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SO CLEAR!!! Even with minimal German I can follow this form easily (building on my rusty Choy Lee Fut training). It inspires my to continue practicing. Thank you Sifu!
EH? Choy Leh Futt is southern? Also thanks to sifus like you who keep Choy Leh Futt alive. This MA use to be as popular in movies as Long Fist for it's artsy form. Now it's Wing Tsun... Not as flashy but I guess it's the "in" now. 🤷♂
Did Kung fu a long time ago. This was always the salute followed by "geen lai." (Not sure what it means...) Love the music! Can I ask what it is? Thanks!
I used to do hangar back in the day but i stopped due to financial reasons. I still remembered the stances and all that but yeah. I want to start again amd this videos made me remember some of the stuff i had learned. Thank you
Do you guys have any suggestions concerning a good dit da jow that can be purchased via the internet? My old sifu has passed and I don't have the skill to brew my own
Excellent video, I just subscribed to this channel and I'm looking forward to learning from your perspective on traditional Chinese martial arts training... We use the same Saam Sing routine in Lama Pai and of course our own version of Dit Da Jow...
This is a great video! You have a new subscriber!! I genuinely hope to see many more of such detailed yet simplified instruction! By the way, it has been just a few months that I started training CLF from Master Li Siu Hung at Sunrise, FL and am absolutely loving it! (He also teaches at Boynton Beach, Fl.) Keep training hard!
I'm sorry but did you spend so much time in China that you developed an accent from Chinese speakers? Just curious. I've seen this with BJJ practitioners who've been around a Brazilian for many years.
This is not how my father, a Wing Chun and Hung Ga master explained it to me. The salute has its origin from Taoism’s concept of the Ying (Moon, Cold, Dark) and Yang (Sun, Hot, Light). Together it means harmony. So when used in greetings, the palm is wrapped around the fist which means you’re offering the other person peace and harmony. In traditional Chinese martial arts, the salute has its origin from Shaolin. The palm is open and the fingers of the fist should face the opponent showing your hands are empty and not hiding any weapons. Ancient Chinese military officials must be both warriors and scholars, so that’s where the second meaning came from.
Can you show a version where you step forward after the right straight? I think that's all I need to practice this. I mean I will practice this anyway but please show with the step.