Gulo
Yellow Belt
pingga or dos manos
does anyone here trains with this pilipino style of wooden sword fighting?thanks:asian:
does anyone here trains with this pilipino style of wooden sword fighting?thanks:asian:
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Use of longer weapons like the tapado may be a reflection of their use as staffs and poles in everyday life:
"Longer impact weapons include the bangaw, a straight staff of rattan running approximately forty-four inches. Specifically, however, the staff is measured by the distance from the ground to the individual practioner's sternum. The bangkaw is generally held by both hands at one end, and wielded in much the same manner as the kampilan. Another two-handed impact weapon is the pingga, a traditional load-carrying pole of the magpuputo (rice cake venders), magtataho (bean curd venders), and the maglalako ng kulambo't kumot (mosquito net and blanket venders). Pingga are three to four foot lengths of flattened bamboo used for transporting various goods and for fighting; its techniques, too, are based on those of the kampilan."
(Mark Wiley, Filipino Martial Culture, p. 125).
Mat Marinas of Pananandata teaches a pingga style that he learned from his granduncle.
Originally posted by Black Grass
Dos Manos is part of the Ilustrisimo style.
Vince
Originally posted by lhommedieu
Two hands on a longer weapon? Or Double Stick (in San Miguel Eskrima it's called "Dos Armas")?
Best,
Steve