Amazing SHORT STAFF Fighting Techniques for Beginners of Filipino Martial Arts KarambitKnives,com
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What’s your favorite color? Mine is below!
Very good! Thank you. Black.
Ngl, this is as cringe and unconvincing as Steven Seagal.
More idol Kali training more power
Blue
Yellow
one thing ive come to realize in my own martial journey; i identify predominately as an Axman and its the weapon i feel most comfortable with and it just "called" to me from the start but my biggest issue was so many of the sparring videos and drills i saw with the Axe the Dane Ax in particular made it look so STIFF and rigid and while i get it to an extent i couldn't shake the idea that "their fighting against the weapons innate form and themselves to a certain extent" then i did some reading in the old manuals and discovered something interesting Polearms are also called "STAFF WEAPONS" which immidiately had something click in my mind and as i watch staff drills and techniques im able to apply them to my own axmanship and my fellow HEMA enthusiasts have commented "how the hell do you fight with an Axe like that?!" because thanks to wonderful people like you i was able to realize its just a staff with a dedicated chop chop bit on one end to increase deadliness XD thank you so much for the beautiful videos <3
I don’t have one
Blue. Fascinating techniques!
good session
I love polearm techniques extremely useful and a very underestimated weapon. Over all the weapons to use in a survival situation a staff is inconspicuous useful to carry things including yourself and you can defend yourself and when it breaks you can find another. Only thing about the staff is you should always carry a sidearm like a short sword, knife or shield etc
again, this is a "modern" invention. There was no short staff in Philippine martial history. This was Inosanto's innovation. There was no historical Filipino martial arts system until guys in the USA systematized "modern". Thanks to Bruce Lee, it got off with this marketing strategy. But there was no Kali. What existed prior to the 1970s was escrima from the Spanish "esgrima". And this was basically fencing for the common people. That is why the terminology was in Spanish and the numbering system is from European fencing. Because it was fencing. But thanks to Inosanto it became a "modern" martial art. There are schools that copied the Karate kata system too and called them sayaw, which is funny. Because there was no dancing in fighting here except on barrio fiestas (the dancing I mean). The question is, was there a true historical martial way in the Philippines? Unfortunately, there are no historical documents to show this. There were warfares of course, and war implements such as bladed weapons, armors and shields but there are no records to show that they were systematized. Additionally, there were no "Filipinos" in ancient times as the islands were governed by small polities with their own "kings" or rulers. "Filipino" came from King Felipe II of Spain and therefore a term used by colonizers.
Bruce Lee yellow of course