وهنا قد وجدت قناتك ، انا عربي مسلم من ليبيا شاب عمري 19 أحب عالم القوس والسهم منذ كنت صغير ومن اربع سنوات كنت دائما أشاهدك وانت تطلق تلات سهام في بأصابعك انت حقا مذهل إستمر في النشر واذا ابتكرت افكارا جديدة ستزداد شهرتا صديقي انت تستحق ذلك❤
@KhanSeb2 ай бұрын
That's very impressive ! I always kinda tought that Japanese archery was more about a search of the perfect form rather than "really" trying to hit the target, but I guess it's about both.
@UgriArcher2 ай бұрын
It is very much the both. As, in my opinion, should be true with other forms of traditional archery as well.
@lennutrajektoor4 ай бұрын
The level of mastery is at insane.
@UgriArcher4 ай бұрын
Oh no, it's not, but keep I on learning.
@jkaasala3 ай бұрын
As a fellow Finn and someone new to kyudo, I'd love to hear what it is like to train in Ogasawara-ryu here. Things like where it is trained at, how many people do it, what does it consist of (given that the ryu has quite varied activities), etc.
@UgriArcher3 ай бұрын
Hi there, and thanks for getting in touch. I don't get to interact with too many finnish kyudoka so this is nice. Training with Ogasawara-ryu is demanding and requires dedication. And yes it's a lot more than archery. Should you like to talk more, could you send me e-mail? Would be nice. You'll find my e-mail at the channel's "about" section.
@SheepandSorcery2 ай бұрын
6:03 DOUBLE KILL
@manjitahzan95774 ай бұрын
If you hold your Zanshin pose for 2-3 seconds more, your form would be perfect I think. However, your form and accuracy is already beautiful.
@UgriArcher4 ай бұрын
Hmm, yes maybe I'm a bit hasty to go for yudaoshi. A while ago I actually asked my sensei about this and he said it's up to individual to decide the length of the "pose" but the flow of the movements (and breathing) as a whole is of importance and good guideline. We'll see how this developes for me in the future.
@manjitahzan95774 ай бұрын
@@UgriArcher Thanks for your reply. I learned a lot when watching your videos.
@yerdeАй бұрын
Do you have any knowledge about the shooting style that the samurai used in war?
@UgriArcherАй бұрын
Yes, some. I'm student of Ogasawara-ryū, a traditional japanese school of archery, mounted archery and etiquette - founded over 800 years ago. They served as instructors to generations of Shoguns in these disciplines, so the teachings of the school originate from the age of samurai. What did you want to know?
@yerdeАй бұрын
@@UgriArcher That's nice! Well, I am curious how the warfare archery looked liked in the samurai era, as they have started as mounted archers. What did they use for shooting, gloves or rings? Is there a book which describes the training and the concepts?
@UgriArcherАй бұрын
@@yerde I think as to what battles during samurai period looked like the old paintings may shine some light. The actual shooting style hasn't changed that much within the old schools still practising these skill, so you can search for example Ogasawara-ryu, Yabusame videos to witness it. Gloves were used, not rings. You won't find the actual trainings described in detail in any publicly available books, as those are the secrets of the schools and only shared within. Of the battlefield tactics and concepts I believe historians have written many good books.