I practise Jujutsu in sweden, and we do it on soft floor, to not hurt eachother. And comparing our Jujutsu to this Japanese one, i can see that These fellas are using alot of things that could've been easier doing without it.
Cool, my Aikido teacher once tought me that second technique (after Ijikimiosae(forgive the spelling)), very usefull, it sure breaks the arm in a snap.
This looks very similar to the Tsutsumi Hozan ryu. In fact, only the third and two last techniques are not, as far as I know, in our syllabus. Interesting vid :)
All of it is stuff ive done as well, so many syllabuses(syllabi?) cross over. No techniques of this nature can be original, it's all been done before:-)
I agree. Variants of most of this appear in the Tsutsumi kyu grades as taught in Australia by Jan De Jong sensei. However, there is a curious mixture of some features of older Tsutsumi technique (which is now less commonly taught) and some significant departures from what Tsutsumi practitioners would regard as technical orthodoxy.
Derukugi - this is aiki-jujutsu which is closely related to aiki-do
Breakfalls are normally practiced on tatami but a lot of the demonstrations I have seen in Japan are performed on hard wooden floors for the simple reason that a tatami floor might not be available at the venue. Anyway, if you put enough ki-ai into your ukemi you can survive it without injury
I'm not so sure about Judo being done on wood floors. Dr. Kano started in a Budbhist shrine with a tatami room, from what I understand, and as the economy improved many schools built tatami rooms just for that purpose. It was common in the USA to make tatami out of sawadust and dropcloths on dirt floors inthe early 1900's as well. You're right, though, training on wood floors is not uncommon.
Looks like Nihon Goshin Aikido.
Spartacus217 2 years ago
Very nice
downtownnycity 2 years ago
good thats the ancient way of teaching on wooden floors...
fukudakano 3 years ago
Old school would be practicing outside. The old stuff (which this isn't) has an outdoorsy feel to it.
mekugi 3 years ago
@fukudakano
Whaaaaa.Lmao.
I think I know what he means but kind of got it very wrong
Jahleim72Amaya 1 year ago
I do jujusu in sweden too :D started yesturdday!
luvoka45 4 years ago
I practise Jujutsu in sweden, and we do it on soft floor, to not hurt eachother. And comparing our Jujutsu to this Japanese one, i can see that These fellas are using alot of things that could've been easier doing without it.
Felixmachinima 4 years ago
how is jujitsu in sweden different from japan's? any?
moelicious416 1 year ago
They wont pull the mats out on the street,
rusrious 4 years ago
NO MATS! THATS HARDCORE
trex0 4 years ago
trex0! Ha ha ha ha Hard core! Lmao no it's martial arts! silly!
gekiryudojo 4 years ago
were exacly is this at? like what city ?
GERMAN1RAY 4 years ago
Tokyo.
mekugi 4 years ago
Cool, my Aikido teacher once tought me that second technique (after Ijikimiosae(forgive the spelling)), very usefull, it sure breaks the arm in a snap.
btw I wouldnt want to fall on that flor lol...
Filipeferreira 4 years ago
This looks very similar to the Tsutsumi Hozan ryu. In fact, only the third and two last techniques are not, as far as I know, in our syllabus. Interesting vid :)
tonic006 4 years ago
All of it is stuff ive done as well, so many syllabuses(syllabi?) cross over. No techniques of this nature can be original, it's all been done before:-)
KAFel01 4 years ago
I agree. Variants of most of this appear in the Tsutsumi kyu grades as taught in Australia by Jan De Jong sensei. However, there is a curious mixture of some features of older Tsutsumi technique (which is now less commonly taught) and some significant departures from what Tsutsumi practitioners would regard as technical orthodoxy.
Am3z4 3 years ago
I saw the similarities too. It was really interesting to watch from a Tsutsumi Hozan Ryu practioner's perspective.
craigmahar 3 years ago
great I wanna learn!
zhouyi64 5 years ago
This is no Aiki-jujutsu. There is no use of aiki anywhere here.
jjnnww 5 years ago
they were breakfalling!
seikenryucrew 5 years ago
very interesting indeed
aikicin 5 years ago
Derukugi - this is aiki-jujutsu which is closely related to aiki-do
Breakfalls are normally practiced on tatami but a lot of the demonstrations I have seen in Japan are performed on hard wooden floors for the simple reason that a tatami floor might not be available at the venue. Anyway, if you put enough ki-ai into your ukemi you can survive it without injury
tnickjp 5 years ago
Actually, it is a mix of a few things.
mekugi 5 years ago
That is correct!
Trgvo 4 years ago
Thanks for the clip Mekugi. I've only seen Daiwado in a book by Sato sensei, never in action.
sithrising 5 years ago
Interesting. I looks like Aikido with a strange twist. Do they always practise on hard floors? How about breakfalls?
Derukugi2 5 years ago
No need for breakfalls if locks are perform standing up
slouttop 5 years ago
The techniques of Aikido were taken from Jujutsu, as was Judo. In Japan they've always used wood floors, even for Judo.
tasast 5 years ago
Not always. Tatami were pretty common, as well as grass and earth.
mekugi 5 years ago
That's true.
tasast 5 years ago
I'm not so sure about Judo being done on wood floors. Dr. Kano started in a Budbhist shrine with a tatami room, from what I understand, and as the economy improved many schools built tatami rooms just for that purpose. It was common in the USA to make tatami out of sawadust and dropcloths on dirt floors inthe early 1900's as well. You're right, though, training on wood floors is not uncommon.
mekugi 4 years ago