Podium finishes in the youth classification in the Wave World Cup, as well as on the slalom course at national level and in the iQFoiL national squad - they spent the winter in mast-high Maui waves. Leon and Marlon Maethner put the pedal to the metal. We spoke to the brothers from the windsurfing-enthusiastic Maethner family.
Marlon: Good, good. Yes, slowly, but of course we do miss Maui - it was just a dream.
Leon: It's nice to see my friends here at school again. I'm settling in well again, but I already miss the perfect windsurfing conditions on Maui.
Leon: Yes, during foil training. I'm in the Schleswig-Holstein windsurfing squad with Vincent Langer as my coach. Marlon is no longer in the squad because he's too old for it at 19.
Marlon: I had to study for my medical test, which I wrote last weekend. I did my A-levels last year and want to start studying medicine this year, so I'm currently applying to universities. So unfortunately I haven't made it onto the water yet.
Marlon: Definitely Kiel! It would be great to stay here in the north on the coast. We live on the Kiel Fjord, quite close to the water, so it's easy to go windsurfing in between.
Leon: I'm in my tenth year at grammar school. It doesn't count towards the Abitur yet. So the exchange to Maui over the winter term was a perfect fit. Going to school on Maui was a great experience.
Leon: That was hard sometimes, yes (laughs). But you have to say, Marlon also did a lot of study preparation and learning in the mornings. We often didn't get out on the water together until the afternoon. It was only on the good days that he caught a few waves before me.
Marlon: Our parents were there, yes. Both of them have been windsurfing since their youth and have always wanted to spend a longer period of time on Maui. This winter they were able to fit it in with their work, and it was also ideal for Leon and me. And our big brother Moritz came to visit us on his holiday.
Marlon: Yes, we both started windsurfing at a very early age. My parents put me on the board for the first time when I was five, so Leon was only two years old (grins). That means he couldn't really push me at the very beginning (laughs). But when he joined in two or three years later at the age of five, that's when it all started. We're usually on the water together and are happy for each other when he does a new trick, wins a race or catches a good wave.
Leon: I always wanted to get out on the water as often as possible. I remember when Marlon took part in Vincent Langer's Kids Camps, but I was still too young. I really wanted to take part too.
Marlon: (Grins and nods.)
Leon: We both really got into it when we were ten or eleven and surfed waves for the first time. After that, we always wanted more!
Marlon: Around Kiel, depending on the wind direction. In Weißenhaus, for example, you can hit the waves when the wind blows from the west-north-west, otherwise you can slalom to Heidkate.
Leon: That's right, or to Schilksee for foil training. And when the conditions are good, we go with friends or family at the weekend to go waving, primarily up to Denmark.
Marlon: Wave is the passion of our whole family. We were introduced to the discipline of slalom through Vincent Langer's Kids Camps. We've taken part every year since we were nine years old. It was always great fun and that's why we started taking part in the Racer of the Sea and DWC races. And Leon is also a member of the iQFoiL national squad.
Leon: I get to foil more often during the school day, but at the weekends and during the holidays we can usually be found in the waves.
Marlon: Absolutely. On Maui, there were even days when the whole family of five of us were out on the water in Ho'okipa - and there were also the odd party wave or two. And let me put it this way: our house is pretty full ... with windsurfing equipment.
Leon: Yes, that basically came about through Vincent's Kids Camps. Axel Wallem from Duotone always exhibited the material there, which is how we came into contact with Duotone. We've been part of the team since 2019.
Marlon: The people at Duotone are really great - we really enjoy being part of the team there. Especially with the other Young Guns. We often have a lot of fun windsurfing together with Tobias Bjørnå, Carlos and Alexia Kiefer, Hannes Gobisch and co.
Leon: That's right, Marlon came third in the U20 classification and I came second U17.
Marlon: We've been regularly taking part in contests since we were twelve and 15 years old, so we've already gained some experience. That helps a lot. Things went really well in Denmark in the autumn.
Marlon: Next up is the Youth World Cup in Pozo. I'm flying there in a fortnight' time.
Leon: Unfortunately, the World Cup starts two weeks before my summer holidays this year. Hopefully school will work out so that I can still take part in the World Cup.
Marlon: And then the Youth World Cup in Denmark is on the agenda again in autumn. In between, we want to take part in as many slalom events in Germany as possible. In general, the aim is to compete in many more events in the future, depending on how we can combine it with our studies - including on the IWT/PWT Wave Tour around the world.
Leon: Of course, becoming a professional is the dream and, to a certain extent, the goal. But it's also a long way off. I'm going to do my A-levels first and then plan to go to university like Marlon. At the same time, I'm going to keep pushing myself in windsurfing and see where that takes me.
Marlon: That's also my plan and goal: to study first and at the same time tackle windsurfing as professionally as possible.
Leon: On Maui, most of my classmates were surfers. Nevertheless, you are not an outsider as a windsurfer. In Ho'okipa, you can always meet the odd like-minded young windsurfer.
Marlon: Yes, but in the Canary Islands we meet more young people, or rather most windsurfers our age. There are the locals Carlos and Alexia Kiefer, Liam Dunkerbeck and many other young windsurfers on the water. And with the Richter boys, the Gobisch siblings and us, there's already a whole bunch of youngsters from Kiel in the youth starting field. I would say that there is generally a lot of young talent there. It's great fun to push yourself with your peers there every summer.
Leon: We got used to the "new" wind direction relatively quickly on Maui. However, it has to be said that we had already spent a few weeks on Maui two years ago - so wind from the right was nothing new for us.
Marlon: Yes, getting used to it went quicker than expected, especially when riding the waves - jumping still feels strange. We occasionally surf in Denmark when the wind blows from the right, but not often.
Marlon: Podium!
Leon: (Looks at his brother, grins and nods.)
In the U18 juniors, Leon already took second place behind Carlos Kiefer Quintana on the opening day. Marlon has not yet competed in the U21 group, with Liam Dunkerbeck and others waiting in his first heat.