I practice false kendo hard … . I am too terrible.
I jumped meaninglessly, and cutting it made a shoulder-worn robe of the axis blurring blurring a Korea style as a model. Finished martial arts in Japan are performed unreasonable impurity of. Though I think that they have the own reason of the choice.
I think and force it to desire why there is bending to the wooden sword whether I am thin.
i don't think it was done right. a lot of the form displayed here doesn't keep the right ja-seh. body is supposed to be kept low to the ground and feet heavy. grip on the sword needs to be strong, esp at this level. i would say this individual needs more training on the legs. it would make the form much more appealing.
Strange how the forms differ from school to school. In the sang-su sa-bon (the fourth two-handed form) I raise the mokgum into an overhead block, before the sodo-sae, unlike this chap who holds it beside his waist, where it's not a block at all.
I practice false kendo hard … . I am too terrible.
I jumped meaninglessly, and cutting it made a shoulder-worn robe of the axis blurring blurring a Korea style as a model. Finished martial arts in Japan are performed unreasonable impurity of. Though I think that they have the own reason of the choice.
I think and force it to desire why there is bending to the wooden sword whether I am thin.
koisan1000 10 months ago
Form five is one of my fav. Good luck. Six and eight rock my world.
tomateradio 3 years ago
I just recieved my orange belt and am going to learn this form next along with #5.
Nicely done :)
BrownsvilleElectric 3 years ago
My school teaches the same technique as this guy. I believe it is a "parry" (not sure what the korean term is).
Chak-gum looks great though!
XoNMan1 3 years ago
looks like you have the basic sets memorized i would say just work on the ja-seh. you can never practice too much =]
XD4133 3 years ago
i don't think it was done right. a lot of the form displayed here doesn't keep the right ja-seh. body is supposed to be kept low to the ground and feet heavy. grip on the sword needs to be strong, esp at this level. i would say this individual needs more training on the legs. it would make the form much more appealing.
s3ts 4 years ago
Strange how the forms differ from school to school. In the sang-su sa-bon (the fourth two-handed form) I raise the mokgum into an overhead block, before the sodo-sae, unlike this chap who holds it beside his waist, where it's not a block at all.
Ilporko 4 years ago