circles in the snow.

[QUOTE=shawnsegler;975690]Lol. That’s hilarious[/QUOTE]

You know what else is hilarious? Panhandling on tai chi forums on the internet! That’s HILARIOUS!

concrete training is ok.

online training is better than actual person to person instruction.

you have some very strange views on martial arts training.

good luck with that.

[QUOTE=Boston Bagua;975700]concrete training is ok.

online training is better than actual person to person instruction.

you have some very strange views on martial arts training.

good luck with that.[/QUOTE]

Concrete training is very good for a specific type of stepping where you are working to develop grinding power and friction by sliding across the ground.
So basically.. it’s good for a specific type of bufa jibengong. Not good for stamping, falling or other sorts of things.

As for the rest.. I typed up a huge response.. but on further reflection it’s not a point I’m patient enough to argue.
I will however make you a wager Dale..

Jan 1, 2010 is coming up. I’m a bagua guy, you are a bagua guy. Let’s give it 10 years.. and we see who is doing better (and still walking the circle) then. If I can’t convince you my method worked by then I will donate a couple hundred bucks (in 2010 inflation adjusted dollars) to your favorite charity.

back on topic… LOL… i discovered an interesting aspect of walking circles in the snow. firstly, i kept the inside diameter of the circle about 3 feet, about four steps for one circle… as opposed to doing practice around a stationary pole or tree, walking in small circles in the snow allows one use the visual circle from your stepping as a guide for upper body movement… of course the eyes are angled down in order to view the movements and how they correspond to the circle. anyhow… i was just sharing a relatively new concept(for me) with you fellow dizzy guy’s.

and if i may be so bold as to throw a friendship swat at ole dale(it’s been awhile since we were online mortal enemies) i might not be able to break him and he might not be able to catch me and i might be able to lob off a few iron balls at him… then again, considering his astrological sign of the sheep(goat), i’d probably just hit him in the head with a few iron balls and it would do nothing more than p!ss him off. :smiley:

While I am not trained in Ba Gua I do have a couple of comments:

First:

How is it possible, in a ZILLION years, that ANYONE can push uki out of a thread??? Much less his own??:eek:

Where are your aside comments relating to this present brouhaha uki?

You are letting your end down!!!:mad:

Second:

As I said, I haven’t trained in Ba Gua, but I am a fan, and from what I have seen of the stepping exercises, they do not involve high impact movements. Indeed, the circle stepping I have observed involved more of a shuffle, or sliding, step.

If I am correct in my observation, then walking on concrete should not have any serious deleterious effects on the joints. It is constant impacts on the joints that causes harm when training upon hard surfaces and even this must be constant over time. Intermittent training involving repeated impacting on concrete should not be a problem for well conditioned and relatively light individuals. That means if you are over 200#, as I am sure you are Dale, then caution would be advised. But for lighter well trained individuals there should be little to no risk involved with limited intermittent training periods on concrete.

Thirdly,

For those of you who have worn down your grass, COME ON NOW!!! You don’t actually walk the same circle everyday in the same spot do you?? Use your heads, walk a different spot everyday, this preserves the grass. This should be basic knowledge for anyone training on their home turf!:slight_smile:

[QUOTE=uki;975720]back on topic… LOL… i discovered an interesting aspect of walking circles in the snow. firstly, i kept the inside diameter of the circle about 3 feet, about four steps for one circle… as opposed to doing practice around a stationary pole or tree, walking in small circles in the snow allows one use the visual circle from your stepping as a guide for upper body movement… of course the eyes are angled down in order to view the movements and how they correspond to the circle. anyhow… i was just sharing a relatively new concept(for me) with you fellow dizzy guy’s.

and if i may be so bold as to throw a friendship swat at ole dale(it’s been awhile since we were online mortal enemies) i might not be able to break him and he might not be able to catch me and i might be able to lob off a few iron balls at him… then again, considering his astrological sign of the sheep(goat), i’d probably just hit him in the head with a few iron balls and it would do nothing more than p!ss him off. :D[/QUOTE]

(Late edit to stay on topic!) Concerning circle walking in snow:

HEY!!! Stop posting before I can post mine, Now my comments criticizing your tardiness look out of place!!

Is that anyway to treat a comrade???:mad::mad::mad:

[QUOTE=Scott R. Brown;975721]How is it possible, in a ZILLION years, that ANYONE can push uki out of a thread??? Much less his own??[/quote]it’s a near impossible. :slight_smile:

For those of you who have worn down your grass, COME ON NOW!!! You don’t actually walk the same circle everyday in the same spot do you?? Use your heads, walk a different spot everyday, this preserves the grass. This should be basic knowledge for anyone training on their home turf!:slight_smile:
even 5 minutes of “slide-stepping” will tear up your grass. whoa though… i can see moving around the yard and changing circle sizes to create something like “bagua yard art”… imagine faking crop circles with your feet. :smiley:

[QUOTE=Scott R. Brown;975722]HEY!!! Stop posting before I can post mine, Now my comments criticizing your tardiness look out of place!![/quote]perhaps it’s because you are naturally just out of place when i am around. :stuck_out_tongue:

Is that anyway to treat a comrade???
i like to call this the synchronistic luck of the tiger. :smiley:

[QUOTE=dimethylsea;975705]Concrete training is very good for a specific type of stepping where you are working to develop grinding power and friction by sliding across the ground.
So basically.. it’s good for a specific type of bufa jibengong. Not good for stamping, falling or other sorts of things.

As for the rest.. I typed up a huge response.. but on further reflection it’s not a point I’m patient enough to argue.
I will however make you a wager Dale..

Jan 1, 2010 is coming up. I’m a bagua guy, you are a bagua guy. Let’s give it 10 years.. and we see who is doing better (and still walking the circle) then. If I can’t convince you my method worked by then I will donate a couple hundred bucks (in 2010 inflation adjusted dollars) to your favorite charity.[/QUOTE]

Sounds good to me.

Jan 1 2020 is a deal.

I will be around.

Uki,

I can pee in the snow and write your name in circles… i think this qualifies.

that is all.

[QUOTE=Boston Bagua;975636]And you live in the GREAT WHITE NORTH…

:eek::confused::D;)[/QUOTE]

Did a session once in 30CM of snow and -20 C weather, it was freaking great !!!
:mad:

When I lived in Northern Japan in the late eighties early nineties, we would get tons of snow and I would sometimes train outside before submersing myself in my four foot square ofuro.

Oh that was nice. Hot water up to you neck after training like a yeti.

not too shabby… although i did feel somewhat like an eskimo with the boots on. :slight_smile:

[QUOTE=Boston Bagua;975750] Hot water up to you neck after training like a yeti.[/QUOTE]yeti’s have hair… :stuck_out_tongue:

[QUOTE=uki;975789]not too shabby… although i did feel somewhat like an eskimo with the boots on. :slight_smile:

[/QUOTE]
[I][B]

deja vu’[/B][/I]??

ive always wanted to spar with a bagua guy id like to see how it look when its applied:D

[QUOTE=goju;975856]ive always wanted to spar with a bagua guy id like to see how it look when its applied.[/QUOTE]coming to pa anytime soon?? friendship sparring is nice… there is no such thing as a competition in my book. :smiley:

book you know how to read??? :eek:

oh snap

[SIZE=“1”]who did you think wrote his posts?[/SIZE]

[QUOTE=Boston Bagua;975589]I walk outside but not to get too cold or sweaty, thats where you can get invaded by evil wind(at least by Tradtional Chinese Medicine standards).

All my classes I take here in Beijing are outside in the park all year around, sometimes it gets real cold. Once I made the mastake of training on a cold windy day without a hat,cause almost nobody wears hats in the winter. Got a migraine that day.

Hence you want to make sure you are covered up when you train.

Wind according to Traditional Chinese Medicine can cause problems. Always better to keep it where it is, outside of my body.

I bet you will not forget your hat ever again, brother.