Kobudo, the ancient Okinawan martial
art of farming and fishing tools for self-defense has been so effective, that
many law enforcement agencies around the globe adopted many of these tools for
their line of work. One notable tool was the tonfa, a side handle baton that replaced
the common ‘Billy club’ for a few decades until the expandable baton was
introduced. But even the expandable baton, known as a kibo and referred to as ASP, has a Japanese martial
arts association. For instance, the hanbo, a 3-foot baton, is used in
many styles of traditional jujutsu and ninjutsu and is even used in some styles of Shorin-Ryu Karate.
Other similar tools include nitanbo
and kobuton.
Soke Hausel, Arizona Martial Arts Grandmaster & Hall-of-Fame martial arts instructor discusses karate, kobudo, samurai arts, self-defense, jujutsu, history, philosophy, teaching methods, comments from his karate students and includes concepts and ideas on martial arts training. Grandmaster Hausel operates the Arizona Hombu (Arizona School of Traditional Karate) in the East Valley of Phoenix
Arizona Martial Arts
Monday, May 13, 2013
Martial Arts Students from Arizona Learn to Use Farming Tools
Labels:
arizona kobudo,
Arizona martial arts,
kobudo,
martial arts weapons,
sai
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