A
andurilking2
Guest
what does eeveryone prefer?
i personally prefer open hand 100%
i personally prefer open hand 100%
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Originally posted by andurilking2
what does eeveryone prefer?
i personally prefer open hand 100%
Originally posted by c2kenpo
Mostly train in open hand but sticks and staff just in case that attacker happens to attack me whilest I sweep the floor.....
Now where did I put that set of Sai again.....could you hold on a minute??
Have fun,
David Gunzburg
Originally posted by pesilat
Ahh, but why look for my Sai when I'm already holding a book in one hand and a bottle of water in the other - two perfectly good weapons "locked and loaded".
Mike
People talk all of valiant hand-to-hand combat (meaning swords, spears, open hand... Melee combat). The Spartans, the Japanese, and many European nations. The valiant soldiers/knights/samurai who spend their whole life training only for it to end in the hands of a peasant with a crossbow or another ballistic weapon with minimal training.
Originally posted by c2kenpo
Great thought pattern there Mike. Using anything as a weapon is a great idea. One of our students came up with a kata that used his school boobkbag and the items that were attached(such as his book) as weapons for defense.
Dave Gunzburg
Originally posted by lost_tortoise
I am too old and rickety to be doing the mano y mano thing anymore, so I prefer to have a weapon and good 5K time (although I am severely lacking in the latter, so a weapon may have to suffice). To reiterate what Mike has said, I like to use whatever I have on hand as a weapon (I have even been successful using my jacket for sarong techniques!) The less pain and blood loss, the better IMO!
geoffrey
Hmmm...Originally posted by Blindside
As totally an aside, a crossbow was never the weapon of a "peasant." It takes disciplined training to load and fire such a weapon under combat conditions. Units of crossbowmen were often professional soldiers or mercenaries, but certainly not "peasants." Pre-gunpowder it was hand-to-hand that decided the huge majority of battles, off-hand I would only consider the mongols to be the exception to that general rule. Even including the (over-rated) effects of the English longbow on battles....
But back to the topic at hand....
I love hand-to-hand, but have a huge attachment to all things pointy and sharp.
Lamont
Originally posted by andurilking2
ah yes the reason i practice iado is because when i get into a fight at work the winner is usually the better with a sword
Originally posted by tonbo
I prefer open hand. If my oponent wants to bring a weapon that I can take away from him, then I will happily oblige. I don't want to return the favor, just in case they are better than me.
Peace--