Hello everyone !
A beginner on the path of the sword, I appreciate and highly respect the wealth of material you ARMAters have contributed on this website.
I have waded through it for hours on end already (my wife tells me too many hours). For quite some time -years- I have been considering taking the plunge and studying earnestly, but life, family, job... and finally I am in the water trying to swim. I have started practicing alone the various stances, footwork, and basic cuts on a 30 minutes per day basis.
I would like to begin learning as straight as I can from the start. My core manual is John Clement's "Medieval Swordsmanship". I have ordered my first waster from Raven. While it is being lovingly crafted, I have to make do with what I have and that is : a wooden dowel (longsword sized), and ... a one handed short sword old stage prop (well I strive to not do the same mistake twice).
I have some questions here for you experienced people. Please moderator/webmaster tell me if I should make a separate post for each question (which would make many) or is it okay to pile them in one.
Question I : After careful study and measurements of afore-mentioned prop, I was surprised that it is not that bad, figures-wise :
-overall weight 2lb 10oz
-overall length 35 inches
-blade length 28 inches
-point of balance 4 inches from guard
-"sweet spot" hitting at hard target 6-8 inches from tip
-"pendulum equivalent" is almost at the tip
Would using it be detrimental to my learning or is there a way I can make that metal thing useful ?
Question II : I would like to study both longsword and medieval sword and shield. I take to heart the "cross-train" advice found around here. Would starting these together be detrimental or beneficial to my training, and why ?
Question III : I do not have a pell (yet), but a stack of logs I can strike at. This I did with the one handed prop. I wonder about the follow-through/recovery issue. A hard strike on something as solid as a tree trunk does not go through the target but rather bounces off it. Should I strive to make my hits less bouncy by making them "stick" on target, or simply recover from whatever bounce as fast as I can, or should I reverse movement to the initial stance ? My own cutting experience is limited to gardening with a sickle, so I know about edge alignment but not much more.
Question IV : When starting from Nebenhut and cutting diagonally upwards with the true edge, I cannot "feel" the Ochs ward I should try to end in. The sword just flies upward and way beyond Ochs. Any suggestions ?
Question V : Regarding footwork, I feel confused by Silver's comments on the true and false times, which lead me to believe I should strike quicker than I move my feet. This would mean hitting while not being stable on my feet. And there is also this German master (sorry I cannot find it again right now) who says approximately "he who moves after he strikes has no reason to be proud of his art". Did I misunderstand something ? How should I interpret this kind of paradox for actually studying footwork/striking combination ?
Question VI : I am already looking for sparring partners around me (western France, Britanny to be precise). How early should I start sparring ? Is there a way to tell when my/our level of practice is good enough to start sparring ?
Okay I hope I did not bother you too much with dumb questions.
Take care
JL
