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Daidojuku

 

Started in 1981 by Kyokushin 8th dan Azuma Takashi.

 

Combines Kyokushin Karate with Judo, Jujitsu,Muay Thai.......

 

A very competitive style with an emphasis on realism and freedom from style related boundaries.

 

Basically Karate influenced MMA.

 

Tournaments are full contact MMA type rules. No gloves, but bubble face head gear is worn. 30 second time limit for ground fighting.

 

Various dojos focus on different specialities.

 

My dojo is heavily Muay Thai influenced, and we also compete in kick boxing events.

 

Check out some fight clips on the home page: https://www.daidojuku.com

"Today is a good day to die"

Live each day as if it were your last

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Hey Pineapple......I meant to ask you.......My master lives in Pohoa......anywhere near you ?

~Master Jules......aka "The Sandman"


"I may be a trained killer......but Im really a nice guy"

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AIKIDO-

 

Develops a new person and understands the principals of balance and energy. Views change on yourself as well as fighting. you understand and control and redirect or break balance simply. You develop to center yourself with nature and understand ki. helps you bring true ki to have in you always and develop a no mind person. you understand how to control without hurting someone. takes away fear, doubts, and restores it with relaxation which any thing is possible to counter.

Even the most powerful human being has a limited sphere of strength. Draw him outside of that sphere and into your own, and his strength will dissipate.

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I have a style question is there any hapkido guys out there? I would like to here about that, I heard it is a pretty complete style with kicking, punching, grappling and submission. Come on guys lets here about some more styles be a little more descriptive of the training for each. Thanks!!!!

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Master Jules:
My master lives in Pohoa......anywhere near you ?

 

Sorry, Pohoa is on a different island (The Big Island). I live on Oahu.

 

Who is your Master and which style?

 

My masters name is Alex Kirk. He is the chief of Police of the SPCC (society for the prevention of cruelty to children)....he is my Goju Ryu and JuJitsu teacher......he has a few houses out there, and travels all over the place......he's hysterical, but a really great martial artist. Hes been training for about 38 years. Hes also a direct student and was a very close friend of the late Peter Urban, I was lucky that he took me to train with him.

~Master Jules......aka "The Sandman"


"I may be a trained killer......but Im really a nice guy"

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I have a style question is there any hapkido guys out there? I would like to here about that, I heard it is a pretty complete style with kicking, punching, grappling and submission. Come on guys lets here about some more styles be a little more descriptive of the training for each. Thanks!!!!

 

I take Hapkido, from Ji Han Jae lineage. It is a very complete style. We learn alot of high and powerful kicks, not unlinke tae kwon do, but we also spend alot of time doing falls, various throws, joint locks, and submissions. On different days we'll spend a class specialising in a different area. Training also includes various weapons, but only at higher levels than me.

Like a midget at a urinal, I'm always on my toes

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I do Hsing I

 

I've been doing it for about a year. You are taught 5 primary forms(simple to learn) that you do over and over again.The five elements are Metal(splitting), water(drilling), wood(exploding), fire and earth(round). These are the basic fighting principles of hsing I.

 

The first thing you learn is body connection(structure) and how to move with it in the forms. Hsing I practicioners train to stay stable, always having their legs underneath them, never overextending. The forms help with that. Hsing I is all about power and over powering their opponents. They do this by training to keep their structure and moving the whole body as one unit. Every punch has whole body power behind it.

 

Hsing I is about 50% strikes and 50% grapple, but most people would think its 100% strikes. There is some kicking mostly to knees and shins. It mostly uses its arms for fighting and feet for stepping. If you saw a Hsing I guy fighting it would kinda look like boxing but you'd see his whole body move as one very tight unit.

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