For our Monday-night group-training session this week, we sought out a park now that the weather is getting substantially nicer and now that there is another wave of new interest coming. We had been working out in one of our yards, but it's too much of a mess to have so many people over, particularly people we might not know yet. Thus, we're glad to have found some neutral territory, so to speak, to train in. We decided to try a nearby park where there are a ton of community soccer fields, but since it had just rained (as it is wont to do in the spring in Knoxville -- and the early summer and late fall and all winter), the fields were swamps. We decided to practice in the parking lot, which is about two hundred yards (180m) long with a packed gravel surface. Having such a long, straight area to train in, we decided to do the line-stepping, a.k.a. one-step, a.k.a. zig-zag step, drilling method on basic strikes until we got tired and round it out with some forms drilling.
Doing line-step drills for approximately two hundred yards is a different sort of activity. That's a pretty decent distance. The method: start at one end with a strike, do it all the way to the other end, take a short break (about 1 minute), and then return with another strike. We repeated this through the dodging strikes (Phoenix), some hooking strikes (Lion), and some extending strikes (Phoenix) before it had been about an hour and a half and was getting dark. We used the last minutes of daylight before the park closed to review the four Lion System forms to be trained in the Beijing/Huairou intensive this year: windmill seizing, lying step seizing, turning the back grasping, and holding and lifting grasping, which we drilled vigorously last week. It wasn't a very varied workout, but it was a damn good one.
Now... the long-awaited "heavy metal" or "heavy weapons" workout. I'd call it the "Heavy Weapons Master" workout if it wasn't for the fact that I feel like I suck at the heavy weapons. Here are my two heavy weapons:
- The bagua dadao, which many of you are familiar with. In case you're not, it's our large saber (Chinese-style dao, or broadsword) a little over five feet long and eight pounds heavy (3.5kg), used one-handed for turning, standing strengthening, basics, and a monster of a form that takes about 8-10 minutes to complete at normal pace.
- My iron staff, which is a round steel bar six feet long and 7/8 of an inch in diameter (1.83m long by 2.2 cm in diameter), weighing just short of 14lb (6.3kg). I don't know any "bagua staff," but I learned a lot of bo staff basics when I was training in karate, so I use those techniques for conditioning and many of the same kinds of goals as the dadao provides: using a heavy thing, coordinating movement and body with the heavy thing, getting power out, strengthening and conditioning, etc.
- Drill form-related stuff with the saber;
- Drill anything martially useful with the iron staff;
- Drill basics and turning with the saber;
- Stay physically active during breaks from the weapons.
Anyway... happy training! Keep it up!
3 comments:
You might consider checking out Yang Jwing-Ming's Shaolin Staff dvd. I haven't looked at it personally, but I do have respect for his work, and the fact that it's chinese martial arts might make for a better fit than karate.
I might look into that, Ryan, thanks for the tip. I haven't seen too much of YJM's stuff that I thought was silly, and I was present at one point when HJB indicated that YJM and he are "martial brothers." What that means, I'm not fully sure.
I have a background in karate, and since I've been using the staff primarily as a strengthening tool, I figured what I was up to was kind of sufficient. The original reasons I picked it up are 1) because there's one at the karate school I maintain friendship with (about 5 pounds lighter than mine), and so since I was there, I started using it in the vein of the saber -- large heavy weaponry makes you strong and forces you to learn to get your power out -- and 2) I had injured my wrist to the point where using the saber became quite counterproductive and still wanted development from a heavy metal instrument.
I had actually considered looking into bagua staff, but I didn't really want to get crossed up with lineages and get practicing something that might aggravate HJB or that might be detrimental to my YSB training. I've thought about talking to HJB about the staff, showing it to him and whatnot, but I'm honestly a bit nervous about what he'll have me doing with it! I guess that's no kind of attitude, though... so if we're all swinging around 15-pound iron staffs before long, my apologies might be due, in a way.
I'd definitely ask him. Even if it's just one or two basic exercises, the benefits would accrue over time. For my part, I'm really looking forward to seeing the new jian material. But I haven't even had the chance to review any saber stuff yet, and my barehand skill level is so absolutely basic that I'm nowhere near the point where I should be working with weapons. Looking forward to your post on study groups, since I'd love to get one started here, but finding people is likely to be challenging.
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