Neither page renders on a mac.
I get Java errors on the first link.
David Williams
http://www.wingchun.com
Kim sut, Lok ma, Ting yu, Dung tao, Mai jiang
There are some rendering issues with the mac.
The links have been tested and work with windows.
If "rendering issues" means "doesn't work", I'd agree with you.
I'm on Windows 2000 and there's a black screen on the first one, and a black screen plus a WMP button on the second!
Nice thread, Nelson.
Video #1:
http://www.detroitwingchun.com/VIDEOS/ghosthands.wmv
Um. The guy in the white t-shirt and glasses(left side) might want to practice rotation along the centerline and practice proper positions in SNT. Example: The other guy punched right over his Bong.
Video #2:
http://www.detroitwingchun.com/VIDEO...xperienced.wmv
There's the links. Files are pretty big (60-some MB)
Good to look at, but beating beginners at Chi Sau is a small feat.
Peace
Last edited by couch; 03-20-2006 at 04:40 PM.
An ounce of action is worth a ton of theory. Friedrich Engels
Well I have been doing wing chun for several years, and I must admit that when doing chi sao with the guy on the right I and almost everyone look and feel like a beginner, no matter how long they have been training for.Originally Posted by couch
Last edited by nelsonmarcelino; 03-20-2006 at 07:53 PM.
Here is a clip showing wfc SNT
http://www.detroitwingchun.com/nelsonfootage2.htm
Thanks again.
There's some nice basic stuff in there again. One thing we do differently is we always do those kind of flow combo drills within punching range. These guys are punching at a range where if the big guy just stands there they won't hit him.
We do that for some basic exercises like repeated pak sao drill where you punch continuously and your partner paks continuously into your centreline to disrupt your balance, crush your structure etc. But then we concentrate on the same drills from a 'real' range where they will hit you if you miss (but of course, if you miss your pak you hit them anyway).
Also we don't do many exercises where we punch one after another in a rhythm, because it can develop bad habits. Generally, anybody who punches more than once doesn't punch along the centreline if they did the first time or not, so for most exercises with a combo we do a centreline punch then something more natural like a haymaker, overhand cross etc.
BTW, vid #1's disappeared completely: it now says the page isn't found... did you take it down Nelson?
Also I still can't get the third one...