Marsala
ItalyNo significant tide impact at this spot — verified.
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Discover Marsala
Europe's largest flat lagoon, set among the salt pans and windmills of Marsala. At Lo Stagnone the water is hip-deep for kilometres, turquoise and mirror-smooth — the Mediterranean's factory for learning and stacking tricks.
Lo Stagnone is a setting before it's a spot: a still lagoon between the land and Isola Lunga, gridded with pink and white salt pans, dotted with windmills that turned back in the salt era. The water is warm, low, perfectly smooth — a dream beginner's water and a freestyle ground where you fall without consequence, since you can stand. At sunset the light flattens over the salt basins and the lagoon turns to gold. Few places combine so much: the safety of a lake, the salt of a listed landscape, and the reliability of a summer thermal.
Level and best time
Hard to find anything more reassuring for learning and progressing: the water is flat, shallow, and you can stand almost everywhere in the lagoon. It's one of Europe's biggest school hubs — a cluster of schools (ProKite Alby Rondina and many others) and gear. The downside is the crowd in high season: lots of students on the same water.
source : kiterr.com ↗The season runs April to October, with a very steady summer core driven by the north-to-north-west thermal that fills in the afternoon, topped up by Maestrale (NW) episodes. Pleasant strength most of the time, building in the afternoon. As the lagoon is flat and you can stand, it's one of the rare spots rideable in almost any direction — but the north-west thermal is the king wind.
source : kiterr.com ↗Arrival guide
You reach Marsala via Trapani (nearest) or Palermo airports. The spot is the Riserva naturale dello Stagnone: a lagoon closed off to the west by Isola Grande (Isola Lunga), dotted with working salt pans and windmills, a few minutes north of town. The schools line the lagoon.
source : locations.thekitespot.com ↗Safety
It's one of the least dangerous spots going: the lagoon is flat, shallow and closed, you always walk back. The real watch-points are minor. The bottom is very shallow in places (banks, salt, mud) — booties help and mind the shallows. The crowd is real in high season (many schools and students): keep your spacing. And the thermal builds in the afternoon: size your kite for late in the day. You're in a nature reserve — respect the salt pans and the marked zones.
source : kiterr.com ↗Soon, by the riders
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A few resources to discover this spot.