction Quality (The Stuff That Makes a Difference)
- Radios and clear communication
- A dedicated, safety-conscious teaching style
- Up-to-date gear with the right sizes
- Knowing the key instructors
- Where You Meet: Marsala Logistics That Don’t Waste Time
- What About Weather? The Reality of Kite Lessons
- Price and Value: $229.78 for 2 Hours of Real Coaching
- Who This Lesson Fits Best (And Who Should Plan More Time)
- Tips to Make Your Session Go Smoother
- Should You Book This Lo Stagnone Private Kitesurf Lesson?
- FAQ
- How long is the private kitesurf lesson?
- Is this lesson private?
- What language is the lesson offered in?
- Where do I meet for the lesson?
- What happens during the first part of the lesson?
- Do I need to know how to ride a kiteboard already?
- What if the weather is poor?
Key Highlights You’ll Care About

- Lo Stagnone is a progression-friendly lagoon: room to practice and a setup that helps you get comfortable without constant crowd pressure.
- 2 hours is structured as a confidence primer: you’ll assemble gear, practice safety, and learn kite handling before you even think about full riding.
- Neutral zone skills before water time: kite control comes first, so the water part feels less like chaos.
- Private lesson means one-group attention: you’re not blending into a class; your instructor can stay tuned to your timing and mistakes.
- Professional, safety-conscious coaching: the team emphasizes doing it right every step of the way.
- Communication tools can speed up learning: radios are used so instructions land fast and you spend less time guessing.
Lo Stagnone in Sicily: Why This Spot Works for Beginners
If you’re learning kitesurfing, the location isn’t just scenery—it’s part of the curriculum. Lo Stagnone sits in a lagoon area around Marsala, and the practical advantage is space. You want a place where you can practice body control and kite handling without feeling like you’re always in the path of other kiters.
I also like how the school uses the spot to help you get your bearings fast. One theme that pops up again and again with this place is that the teaching environment is set up for focus: fewer distractions, more controlled practice zones, and room to repeat movements. The result is you spend more time doing the thing and less time waiting your turn.
And yes, it helps that the vibe is relaxed. After your session, you’re not stuck with a generic “sports base” feel. The school setup includes a calm hangout area that makes it easier to stay comfortable between runs—so you don’t burn energy worrying about logistics.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Sicily
Your 2-Hour Private Lesson Plan (What You’ll Actually Do)

This is a private lesson, so the flow is tailored to you and your group, not stretched across a crowd. Expect around 2 hours of instruction, starting and ending at the same meeting point.
Here’s the sequence you should expect:
1) Equipment assembly and safety methods
Before you touch the water, you’ll learn how to put the gear together and how to handle it safely. That matters more than people think. Kitesurfing is one of those sports where the equipment routine is half the skill. If you’re fumbling a harness or line setup, your confidence takes a hit before the kite even goes up.
You’ll go through the safety fundamentals you need to enter the water. The goal here is not just knowing the rules—it’s building the habit so your body reacts correctly when conditions change.
2) Kite control in the neutral zone
Next comes kite piloting in the neutral zone. This is where beginners usually get lost, because they expect the kite to behave like a toy. Neutral zone practice teaches you how to manage the kite’s pull with steadier control. You’re learning how to position it, how it responds, and how to correct without panicking.
This step is a big deal: once your kite control is calmer, the water portion feels more like a skill drill than a survival test.
3) Body dragging (the step before full riding)
When everything clicks, you move into body dragging. This is where you start feeling the pull and learning how your body position affects direction and control. It’s also where you figure out what it feels like to move through the water with the kite powering you.
Important reality check: body dragging is progress. But it’s not the same as standing and riding a board. That’s why this lesson is best understood as a foundation block.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Sicily
Learning Strategy: Why “Teaser Lesson” Is Smart, Not Small

The school is very clear—this first 2-hour private session is designed like a teaser. You’re not being sold a miracle. You’re being guided through the early steps so you can answer a simple question: Do I want more hours of this?
That’s actually smart travel planning. If you’re on vacation, you don’t want to spend your whole trip “maybe someday” learning to ride. A teaser session gives you a reality check early, with enough instruction to feel the sport instead of just watching it from shore.
If you decide you’re into it, you’ll already know the equipment routine, the safety basics, and the kite-control language your instructor uses. Then your later sessions can focus on board skills instead of restarting from zero.
Safety, Gear, and Instruction Quality (The Stuff That Makes a Difference)
The most praised part of this kitesurf school experience is how seriously they treat safety and how closely they coach.
Radios and clear communication
One practical detail that can seriously speed learning is the use of radios. When you’re learning, you don’t just need instructions—you need them fast and in the right moment. Radios help cut down on confusion and reduce the time you spend trying to interpret hand signals or distance cues.
A dedicated, safety-conscious teaching style
You’ll notice a consistent approach: instructors keep an eye on you, reset your basics when needed, and help you build a foundation you can repeat. This is the kind of instruction that helps you avoid the “wild first session” feeling that can happen when safety is treated like paperwork.
Up-to-date gear with the right sizes
Expect the school to use good, well-maintained kitesurfing equipment. Gear quality matters because worn lines, inconsistent kite behavior, or wrong sizing can make learning harder than it has to be.
From what I’ve seen described, they use Flysurfer-style equipment and keep multiple kite sizes ready so the kite you fly matches conditions. That’s important in a windy lagoon setting, where conditions can shift during a day.
Knowing the key instructors
In conversations and shared experiences from the school, names come up often—Gabor (the owner) and instructors such as Szimi (sometimes referenced as Simi). If you’re the type who likes to know who’s teaching you, that’s reassuring: it’s not random staffing. It’s a team built around instruction and safety.
Where You Meet: Marsala Logistics That Don’t Waste Time

You’ll meet at Follow The Wind Kitesurf School Sicily at Via Baia dei Fenici, 91025 Marsala TP, Italy. The activity ends back at the meeting point, which is exactly what you want for a sport lesson—no awkward half-day detours.
The operating window listed runs daily (Monday–Sunday) from 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM during the season period shown (04/01/2026 to 10/31/2026). Plan your day around that. Kitesurfing isn’t a “wander in anytime” activity, and the timing matters because you’re dependent on weather.
Also, you’ll receive a mobile ticket, and you’ll get confirmation at the time of booking. For a sport where you’re arriving in swim gear and dealing with gear, that’s a welcome level of simplicity.
What About Weather? The Reality of Kite Lessons

This experience depends on good weather. That’s not a small detail—it’s the difference between a smooth lesson and a day that gets rescheduled.
If your kite plans are flexible, you’ll get more out of your time in Sicily. If they’re locked to one specific day with no wiggle room, consider building a small buffer into your trip schedule for a weather-dependent sport.
Price and Value: $229.78 for 2 Hours of Real Coaching

At $229.78 per person for about 2 hours, this isn’t a bargain-basement activity. But private lessons cost what they cost because you’re paying for attention, safety oversight, and correct sequencing.
Here’s why the value can still make sense:
- You’re not just learning; you’re being assessed. In a short session, good instructors can spot what’s blocking you and what to practice next.
- You’re getting the full onboarding arc for beginners: gear setup, safety routines, neutral-zone control, and body dragging.
- You’re flying the right kind of lesson format. Private means your instructor can keep you progressing instead of doing “watch and wait” instruction.
If you’re doing a “try kitesurfing” trip, this pricing fits the goal. If you want full board riding quickly, budget for extra hours after the teaser—because this first session is designed to help you decide and to lay down the basics.
Who This Lesson Fits Best (And Who Should Plan More Time)

This is a good match if you:
- want a private start with one-group attention
- are comfortable with a moderate physical fitness level
- want to learn in English
- prefer structured teaching over trial-and-error
It’s also a strong option if you like safety-first coaching. The vibe here seems built around not losing sight of you while you learn new movements.
If your dream is standing and riding your own board right away, plan for more than 2 hours. This session teaches enough to get moving and understand the sport, but it’s not marketed like a “full rider in one afternoon” plan.
Tips to Make Your Session Go Smoother
You’ll get more out of the lesson if you show up ready to learn the basics well.
- Ask questions about the safety routines at the start. If you understand why steps matter, the actions come easier later.
- Keep your expectations tied to the session goal: neutral zone + body dragging. If you treat it like “just give me a board,” you’ll feel frustrated.
- Wear what keeps you comfortable in water sports. If you have your own preferences for footwear, you can bring them—but note the school’s approach includes comfort aids like water-shoe support for learning.
Should You Book This Lo Stagnone Private Kitesurf Lesson?
If you want a safe, structured start in a lagoon setting, this is a booking-worthy choice. I’d especially recommend it if you’re learning for the first time and you care about coaching that stays with you, not just gear rental instructions.
Skip it only if your schedule is too tight for weather shifts or if you’re expecting full board riding in exactly two hours. Treat this as the start of a progression, not the finish line.
For most people, the best outcome is simple: you leave with skills you can build on and a clearer sense of whether kitesurfing belongs in your vacation plans.
FAQ
How long is the private kitesurf lesson?
It’s listed at about 2 hours.
Is this lesson private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group will participate.
What language is the lesson offered in?
The lesson is offered in English.
Where do I meet for the lesson?
The start point is Follow The Wind Kitesurf School Sicily, Via Baia dei Fenici, 91025 Marsala TP, Italy. The activity ends back at the meeting point.
What happens during the first part of the lesson?
In the first two hours, you learn to assemble the equipment and all the safety methods needed to enter the water, then pilot the kite in the neutral zone, and once everything works, move on to body dragging.
Do I need to know how to ride a kiteboard already?
Not at the start. You’ll learn the basics first, but to ride with the board you will need more hours.
What if the weather is poor?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.


































