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...
My uncle used to teach me hung gar but i did not appreciate it at that time.......now i'm more eager to learn hung gar especially to honor my uncle's death due to cancer....i am 16 yrs old
I remember back in the 80s and 90s doing this 3-strike drill with changing partners. We also used to do it with our legs. I was fortunate to have a traditional Kung Fu teacher, like you have in your father. My teacher back then was Sifu Stan Brown of the London Lau Gar schools. We didn't train it as hard as you do, but it was a regular practice in every class. We didn't use trees or Wing Chun wooden dummy. We just used each other. We used to apply a liniment called "Wood Lock" to help with the healing process after the "knocking". In later years, I got into Taijiquan, which is what I practise now. The emphasis is different, but we also used to practise this "knocking" exercise, although not the way you do it here. Personally, skin and bone conditioning is not the goal for me. However, I can understand why dedicated practitioners like you and your father continue this type of traditional Hung Gar practice
I get into it with people about massaging how distal outward. I'm more about trying to dissipate the stasis more so than the direction since the blood in the body pumps the same direction irrespective what direction you massage. I like to combine ultrasound with 跌打藥 to make the process a breeze. Saves time energy and pain when you combine the two. Cheers and thanks for an awesome video!
Thank you Naam Kuen for posting this. Are you related to White Tiger and Charlene or is this a random good thing to post? Either way, thank you!🙏🙏🙏 RI USA
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
During training there is a chance stagnant blood clots develop. In the dit da jow medicine are various components, some are working to resolve these clots. When messaging you want to give the medicine chance to take effect and want to avoid to get a clot go loose (embolus) possibly travelling to the heart or brain (arterial thrombus). That's why you massage away from the heart, the second question you probably are able to answer yourself.
Warning about the Dit Da Jow: it stings, and you gotta really rub it into your arms! If you're not making faces when you apply it, you're not doing it correctly.
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...
Your Cantonese is excellent. I understood your teachings of Hung Gar Kuen. Thank you.
She’s half Chinese and lives in Hong Kong. Most likely born and raised.
You've got pretty eyes! I like your Hung Gar Spirit! I train here in Maryland, USA.
My uncle used to teach me hung gar but i did not appreciate it at that time.......now i'm more eager to learn hung gar especially to honor my uncle's death due to cancer....i am 16 yrs old
No one ever really dies. As long you keep your uncle in your heart, he is alive. Take care and train hard!
@@mykungfucloud yes, true
I remember back in the 80s and 90s doing this 3-strike drill with changing partners. We also used to do it with our legs. I was fortunate to have a traditional Kung Fu teacher, like you have in your father. My teacher back then was Sifu Stan Brown of the London Lau Gar schools.
We didn't train it as hard as you do, but it was a regular practice in every class. We didn't use trees or Wing Chun wooden dummy. We just used each other.
We used to apply a liniment called "Wood Lock" to help with the healing process after the "knocking".
In later years, I got into Taijiquan, which is what I practise now. The emphasis is different, but we also used to practise this "knocking" exercise, although not the way you do it here.
Personally, skin and bone conditioning is not the goal for me. However, I can understand why dedicated practitioners like you and your father continue this type of traditional Hung Gar practice
I get into it with people about massaging how distal outward. I'm more about trying to dissipate the stasis more so than the direction since the blood in the body pumps the same direction irrespective what direction you massage. I like to combine ultrasound with 跌打藥 to make the process a breeze. Saves time energy and pain when you combine the two. Cheers and thanks for an awesome video!
Excellent! Thank you!
講解得很好,您可以演示整套打莊的套路,谢谢.
Sehr schön 👍, weiter so ,und viel Glück 👍
How to make your own Dit Da Jow? Thanks.
Thank you Naam Kuen for posting this. Are you related to White Tiger and Charlene or is this a random good thing to post? Either way, thank you!🙏🙏🙏 RI USA
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
何小姐你好:你會看中文嗎? 我好欣賞你的洪拳, 打得剛勁有力有姿勢有實際, 不愧為劉家良的徒孫👍👍👍💪❤️✌️
Can please demonstrate more sections. Are there anymore hunggar training methods.
What is the reason for massaging away from the heart? And why the three hour wait?
During training there is a chance stagnant blood clots develop. In the dit da jow medicine are various components, some are working to resolve these clots. When messaging you want to give the medicine chance to take effect and want to avoid to get a clot go loose (embolus) possibly travelling to the heart or brain (arterial thrombus). That's why you massage away from the heart, the second question you probably are able to answer yourself.
@@mykungfucloud Thank you for the very prompt response!
Awesome!!
Would you share your dit da jow recipe?
Nice earthbending
😇😇😇
I think that this wooden dummy was for choy li fut
Another Houghton bringing the blunt force trauma, c o o l.
2:22 PLEASE WRITE THE WARNINGS IN ENGLISH!
What does it say
I think that this wooden dummy would for choy li fut, not Hung Gar
Is Dit Da Jow safe to use my goodness keep away from the heart don't wash your hands for 3 hours
我哋香港叫格三星。
The tree did not harm you.
Warning about the Dit Da Jow: it stings, and you gotta really rub it into your arms! If you're not making faces when you apply it, you're not doing it correctly.
I suddenly feel like a wimp
I love you
Iam gonna join the "I love you" club! XD
gaap saam sing...
支持洪拳
Poor tree