Extreme Parasailing lifts you over Roanoke Sound and the Outer Banks coast from Manteo, North Carolina. Departing from Kitty Hawk Kites at 307 Queen Elizabeth Ave, this one-hour boat outing delivers 10–12 minute flights that put the shoreline, marshes, and barrier islands in sharp perspective. Riders clip into a harness on the boat, the canopy fills, and a 500–600-foot line eases you aloft for a smooth, stable ride; takeoffs and landings are handled from the deck, so even first-timers move from boat to air with minimal fuss.
From altitude the scene rearranges: salt marshes carve green veins into tidal flats, old wooden piers point toward the sound, and the thin ribbon of the Atlantic peeks beyond the barrier islands. The experience highlights the region’s low, flat coastal geology and the wide views that make the Outer Banks feel both remote and intimate. Flights are sold as single, double, or triple rides depending on weight and conditions; operators allow observers when space permits.
Practical details matter. The activity runs seasonally—usually mid-May through mid-September—and requires a combined flight weight of at least 150 pounds and a maximum near 400 pounds depending on wind and safety. Minimum age is 5. Expect a captain who reads the weather and can dip riders into the water on request; if you’d rather stay dry, tell the crew.
Why book this with Kitty Hawk Kites? The company has long anchored wind and watersports instruction on the Outer Banks, and operating from Manteo places you in the quieter, more sheltered waters of Roanoke Sound instead of the open ocean. That makes for calmer launches and expansive sightlines across Currituck Sound and toward the historic sites on Roanoke Island—the same island where the late-16th-century English colony attempted settlement in 1587.
This outing is less about adrenaline and more about perspective: a few serene minutes above a landscape defined by water, dunes, and marsh. It’s excellent for families—kids five and up can participate—and practical for mixed-experience groups because the boat-based launch removes a confidence barrier common with shore-based adventures.
Bring sun protection, a windproof layer, and a waterproof phone case for those horizon-facing shots. The activity’s brevity belies its impact: a short flight that reorients how you see the Outer Banks, then returns you to shore with a fresh view of the sound’s wide, low-slung landscape.
Operators brief every passenger on safety procedures, life jackets, and weather contingency plans before departure. Cameras are welcome but tether them; sunglasses and a hat with a chin strap help. If wind or weather shifts, staff will reschedule or advise alternate times. Combine parasail flight with a Roanoke Island historic walk or an Elizabethan Gardens visit to round out a day on the island.