Moderators: Webmaster, Stacy Clifford
Grant Hall wrote:I have to say that I don't see much use in this at all, as far as Martial Arts go I consider Kali as one of the worst as it has a always go forawrd mentality in its fighting that results in both opponents getting hit multiple times.
I really hate the WEKAF style where everyone is armored to the core, but this (Dog Brothers Style) takes serious guts. it's a real fight, with real sticks. As an aside some Kali practitioners do see their sticks as training weapons as blades and use a "one hit ends fight" mentality.I don't think it builds martial spirit at all, aleast not the martial spirit indicative of one who fights with bladed weapons.
They are one in the same, not in the sense that one should take a hit to give a hit, but in having a willingness to engage an opponent actively seeking to do you real physical harm while you seek to do them the same and avoidharm yourself, no matter the tool.
To quote the Modern Army Combatives website (MAC being partially created by ARMAteer Matt Larsen)
http://moderncombatives.org/home.htmlthe defining characteristic of a warrior is the willingness to close with the enemy. We do not win wars because we are better at hand-to-hand combat than the enemy, we do however win wars because of the things it takes to be a good hand-to-hand fighter. Any training plan that does not serve to build this fundamental aggressiveness is actually counter productive. Confidence comes from competence. It is not enough to simply tell soldiers to be aggressive; they must have a faith in their abilities built through hard and arduous training and know that they are going to win; so that when that weapon does malfunction three feet from the bad guy, they will instinctively attack.
Grant Hall wrote:game of "stick fighting"
Stewart Sackett wrote:If you look at the dog brothers as a group of people playing with sticks that they pretend are swords then what they're doing is silly..
Jeremiah Backhaus wrote:
Kat, greetings. I have never met you, being a relative new guy (1 1/2 years in) but I did watch your highlights video that you posted, I look forward to eventually meeting you and getting some good scrapping in. I have a few questions for you though: You say that you have been out of ARMA for a while, I don't know how long, but my guess is at least 4 years.
If you were to lay off of Muay Thai training for 4 years and then get back in, but jumped right into a kick boxing ring, do you think that you could effectively recall your training?
That got a bit hard to follow, do you think that you can effectively recall and apply your ARMA/WMA fighting skill in a situation that you have not used it in for years? I tend to think that might be a little difficult.
I also would ask how you think the two will match, you said in a previous post that you would keep in the back of your mind that the fight would be over if you were using a sword, well, that changes the way you would fight. Fighting with sticks is one thing, fighting with swords is another. The Dog Brothers admit that in the intro video. If one were to go into the fight thinking that it bears similarity, that could have some dangerous results.
Now, I am not trying to change your mind, from what I gather that would be a very hard thing to do. I wish you the best as you test your martial mindedness (though it seems you don't need to test it), but I hope that you don't try and apply fighting with swords to fighting with sticks.
(GFS)
Stewart Sackett wrote:Grant Hall wrote:game of "stick fighting"
People have been fighting with sticks longer then they have been fighting with swords & there are numerous European traditions of stick & staff fighting.
KatherineJohnson wrote:[quote="Grant Hall
A decent boxer could not only take on these guys but he would decimate them once he closed range. The videos that Dog Brothers present show clearly that you can take repeditive hits from their sticks with little real damage.
Grant Hall wrote:You misunderstand me, I don't consider fighting with a stick to be a silly game, I consider Kali to be a game.
Stewart Sackett wrote:Grant Hall wrote:You misunderstand me, I don't consider fighting with a stick to be a silly game, I consider Kali to be a game.
Ah, sorry. I totally misread you.
It makes a lot more sense to criticize a style of stick fighting then it does to criticise the stick in general as a weapon. I don't know much about kali, so I can't comment there.
I am curious about your opinion of La Canne. I looked it up on youtube and what I saw all looked good, for about 14 seconds and then someone would start twirling for some reason. I was under the impression that la canne was still taught, when it is taught, along with savate (which tends to be fairly pragmatic), so I was surprised to find so few combative examples of it.
I believe it is still taught as a combat form, one thing I like about Savate is that it is seperated into 3 catergories, basically you have full on combat with all the dirty tricks, then you have full on combat without the dirty tricks and then you have sport Savate which is the most well known. Im fairly certain that French Stick Fighting is also catergorized in a similar fashion.I was wondering if you, or anyone, could tell me: Is the art still practiced combatively or is it purely a dance form now? Are their any objections to historical la canne or are criticisms entirely focused on the choreographed nature of the art today?
KatherineJohnson wrote:I'm thinking about attending and either fighting with a modified rattan "staff" or modified bamboo shinai. Probably some knife work aswell.
Anyone else thinking about going?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVg1LMET46c
Return to “Research and Training Discussion”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||