Group mug shot (38K).
Aikido-L Seminar '99 - Pictorial Review* [1/4]
by Tim Gion
Introduction
November, time for the second annual gathering of the members of the
Aikido-L list. Unfortunately, I had been diagnosed with chondromalacia or
runner's knee a month before. At the last (US) Aikido-L seminar, Mike
Bartman had taken photos during the classes because he couldn't practice. I
decided I'd try to fill his shoes this year. Since I only had
a point and shoot camera, I bought a Canon SLR so I could have better control
of what was in the frame. The next two paragraphs talk about taking the
photos and digitizing them. Skip them for now and read them later if you're
unhappy with the picture quality.
Now a few words on picture quality: I shot two rolls of film with my new
camera before the seminar, so I was still learning the camera at the seminar.
I used FujiColor 800 for the photos and a good number of them were taken
without a flash. I realized after the first 1 1/2 rolls that the camera was
complaining about the light levels, so I slowed the shutter speed down until
it stopped blinking. Some of the pictures have quite a bit of motion blur
due to the slow shutter speed. Jim Baker's and Alan Drysdale's classes were
both taken with the camera in full auto mode with flash. I got to see the
results of no-flash, 1/250s shutter before Chuck Gordon's class and decided
to go back to that for the last class.
Now a few words on scanning: I scanned the photos in at 150 dpi to save time.
Then I trimmed a lot of the extraneous background in each photo. I hope I
didn't overemphasize the foregrounds in my hack and slash photo editting. I
didn't get around to balancing the color in the photos.
George Simcox's Class
George Simcox from the Virginia Ki Society started the seminar's first
official class. He started with a basic ki exercise where stability is
tested from the front. Scott Crawford was picked to help demonstrate
this test.
Scott Crawford (L), George Simcox (R) - 30K
George followed with a few more exercises which showed how to take uke's
balance in a relaxed manner.
Paul Gowder (L) and Don Tedesco (R) start the exercise (45K).
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Maria DeRosa (L) and Bob P. (R) start the exercise (38K).
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George shows the goal of the exercise with Mark D. (39K).
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At some point, George moved from the exercises to the Ki Society's basic
kokyu-nage. Like the exercises, the basic kokyu-nage starts from a crosshand
grab.
Tony Fontaine takes Mike Bartman into kokyu-nage (34K).
As we later came to realize, shihonage was a theme of the seminar. George
demonstrates the Ki Society version of the technique on Craig Hocker. This
is number one of about twelve shots of shihonage. There's even more that I
didn't scan in!
Craig Hocker (L), George Simcox (R) - 33K
Philip Akin's Class
Philip Akin of the Yoshinkai Aikido Headquarters taught the after-lunch class.
Unfortunately, I don't have any pictures from Philip's class. A day or two
before the seminar, I decided to test my knees with one class. Since I had
taken at least one class with George, Alan, and Chuck and Jim came from a
style familiar to me, I decided to try Philip's class. Philip showed us some
of the elements that make Yoshinkan aikido different from other styles. From
his class and the one other Yoshinkan class I had, the main difference seems
to be the teaching style. Beginners start learning techniques in a
step-by-step fashion, so that precision is really drilled into them. We
began by practicing the footwork for shihonage without a partner. After
repeating the same movements with a partner, we worked on irimi-nage and
tenchi-nage. Philip ended class with 15 minutes of
what-technique-would-you-like-me-to-demonstrate-on-Scott-Crawford?
My knees seemed to hold up ok through most of class before starting to hurt. However, just standing still hurt later that evening. Oh yeah, Scott seemed
to hold up ok under the demonstration, too.
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* All photos - Copyright © 1999 Timothy Gion