I am glad Brian stopped by here as Systema might really fit your need as well!
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There is nothing to report yet and I'd like it to stay that way. But I'd like the feeling that I can defend myself, just in case
It would also be fun with the training. But you have no advice on which styles might suit these conditions more than others?
I agree. I think high kicks on uneven ground would be a bad idea, so something with mostly upper body techniques would serve the purpose.
I'm not anti-gun and I do enjoy target shooting, but it is my opinion that for the vast majority of people, carrying a firearm is simply irrelevant to their life circumstances. I understand there is a constitutional right, but in most cases I believe there is no need to exercise it.
You see this is where I think you are missing out. You don't want a big school and that is fine, but let's say you did. You take a question like this and work it into your whole environmental & situational awareness program.i do not have any such advice, because i do not believe it is relevant. Study something that you find interesting, and develop your skill. you could also practice in this wilderness environment so that you become accustomed and used to it. in doing so, you may become aware of aspects of your system that are difficult in that terrain or that are especially useful in that terrain. but that's part of the developmental process.
Hey,
I'm quite new. I trained Krav Maga for a year but quite many winters have come and gone since then. I was hoping you could advice me.
If you spend a lot of time in the wilderness, in the woods, on cliffs, in open fields... That is to say on often uneven, sometimes semi-loose terrain, switching between open spaces and limited space (trees) and the fact that hard surface may or may not be found below... How would your thinking go with regards to chosing a martial arts style? Which would be among the most effective?
I want to train for the self-defence aspect and I want to be able to fight in this terrain to the point where I'm ready to chose a style that is believed to work well under these conditions.
I'm thinking grappling-heavy styles might be a problem due to the surface being so uncontrolled? But I may be wrong? Hopefully you get what I'm asking here
There are some styles that were developed by japanese fishermen who were on fishing boats all day and had to be able to fight on a boat that is constantly moving, rocking, and tilting. Such a style might suit you for your environment.
There are some styles that were developed by japanese fishermen who were on fishing boats all day and had to be able to fight on a boat that is constantly moving, rocking, and tilting. Such a style might suit you for your environment.