Tibby Posted June 19, 2003 Posted June 19, 2003 My studio is out in the boonies (In Texas, all the good ones are out in the boonies, lol). Anyway, I was cleaning up out back behind the Dojo, and I found the remains of a Wing Chung dummy. I think I can salvage it, with a little elbow grease and a few 2x4’s... anyways, I was wondering if you guys think it was worth it for a School that teaches Karate and Jujitsu to have a Wing Chung dummy? In this area (Bucket of the bible belt) the attendance at the school fold from a group of 20 to no one for a year. I’m guessing it came from back when the school was busy. I’ve seen pictures, but I’ve never really learned to use one of these. I’m totally new to this. I wanted talked to the Sensei, but I'm sure he will show us, but I just want to know exactly what you do with it. Just combinations and such? Is the Dummy only good for Wing Chung, or does it work great for general blocking and sticking and striking and hand speed? Any help can be grateful.
WC-Strayder Posted June 19, 2003 Posted June 19, 2003 Iron arms is made on the wooden dummy. And some good technique training too. If you just do karate and jujijtsu I guess you have no use for it, coz in wing chun we do not block strikes, but deflect them and if you try that you ruin your karate, so my best guess is to sell it. Not to me, coz I live in the cold, deep and snowy mountains of Norway, or middle of nowhere for you guys, (read: Norway) , but to a Wing Chun club in the US of A. My better guess for you, if you are interested, is to learn wing chun sticky hands, a very effective close combat system also learned on the wooden dummy. Buy a book or invite someone that can teatch you some of the basics in chi sao sticky hands, coz that is great even if you train jujijtsu and karate.... just a wild guess. If the first lesson was a failure, then you know that skydiving isn't for you!
Tibby Posted June 19, 2003 Author Posted June 19, 2003 What do you mean by "deflect" blows? In the Style of Jujitsu we pratice, you are taugh feint to the right or left, so that even if he hits, it deflects the blow. Thanks for all your advice, it sounds like it is worth the time to fix it up,
DokterVet Posted June 20, 2003 Posted June 20, 2003 In wado karate, deflections are used more than blocks in application - especially at the higher levels. 22 years oldShootwrestlingFormerly Wado-Kai Karate
Drunken Monkey Posted June 21, 2003 Posted June 21, 2003 well, you might be aware of the "sticky hands" principles of wing chun. one of the purposes of the dummy is for us to get used to maintaining contact of the arms during contact. after the initial interception, there are lord knows how many things we can do afterwards. the fixed positions of the arms allows us to practise pivots, steps into/away, changing from inside/outside etc etc. probably doesn't make sense as this is best shown on the dummy. what i'm trying to describe i guess, is the way we don't really deflect but guide and move the arm to where we want it using very, small, precise movements. post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are."When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."
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