Wednesday 2 January 2013

Shiro Tora Budo Kai Caterham Croydon Dojo White Tiger Martial Arts



 
We currently run two public classes a week:
Monday 8pm to 10pm
Wednesday 8pm to 10pm
 
at the British STMA hombu dojo
Caterham, Surrey CR3 UK
 
£5 a session
 
These classes are for all levels, beginner to advanced
 
This is an adult class over 18s only
There is no junior class

Our curriculum includes training methods from the following Fighting Systems:
 
 
Street Fighting . Self Defence. Urban Combat . Threat Response
Kali . Eskrima . Stick. Knife . Empty hand
Krai Krabong. Muay Thai boxing
Kempo Karate . Kempo Jujutsu
Jun Fan . Wing Chun
Boxing . Savate Boxe Francais
Grappling . Wrestling . Judo . Jujutsu. Dumog
Ninpo TaiJutsu . Kobudo
 
Our system is currently taught to Police Officers, Door Supervisors,
Prison Officers and Security personnel
 
Learn from a 7th degree Black Belt with over 30 years experience
 
 
For further information contact us by email
 
email: ShiroToraTiger@yahoo.co.uk
blog: ShiroToraTiger.blogspot.com
 
Practical, Realistic and Effective Street Self Defence






White Tiger Kempo Jujutsu


 
Form 5 of Karate adds throws and takedowns to the Kempo techniques - which then involve Kempo ground finishes - so from Kempo Karate we move to
 
Kempo Jujutsu
 
or
 

Kempo Goshin Jutsu

is a complete unarmed combat system
based on Japanese empty hand Martial Arts

the rapid hand strikes of Kempo
the kicks, punches, blocks and strikes of Karate
the devastating and effective self defence techniques of Jujitsu
the joint locks and throws of Aikido
the throws, chokes, strangles and ground fighting of Judo

Self Defence for the Streets of Britian in the 21st Century
Multiple opponents
Weapon defence including gun and knife
Street proven techniques and tactics

White Tiger Kempo Karate

 
 
 
As we're building up the kb sets we take more complex drills from the arts of boxing, karate, savate and thai - primarily punches and kicks

Thai of course has knee and elbow strikes, but these are not used in sparring and rarely in partner... drills

we develop these sets on impact pads and bring them out in freestyle sparring wearing our PPE, boxing gloves and shinpads

we punch the head and body
we kick the leg and body - and sometimes the head

we practice defences and defensive combinations - defend the opponent's blow before executing our combination

With our Kempo and Street Karate we look into more complex techniques and concepts

Kempo takes us "beyond sparring" - we no longer just use the clenched fist and it is not inside a padded protective glove it is "empty hand"

we use a variety of "ken" striking "tools" or "fists" to different and more lethal targets - shuto knife hand to neck and throat, finger strike to eyes, knee and kicks to groin and knee
 
we cause direct and deliberate damage

Form 3 of karate was all about grappling defences - various grabs

Form 4, using the attributes and reflexes developed in sparring, takes us Beyond Sparring to defend against more complex attacks from the opponent, combinations of kicks and punches - and with more variety behind our responses and strike combinations

So when you are developing your boxing and thai sets you are developing the attributes and reflexes that go Beyond Sparring to make your Form 4 Karate even more lethal


Ninjutsu








Whether hiding or moving,
inton or goton,
concealment or escape,
follow the "S" code

There are 8 points here - which could be considered the kihon happo of Onshinjutsu


Stealth
Silence
Shadow
Sillouette
Shape
Shine
Surface
Spacing

Spacing - the space between you and the enemy, what they can see. Are you working alone, is the enemy, are you in a group, is the enemy? Move apart, not in formation, not at the same time - have no pattern that can be noticed

Surface - camoflague

Stealth - does your movement match the background noise? footsteps, vehicles, wind in the trees? Are you making "natural" sounds? Do you sound like water, the wind, an animal moving - or do you sound like a person? Avoid unnecessary movement.

Shape - does your shape look like a person, have you broken up your outline to look like you are part of the environment?

Shadow - the opponent cannot see you, but where is the light - are you casting a shadow on the ground or wall or tree? And does the shadow give away your shape? And would they see the shadow move even if you are concealed from direct sight?

Sillouette - are you so dark you make a dark shape that stands out?

Shine - anything metal reflective? Does the moving light catch your eyes and make them glint? Do not look directly at the enemy you are avoiding

Silence - are you moving silently? Or if concealed sitting silently? Can the enemy hear your breathing?
 

Ninpo Taijutsu Ninjutsu



The two styles of Ninpo Taijutsu that exist, the Bujinkan and the Genbukan, draw their methods from the 9 existing Ninja ryu, which we have listed elsewhere.

They form a "book" called the Ten Chi Nin Ryaku No Maki, which means the Book of ...Heaven, Earth and Man.

The first part, the core of modern Ninja training, is taken from the Book of Heaven, itself based on the core syllabus of the Gyokko Ryu.

There are two main training methods or "kata":

the Sanshin no kata - set of five waza,
the Kihon Happo - set of 8 techniques - 3 striking and 3 grappling.

Here we start our practice a modified interpretation of Kihon Happo based on both the sanshin kata and the koshi kihon sanpo, the 3 striking waza of the gyokko ryu.

These are defences and responses against 4 jodan attacks, then 4 gedan attacks.

We then practice the 5 grappling responses to a collar grab called the torite kihon goho. They consist of 3 wristlocks, an elbow lock, and a throw. They are the basics for ninja grappling defences.

Another way to categorise Taijutsu is to seperate it into it's 3 major skills:

taihenjutsu - body movement
dakentaijutsu - striking - kempo
jutaijutsu - grappling - jujutsu, chin na

kobudo, weapons, is done with
body movement, the same stances and footwork
striking, including cutting for blades
grappling, lox and chokes with stix

Ninja Onshinjutsu

 
 
Onshinjutsu is the art of invisibility, escape and concealment

in combat it is about hiding your intentions and actions from your opponent

Ninpo taijutsu, as a combat method, is hard to read and follow for an opponent and makes much of us...e deception, distraction and drawing

To be invisible, to hide and move unseen and unheard, we use the GoGyo five elements

Earth, Water, Fire, Wood, Metal

when being looked for by an enemy there are two main methods

1. hide so the searching enemy passes you by
2. move without being seen or heard



Ninpo Taijutsu Sanshin Kata



The "Three Hearts" form of Ninpo Taijutsu

Chi - Earth - Seigan - shitan ken
Sui - water - ichimonji jodan uke - shuto kiten ken
Ka - Fire - ichimonji jodan uke - ura shuto
Fu - wind - gedan uke - boshi ken
Ku - void - gedan uke - shako ken - keri




Ninpo Taijutsu Kihon Happo



Kihon Happo - 8 basic - 8 Infinate

koshi kihon sanpo

ichimonji
hichu
... jumonji

Torite kihon goho:

1. Against lapel grab and punch - jodan uke, omote gyaku
2. Move back to ichimonji, then again with omote gyaku
3. Move back ichimonji, ura shuto, ura gyaku
4. Against double lapel grab - musha dori
5. Ganseki nage

As Kihon Happo has also been taken to mean "8 infinate", a basis for infinite techniques, it is appropriate for Shinobi Shidoshi to re-interpret them as their dojo develops

Ninpo Mutadori



Mutodori is the skill of evading an opponent with a katana sword while unarmed.

It involves not being there when the strike arrives

it involves movement in one of the 8 directions to evade

... it involves closing the gap to counter

Though we are unlikely to encounter a samurai weilding a sword these days, it is the principles of this training we are interested in.

Mutodori means defending yourself against an attacker with a 3 foot razor blade - and this attacker is an expert

If you perfect mutodori then any modern weapon attack
blade, stick, flexible, projectile
machete, bat, chain, gun
is going to be achievable


as with the other ninpo kata the physical example practiced is just a way to learn and understand the concepts

Hira
Ichimonji
Jumonji

White Tiger Kung Fu

A lot of Wing Chun

Some Praying Mantis

The best parts of Tai Chi

and the stripped down deadliest bits of Tiger Crane which form the foundation for Kempo which forms the foundation for Karate-Do

Tai Chi in Combat




The Tai chi push comes in 3 henka all from the same section of the form:

push
ward off
stroke horses mane

the combat application is to push the opponent away from you:

push him down, allowing escape
down stairs
into a wall
through a window
into the road in front of a vehicle

in CRA it sits between the Wing Chun range and the Muay Thai clinch



Some arts we only use a small percentage of and, in combat, TC is one of them, a we only use the push as a direct technique

However it is a very versatile technique if you consider the timing and the environment

We pair Chinese TC with Filipino Dumog
TC is the art of pushing an opponent
dumog is the art of pulling an opponent

both arts move the opponent to another place, and often to the ground

the 3 variations of the Push listed are the advanced henka and take into account the positions of your hands to his control points



Tai Chi and Physics



Tai Chi teaches us how to use the laws of physics to move an opponent

Archimedes stated
"give me a big enough lever, give me somewhere to stand, and I will move the Earth"


and this is applicable to all leverage based teqchniques, JuJutsu in particular is full of them

Consider Newton's First Law of Motion:

A body at rest or in motion will remain in that state until acted on by an external force

Consider the front stance, zenkutsu dachi, forward bow as a way of understanding, training, and applying this law

Pushing a car

1. the car is stationary and you want to get it moving

2. the car is rolling and you want to make it stop

use this stance, with the arms in front of you, to change the state of the car

Modern Tai Chi

never mind stroking a horses tail, plucking a lute, or looking for a needle at sea bottom

practice your tai chi in contemporary terms

Mug: "There are no rules in a Street Fight"
White Tiger "Yes there are, the rules of physics"