Kittan Bachika
Purple Belt
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2009
- Messages
- 312
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Karate has Kihon which is their blocks, foot stances and strikes. Does Kali have something similar?
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Karate has Kihon which is their blocks, foot stances and strikes. Does Kali have something similar?
The more appropriate translation is the relationship of knife to empty hand rather than stick, at least the way it is taught in PTK. A longer weapon (bolo/stick) acts as a third jointed limb on the arm rather than the knife which is an extension of the hand. I usually show the unarmed translations once the student is comfortable with a number of knife patterns and manipulations, call it a month or so.
I see. I always though that they started out with the stick first. But as billicihak said before, it depends on they style of kali.
Is it easier for students to pick up empty hand fighting after learning to use the knife? In other styles they usually do empty hand first.
On the plus side, the assumption of weapon explains most of the oddball things you see in karate and kenpo, when you watch say Kyokushinkai guys do unarmed sparring you never see the classical blocking that is taught in the kata. Add a knife into the sparring equation and all of a sudden they are absorbing hits anymore the defensive sphere expands as all those extension blocks and parries have to come into play. Using the weapon first explains much of the basics that you see in most of the unarmed systems.