I was practicing tonight at the pell with a sharp and had coated the pell with old mattress foam from our boat cushions (That stuff is tough to hack through but it cuts nicely enough), and I stumbled upon something that brings a question of technique to mind.
Specifically, I noticed that during (ormore correctly, right after) a thrust technique into the pell, when I pass a foot (recover) and return to a vom tag, I was not pulling the sword right out, but was actually lifting up some as I withdrew in the recovery.....the result of which was a discernable INCREASE in the cut into the "flesh"....i.e., instead of being a sword's width hole, it was now like a 6-8 inch slice to the "chest" cavity after the stab. I only began to notice this when I thrust at speed and was attempting to recover at a realistic sparring speed.
The question is whether or not anyone knows of any historical reference to that sort of lifting (or for that matter, pushing down) to increase the wound channel, as it certainly seems to me that such lateral pressure along the edge while recovering from thrust seems to do significantly more damage?
(The boat cushions were quickly dispatched when I thought they might last considerably longer)
