Kicker Chick Posted June 27, 2006 Posted June 27, 2006 I've heard this term most recently. What are the best uses of flow drills, and can anyone recommend useful drills?
bushido_man96 Posted June 27, 2006 Posted June 27, 2006 I am not familiar with this term....could be the same as floor drills? I am familiar with floor drills, its just putting combination together and working down the floor.Let me know. https://www.haysgym.comhttp://www.sunyis.com/https://www.aikidoofnorthwestkansas.com
dortiz Posted June 28, 2006 Posted June 28, 2006 The best example I know of is a JKD flow drill. YOu line up in fighting stance in front of each other. Hands up of course. First person throws a punch towards the face of opponent. Opponent then blocks with back hand by tapping punch to left,away from face. At same time front hand comes up also blocking ear from same or second punch. This first step is a kind of one,two block. Again left hand sweeps across to right tapping punch and second hand comes up to ear like a reverse knife hand. Now the third step is the left now drives forward pushing the punchers arm back almost across them. Now the fourth step is the defender executes a punch across that move. I cant spell it right but use the term pok sow.Starting slow what should happen is as the last move, the punch occurs, the first move of second person starts, the slap block. Now both sould be able to FLOW back and forth. As speed and smoothness develop you can step out for long punch or in with elbow.In HapKiDo there is alot of similar using back hands back and forth while standing foot to foot.DAOGood excersise.
bushido_man96 Posted June 28, 2006 Posted June 28, 2006 Ah, I see. Kind of like a continuous, interactive one-step? https://www.haysgym.comhttp://www.sunyis.com/https://www.aikidoofnorthwestkansas.com
dortiz Posted June 29, 2006 Posted June 29, 2006 Yes, You could take a one step, remove the formalities at the begining of each persons turn and FLOW back and forth.
bushido_man96 Posted June 29, 2006 Posted June 29, 2006 Oh, that sounds like a fun activity. I'll have to try it sometime. THanks for the info! https://www.haysgym.comhttp://www.sunyis.com/https://www.aikidoofnorthwestkansas.com
aefibird Posted July 9, 2006 Posted July 9, 2006 It's good, we do a lot of those sort of drills at my Karate club. It's kind of similar (but also not) to Chi Sau drills used in Wing Chun - good for improving sensitivity and flow (hence the name). "Was it really worth it? Only time and death may ever tell..." The Beautiful South - The Rose of My CologneSheffield Steelers!
Hwa Rang Warrior Posted May 11, 2007 Posted May 11, 2007 We do flow drills for our self defense. We'll take one lock and change it into another and keep building and building so that the students learn to adapt as their opponent changes positions. It helps reduce what I call the "duh" reaction when grabbed Tang Soo!
DWx Posted May 11, 2007 Posted May 11, 2007 This isn't something we do in class but I do a sort of version of it in my own training. I actually started doing it when my sister told me I couldn't fight like Neo in The Matrix....... so I had to try to prove her wrong and we did like a fast 1-step / sparring type thing. "Everything has its beauty, but not everyone sees it." ~ Confucius
KarateEd Posted May 13, 2007 Posted May 13, 2007 Sounds sort of like Chi Sao, as aefibird says. We do something similar within Youn Wha Ryu TKD, but it's a little different.Ed Ed
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