Don’t know if this is the correct forum for this post, or if the topic has been done to death (I don’t often visit forums…), but here goes anyway.
I’ve read and heard lots about Ip Mans later students, WSL, Victor Kan, William Cheung, LT etc, but I rarely see or hear of the students and their descendants that studied with Ip Man when he was younger man - presumably he was teaching earlier on in his life? Or did he only teach towards the end of his life?
good article … I trained under Victor Kan first and found the syllabus was shared by a few as a ‘time period’ I went to one school in the west coast of the usa on a seminar from london [ no names no politics] and it was a mirror of what i did , but with its own flavour…Both teachers from the same time period,both from YM, same ideas…then I started with A direct sudent of WSL and found a completely missing idea, that none shared…like a mind set took over to standardize a ‘product’ [ big mistake] as opposed to a flowing freefighting mind set with no arm shapes stuck in the air to say ’ look at me Im doing VT ’ …only a training aid shown in forms that did not carry over to the real fight only to help develop the little idea as it grew into fruition, redundancy being the key word , only the later students didnt drop things to progress they turned them into money makers, a waste of time to fight with beyond striking in straight lines, like rockem sock em robots…
Si-Fu Hobbs is my Si-Fu. He teaches wing chun and many other arts. I spent over 5 years attending different WC schools until I finally discovered my Si-Fu. I have found the Foshan wing chun (what Lun Gai/Si Fu Hobbs teaches) is probably the most effective of its kind, through my own personal experiences.
Its nice to see my Si-Fu getting some credit for his knowledge, so thank you.
Personally, I’ve been told that Lee Shing knew Ip Man from Foshan (Fatsan) and they were colleagues of the ‘Restaurant Workers Union’ in Hong Kong. So I guess you could say that he was a ‘modern student’ and an ‘old friend’, as it was Lee Shing who was asked to represent Ip Man in Europe wasn’t it?
Also, rather like Lun Gai, Lee Shing had his own ‘way of teaching’ that he was never allowed to teach ‘openly’, choosing instead to only pass it to his closer students or ‘Toh Dai’.
Perhaps what we need here is a list of names, anyone?
Does raise speculations however as to why Yip Man taught different versions ? and yes it has been covered many times before in this forum but as with all mysteries people will continue to ask till it’s forgotten !
[QUOTE=Kris Wu Tang;816333]Si-Fu Hobbs is my Si-Fu. He teaches wing chun and many other arts. I spent over 5 years attending different WC schools until I finally discovered my Si-Fu. I have found the Foshan wing chun (what Lun Gai/Si Fu Hobbs teaches) is probably the most effective of its kind, through my own personal experiences.
Its nice to see my Si-Fu getting some credit for his knowledge, so thank you.[/QUOTE]
Hi! can you give us a litle more insights into the baat gwa steps concepts of sifu Lun kai
I dont think YM taught different versions ;)…easy way to explain "why we are sooo different " , he taught a different idea that day :rolleyes: or a secret way
[QUOTE=k gledhill;817092]I dont think YM taught different versions ;)…easy way to explain "why we are sooo different " , he taught a different idea that day :rolleyes: or a secret way