Bobby wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 5:23 pm
Valkie wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 2:47 pm
I started martial arts later in life, in my late 20s.
Shotokhan and Budokan.
Had a great master who was a surgeon and was only interested in students who gave their all.......
Thanks Valkie for your story.
It seems that many of us did some martial arts.
I suppose I am reminiscing about the good old days.
I loved the hard training - I thrived on it.
I did Judo for a while then Taekwondo.
I think Judo was the best for all round self defence -
Taekwondo was more a sport.
Yeah, I always wanted to be better, but when the senior students were all champions, it was hard to get near the top.
But I was fit, strong and in knife fighting I did manage to excel, becoming undefeated for 4 years straight.
We trained with rubber karambits, with rounded ends.
They left black marks on our white Gis when struck or drawn across it.
On skin it left a red welts.
As all semi contact sparing, some attacks were illegal, but We still trained in them.
I also still practice with my throwing knives regularly.
Again, not as accurate as I would like to be.
But the 12" target at 20 feet is rarely missed
At 30 feet the accuracy drops rather sadly.
And at 10 to 15 feet, I never miss.
The movies showing accurate knife throwing over 50 or 60 feet is all bull shite.
Too much momentum is lost, accurate direction and impact questionable.
I use three weights
6 oz
10 oz
14 oz
The 6 is purely for short target stuff, woukd do little damage to a man.
The 10 is a typical throwing knife, goo penetration good accuracy
The 14 oz is near the max used by knife throwers, penetration is excellent and getting the throw right is easier, but they go right through the shed wall if you miss the target.
I practice both overt and and understand throws.
Each has an advantage depending on the target.
I'm happy to consider 15 feet as a good range, it would stop an attacker quite well with little danger of him getting at me.