Account 6 is certainly one of the richest by its multiple possibilities, in addition by changing the possible rhythms to move from didactic to a combat approach (I like very much "umbrella" on time 3 of count 6, it produces a powerful "torque"). I learned this in the same way with Vince P. Mazola, instructor of guru Inosanto. But some 20 years ago I stopped one thing; join my feet to change axis and guard when our movements make us reach the top of the male triangle and start of the female triangle (middle of the hourglass and cross formed by the two diagonal axes!). Indeed, if it is didactic for the beginner to find the point of change of direction, it produces a defect in my opinion; the one of being necessarily in a situation of imbalance when we know that to keep its structure and its balance during movements in combat is primordial. Since I practice with a return of the feet spread or with a "chicken step" to change. To meditate and especially to experiment. Greetings from France
Good stuff Sifu Alan. I've trained with Bryan Lewis, working on Pakua with Professor James Cravens down here in Florida. Great guy, great martial artist. Good to see you working with him.
This channel is a gold mine. Would love to see more keysi techniques. Keep it up!
Stay tuned, we have some exciting things coming up!
Спасибо Алан. Это крутая тренировка для координации и отработки
Account 6 is certainly one of the richest by its multiple possibilities, in addition by changing the possible rhythms to move from didactic to a combat approach (I like very much "umbrella" on time 3 of count 6, it produces a powerful "torque").
I learned this in the same way with Vince P. Mazola, instructor of guru Inosanto.
But some 20 years ago I stopped one thing; join my feet to change axis and guard when our movements make us reach the top of the male triangle and start of the female triangle (middle of the hourglass and cross formed by the two diagonal axes!). Indeed, if it is didactic for the beginner to find the point of change of direction, it produces a defect in my opinion; the one of being necessarily in a situation of imbalance when we know that to keep its structure and its balance during movements in combat is primordial.
Since I practice with a return of the feet spread or with a "chicken step" to change. To meditate and especially to experiment. Greetings from France
Good stuff Sifu Alan. I've trained with Bryan Lewis, working on Pakua with Professor James Cravens down here in Florida. Great guy, great martial artist. Good to see you working with him.
Thanks, Bryan is a great guy!
@@SifuAlanBakeragreed. It’s nice to see my Chinese Boxing brothers getting UA-cam famous.
Fantastic! Thanks for posting this 👍
Thank You!