Tarm Wei must have been the son with the limp. He was supposedly famous for his no-shadow kick and fu jow.
@Violent Designs- ask your sifu if he heard the story about Tarm Wei tearing Tarm Sing's...
Type: Posts; User: deeperthantao
Tarm Wei must have been the son with the limp. He was supposedly famous for his no-shadow kick and fu jow.
@Violent Designs- ask your sifu if he heard the story about Tarm Wei tearing Tarm Sing's...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LEyEoLBQt0&feature=channel_video_title
Hi there,
Apart from Ray Chan,
There is Henry Suen in Saskatchewan, Canada who is still actively teaching. His student Robert James(Satori Science) is in Vancouver, teaching privately.
Rose...
Sifu Ray Chan is a disciple of Tam Sing coming from Tam Fei Pang's line( Tam Sam's son), he also learned from Lun Chee. Tam Sing is famous for being a full-contact fighter that competed in the...
Hi,
Thanks for the response,
I guess I am wondering how pai da differs from more stance based methods seen in internal stances?
what is the philosophy behind pai da training? Is there qi...
Hi,
I am trying to find out some more information about pai da training, is anyone here involved in this.
What does it entail? how is it different from internal conditioning methods seen in...
Hey,
Trying to gather some information about internal iron palm training, I have been hitting a rice bag for a few weeks now, want to make sure that I do not damage the laogong point on my hand.
...
a single move practiced a thousand times is better than a thousand moves practiced once or so the saying goes...
You can try getting a hold of satori science, I think he is still teaching bak sing privately in vancouver as well.
"as I get older more and more I'm becoming the weird recluse who trains instead of going to the bar."
-glad I'm not the only one;)
Well said Naya
:D ex-academics
on that same note, I found this clip from the movie a while back
http://youtube.com/watch?v=0vdx5fZjb40
fantastic as usual
I really appreciate seeing the footage of lun chee, cheers
I have never seen an official list from our bak hsing branch, but, it sounds about right. I have heard a number of slogans from my sifu and di si hings which illustrate our focus:
The best...
I bang my arms with a rattan pole, works pretty good. Also in the past I have used similiar sledge hammer type methods.
I never had a sledge hammer so I used a bat and simply added 4L milk jugs...
brand new buk sing choy lay fut video, check it :cool:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=K_pzBB1rtLA
finally some footage of lun chee in action,
no comparison at all, the same guy posted both that was all.. Poon sing is on a different level completely.
I have been conditioning my bridge a fair bit in the last two months, and my hands, the jow is used during and after conditioning.
There was no problem initially, but I can literally feel the jow...
don't forget this guy!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuJatTVdukE
I have been using jow for the last 2 months or so, and I have begun to develop something of an allergic reaction; minor nausea, cough, tightness of breath,
Anybody else experience this, are there...
I know there was a bak hsing elder in vietnam that to my knowledge has passed away, does anyone know if he has any students there?
I watched an interview of the same guy, I think he said he practiced like 8 hrs a day... dope!!!
I think pads are great for kicks and follow ups, both defensive and offensive. Thrust kicks into punch combos, retreating or shuffling side kicks into combo moves, while the bagman changes...
I am currently in an apartment so I can't use a heavy bag, what are some suggested alternatives for hand conditioning, bearing in mind I have good homemade dit da jao,
beans, punching a phone...