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Been training about a year, I've been taught Siu Nim Tao, I should begin learning Chum Kiu in like 2-4 months roughly.
I'm curious not to hijack the thread but at what point do you guys start training devices such as:
Lat Sau Jik Jung
Lian Wan Kuen
Toi Ma
Jip Sau - Jou Sau
Ng Seung Da for Chi Sau (5 double strikes) like... Biu Da, Tan Da, Lap Sau, Pai Jeung etc...
Generally for the way I used to train we would use:
Lian Wan Kuen for SNT drilling & later chi sau adaptation... (but really any technique trained in Wing Chun can be added in Chi Sau for a "free expression")
Lat Sau Jik Jung was trained in Dan Chi Sau
Toi Ma in Chi Sau for "moving horse"
Jip Sau - Jou Sau for the Luk Sau platform.
Ng Seung Da or just Seung Da (more than 5 double strikes) were added also in the Luk Sau rolling platform before Toi Ma.
Thanks for your opinion, just wondering. Hopefully you all understand the translations as It's harder for me to use non-character, non-Cantonese English translations.
I'm lost too. And seeing the characters wouldn't help, since I don't speak, or read Cantonese.
We call our chain punching "Lin Wan Kuen" so that's taught right from the beginning.
Re "Toi ma"... We begin moving, turning and stepping in chi sau at an intermediate student level, as soon as a student masters basic poon-say or rolling, and and is ready to learn our first "chi-sau section". In this training, most attacks are accompanied by stepping forward. The defender dissolves the attack and turns or rides the force backward.
We don't commonly use the term "jip-sau", pronounced "jeep" (you don't mean jut sau?) although I can't be sure whether I've heard it used in passing long ago by my old sifu, who was Chinese. At any rate it's not one of the common terms we use.
Finally, the "five double punches" sound like what we call "five thunder punches" and these are introduced at a moderately advanced level in our chi-sau sections and in the Biu Tze form.
I wish I could me more precise, but I'm not currently associated with any school or organization, and train privately under other gwai-lo who are skilled in technique, but not in Cantonese!
I've been training around 1 year now, still on SLT. Also in the classes we tend to go over the basics again and again and seem to not learn anything new. Is this the same everywhere? I have trained several times with Grandmaster Kwok and he has shown me chi sau, but I haven't done it in my regular class yet.