s_taillebois wrote:Well, there seems to be some initial interest here, but may take a while to get more of a group going.
Utah, alas, forgot to mention all of you down that way. No discourtesy intended.
Wider interest, methinks much of it might be in areas somehow associated with the collegiate environment, or those where the interest is in both martial arts, and exercise. Although too much of an implication for self-defense could be trouble to this kind of activity. Better to be thought of as a flock of eccentrics.
From what I remember from when I was back in the cities...the Asian focus is the norm there.
Ironic (or vexing) insofar as many ignore their own heritage in these arts. But learning an art of this type is obviously much harder when the masters have been dead for so long...hence Tobler, Brown,& others, ARMA and all the manufacturers of useable equipment, deserve acclaim for rescuing these arts from academic obscurity. Nothing quite kills a tradition off, as when it becomes the sole venue of tweed jacket academia.
Being from a city environment and teaching in a collegiate one, I can say you're (generally) right on both counts. In the cities around So. Cal., we generally get Asian arts. Scratch that; we generally get Tae Kwon Do, because you can milk more out of the parents with that one (no 0offense to the art, but it's true of many, many individual schools of TKD). Anything non Asian, except boxing and wrestling (which are now popular because of MMA/UFC stuff), is considered useless.
I brought some padded longswords and a mace to my other martial arts class the other day, and some of the other guys were having fun screwing around with them. Anyway, they invited this visiting MMA dude to go a round, and his answer was "I don't joust."
Sigh.
I'm impatient with stupidity. My people have learned to live without it.--The Day the Earth Stood Still