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I must admit I've never seen a group of any note try to directly apply the teachings of sport or Oriental fencing to HEMA (which doesn't mean it may not happen, of course, but if it does, it's a quite new phenomenon for me).
All this talk of broken hands and fingers leads me to suggest...
"Wear Gloves!"
That's OK. If I didn't want you to hit them, I wouldn't have left them out there like that."
All this talk of broken hands and fingers leads me to suggest...
"Wear Gloves!"
In the US, AEMMA has (or had until very recently) a policy of not sparring with padded weapons. That is not 'utter rot'. Several other smaller schools have the same policy.
That's true, but the fact that they don't use padded wasters doesn't mean they don't do freeplay.
Rabbe
Sometimes there obviously is a danger with sparring and sparring challenges though. And that being that some folks don´t make that assumption [i.e as in it being a training tool] and take a invitation to sparring as something it´s not. I think that is a sad, sad thing that hamper us in our mutual quest... It divides and lessens the spirit and kills one's interest...
The single primary feature of ARMA that distinguishes it from all other organizations is the ARMA Method of Study. All of the other answers given are in some way or another a product of the ARMA method. <img src="/forum/images/icons/laugh.gif" alt="" />Q: what distinguishes ARMA from AEMMA and SAS and other schools?
In the ARMA DFW study group we make sure that everybody clearly understands that at our regular practice sparring is always a part of training. We also tell them that whenever possible sparring should always involve three people, the two fighting and another to observe and comment on their footwork, body position, technique, etc. Although we have moments of laughter and joking we do not allow any horse play in sparring.
I'm also dubious about padded weapons, unless there is some very strict refereeing and discipline. Boffers and padded weapons to me are a huge area of possible salon alteration and deevolution into compromise for sport.
You are right, they can perform free play.
What it means is they are extremely restricted in their ability to perform full-speed, full-contact sparring. In fact they cannot do it at all except in heavy armor and even then, they are still constrained in their fencing particularly in thrusts.
Practicing Blossfechten full speed in armor is somewhat silly to begin with, and the need to have all the armor for every fighter means every (full speed) sparring session is a major event.
From my own personal correspondence with some people in these groups, and from reading their websites, I believe this leads them to spar (full speed) considerably less often. And from watching some of their sparring videos, it seems to me that their fighting ability has suffered as a result.
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