Working very hard using your videos as a guide to learn some eskrima drills. I am not one to post comments on videos, however your one on one style of teaching is professional, easy to watch (yet hard to do) and I appreciate your efforts. Excellent work. Thank you.
@fx02zbn11 жыл бұрын
I like this new version, smoother as you say but I think potentially more poweful and covers a greater arc than just level striking. Thanks a million for. Uploading.
@freedailyexercise11 жыл бұрын
I really really really really need to get back into escrima and nunchuck training. Your video makes me want to pick them back up again :) I love how fluid these motions are. I beat up on my bamboo escrimas so much that the center of it is all soft so I need to get new ones. Great video, thank you for sharing. I've created a playlist to refer to these.
@modestohomeboy11 жыл бұрын
great video. yes this is very smooth and flowing. thanks for posting.
@zombieland64848 жыл бұрын
Awesome Video. I like your presentation, and delivery. Stay alert, stay alive.
@kevin0805923 жыл бұрын
I now have a habit of watching guro wmpyr everyday and before going to sleep.
@rightwinggunnut16 жыл бұрын
Merry christmas Tuhon!
@stattoo328 жыл бұрын
Links to your last videos would be very helpful.
@JaimeFlorSongwriter8 жыл бұрын
+wmpyr I've been watching a lot of Doug Marcaida vid's, and he certainly had more experience than any of us. In the last vid I saw, he was very critical, like Bruce Lee was, when it came to using traditional ways of holding double sticks, like in this video, but it could be argued that it's part of technique that you're teaching. Also like Bruce Lee, I'll tryout a technique, test it as accurately as possible, like a science experiment. If my method of testing is good, & I deem it as a viable technique, I keep it in my arsenal. I guess it's always there, but like a computer, we can compartmentalize. It'll either go in my good technique folder, or my bad one. Also, like the Bayani bros. they also raise the point, that Sinawali doesn't work in real combat. It's good to learn techniques, but it requires that you have a cooperating partner. In a real life fight, your enemy isn't going to cooperate. Marcaida doesn't even have to appear to be looking, & he's so good, that he can demonstrate enough control to show that he could hit his demonstration partners hands, or hit him in an unexpected place. The traditional exercises have their purposes, but beginners should not expect a fight that turns into a Sinawali drill.
@IlokanoWarrior5 жыл бұрын
Sinawali is a good training exercise, it teaches good handles, kind of like how a basketball player dribbles 2 basketballs at the same time between the legs.
@babyx40110 жыл бұрын
I wish I can learn this but I got lost
@tnguyen41816 жыл бұрын
wait... but I thought the figure 8 weaving is usually used to "combo hit", as in landing multiple hits simultaneously, rather than a strong hit?
@tnguyen41816 жыл бұрын
Oh sorry, I think I might have pronounced my comment wrong; I mean rather than ensuring a hit, isn't the figure 8 combo weave used more for quick (strong) strikes?