Postby Justin Blackford » Tue Aug 09, 2005 7:34 am
Actually, I have recently seen just how well an untrained non-fencer can do against one who practices regularly.
One of my friends with whom I study the Art has a 14 year old brother named Travis who would often times watch my study group during our drilling and freeplay sessions.
At first he was apprehensive as to how effective swordsmanship could be from a study group filled with young men who were only three or four years older than him, but he still would watch us from his front porch, though he never asked to take part in the action.
Then, one evening our group was training, and we were entering our freeplay rounds. My friend called out to his brother and asked him to fight, just to see if all his watching would pay off in a fight.
He came down from the porch, picked up a padded waster, and he and his brother entered zufechten in their guards. Surprisingly, although Travis had never actually paid attention to the names that we referred to the guards and the strikes, he seemed to have developed an understanding from his quiet watching at a distance. He immediately assumed the guard of Pflug and his brother the Schranckhut.
The fight involved a lot of krumphaus, oberhaus, and unterhaus, but Travis defended himself quite well and managed to wechsel and thrust his brother when stuck in a hard bind. The next two rounds, his brother defeated him, but not without a hard fight. And in real life, only the first fight would have counted anyway, since you would only get the one chance to do it right.
I was impressed at how a non-fencer who only watched quietly had performed against one who trains on a regular basis. Travis' explanation was, "Hey, I've been defending myself against my big brother my whole life!" HAHA! <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
Justin
A man believes what he wants to believe. - Cuchulainn