GOD! I was just going into the saber forms whenever I left the area that I was being taught in. When you've practiced enough that sword flows with every move,lol. Using your whole body inertia and weight was the key to successfully doing it. Just awesome.
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
I love to see kungfu taught right. In vid 1 I heard mention of the marshal that is credited with inventing xing-yi. It is cool to see that he also advanced the eagle style also. I am curious to see if the added technechs come from xing-yi influence.
He created eagle claw for the soldiers and xing-yi for the officers. He was said to be a master of the spear, and in times of peace needed to be able to defend himself without a spear, this is why a lot of xing-yi looks like spearing techniques and uses the single knuckle to strike. At least by legend.
Ngok Fei created Elephant style, which was the system of locks. Eagle claw was created in a shoalin temple by a monk watching some of the soldiers use the locks, and said that it looked like eagles clawing at each other. So it is basically Northern Shaolin style with the claws, locks, and flowing arm motions of Elephant style.
GOD! I was just going into the saber forms whenever I left the area that I was being taught in. When you've practiced enough that sword flows with every move,lol. Using your whole body inertia and weight was the key to successfully doing it. Just awesome.
TheGuitarkid15 1 year ago
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
swordmaster405 1 year ago
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
swordmaster405 1 year ago
Wow... here in Puerto Rico we are really pumped about Ying Jow Pai, it's a real gift to be able to learn it... oh, and the "twin kick" is a killer. (go cat stance...!!!!)
swordmaster405 1 year ago
My uncle Mark Tozzi was in that school years ago, i wonder if they have any videos of him?
FlatFoot13 3 years ago
Kung Fu Dummy - just do a search for the martialarm in youtube or google.
williamidlhuc 3 years ago
i wish if they can open eagle claw school in Toronto.
nonobig 4 years ago
So cool! I do Eagle Claw Kung Fu too. I noticed a lot of the basic stances in there (such as steel stance, cat stance, and arrow stance).
SifuTashi 4 years ago
I love to see kungfu taught right. In vid 1 I heard mention of the marshal that is credited with inventing xing-yi. It is cool to see that he also advanced the eagle style also. I am curious to see if the added technechs come from xing-yi influence.
SecretSword 4 years ago
He created eagle claw for the soldiers and xing-yi for the officers. He was said to be a master of the spear, and in times of peace needed to be able to defend himself without a spear, this is why a lot of xing-yi looks like spearing techniques and uses the single knuckle to strike. At least by legend.
ahlgrasshopper 4 years ago
wasnt it the kwon do, not the spear?
trivium666fan 4 years ago
Ngok Fei created Elephant style, which was the system of locks. Eagle claw was created in a shoalin temple by a monk watching some of the soldiers use the locks, and said that it looked like eagles clawing at each other. So it is basically Northern Shaolin style with the claws, locks, and flowing arm motions of Elephant style.
trivium666fan 4 years ago
i am about to sign back up = )
dmthead2012 4 years ago
Good to see some people I used to train with. I started about 1 week after the school first opened on 28th street
furtherdefinitions 4 years ago
That was the location I started training. Like a small loft, but felt like home.
palacio154 5 years ago
Wow! Cecil, Mark, Jeanne & Benson in the same video.
yingjow 5 years ago