Dojo etiquette reminder

Hello All,

Just a reminder about dojo floor etiquette.  This is important, especially where the weapons arts are concerned.

The dojo floor proper is the space enclosed by the red border lines, within this space no outdoor shoes should be worn.  The floor at times is dirty enough, so no need to add to the problem by wearing shoes across the area...plus it is proper Japanese etiquette to not wear shoes within the home or dojo.  This should apply even to the arts which are not Japanese based, except for the arts that have special footwear as part of their discipline (since this footwear will not be worn outside anyway).

Along these lines, when you go to the bathroom you should have footwear on.  This is so that any possible "nasties" in the bathroom does not get transferred to the training area.  This is especially important for the arts that use the floor mats.  I don't think that anybody would like the idea of having their face (or any other part of their body) in contact with an area which was possibly contaminated by somebody's feet coming straight from the bathroom.  This also applies to going outside for any reason...put your shoes on, but don't forget to take them off again when entering the training area.  I know that the school employees and children do not observe this, but we should be following the proper etiquette & procedures for two reasons: 1) to not add to the problem and 2) so that we build up good habits for when we go to other training spaces.

The other item is for practitioners to not cross the floor of the other practising arts.  This is out of respect for the other arts and for everyone's safety, especially concerning the weapons arts.  There is the strong chance that if you cross the floor across another practising art you will, at the least, disrupt their training or, at the worst, be involved in an accident (e.g. being struck by a weapon, causing an accident by disrupting concentration, etc.).  If you need to go from one side of the dojo to the other travel on the outside of the red border lines.  Also, if there is equipment or weapons on the floor do not step over them (nor on them) but go around them.

One last thing, if you need to gather and have a chat with others please keep the gathering outside the red border, and not overflow into the area of a practising art.  Again, this is not only out of respect for the other art and its practitioners, but for safety.

As with everything, there are times when this etiquette cannot be followed (e.g. when an art utilises the border area for preparation and/or equipment set out), but in these cases use common sense and proceed in a manner that is both respectful and safe.

The book In the Dojo : A Guide to the Rituals and Etiquette of the Japanese Martial Arts by Dave Lowry is a good guide for dojo etiquette (see the Resources page for other good reference works).

Eric

No training this Thursday night

Just a reminder that the MEAC will be occupied by the Pure Landers from Thursday through Saturday for a function, and hence there will be no training this Thursday. 

We will be going to our fully operational new training schedule from next week, which shall include the Thursday night sessions whose composition is to be advised, so keep an eye out for updates!

 

Changes to the training calendar starting this week

I just wanted to remind everyone that we will be phasing in a number of significant timetable changes starting this week, which will accomodate my need to be in Bundaberg for the latter half of each week for the next 12 weeks.  

I will be updating the website training times later today, so do check in this afternoon as class times and locations are progressively added. 

The permanent change from this week will be shifting Jujutsu to Monday and Wednesday nights, starting tonight. Jujutsu will commence at 6 pm tonight, though from next week will shift to a 7 pm start on the Monday, and the same 6 pm start on a Wednesday.  

FlexiFit will take a break this week, and be back next week at 6 pm on a Monday night (just before Jujutsu).  

Fencing starts its first training session at the MEAC this Tuesday night from 6 pm in the time slot vacated by Jujutsu. It may expand into Thursdays once they have settled in for a few weeks, so please watch this space. 

All other classes will broadly follow their existing timetable for this week, though there will be a few more changes to be announced in next week’s Budo Bulletin, so please keep watching this space! If in doubt, please contact the relevant discipline coordinator directly as they will be able to let you know what the plan is in their specific case.  

New month, new academic year, new timetable

In terms of what is already a big week for the Club, I want to just flag that there will be some significant changes to the Class timetable starting from next week.

As many of you know, I have accepted an offer to study Physiotherapy at the Bundaberg campus of CQ University, and as a result I am going to be out of town from Tuesday evening through to Friday afternoon while classes are in session. This amounts to a little over half of the year away from my regular evening training night for the next two and a half years.

We need to confirm things this week, but the proposal is that from next week, Jujutsu will shift from its current times to a Monday and Wednesday, and FlexiFit moved to a Monday and back to the MEAC. This will mean that on Monday we have FlexiFit from 6-7 pm, Jujutsu from 7-8.40 pm, and potentially shift Thursday's jujutsu session to a Wednesday. This will be partially dependent on what we do to fit Fencing into the Club's timetable, and the availability of Brady to teach the one class per week that I will no longer be able to do. We are most likely to keep Kendo on a Tuesday night, fitting in with Minty's availability, and starting slightly earlier at 7.30 pm. We still need to sort Iaido out as I am keen to run virtual dojo sessions to assist both Sian and Tracy (and Matt G in the far north), so we need to sort out a common time when that could occur.

Michael Conroy is also keen to start a regular Systema class in advance of his trip to Canada to train and receive accreditation, and I am also keen to run a one hour session on the weekend where we can do some advanced jujustu practice (chuden and joden waza).

Change is simultaneously exciting and daunting. I have been teaching Tuesday and Thursday nights here in Toowoomba since the Club started at the end of 2008, so it will take some adjustment by myself and other members of the Club to make the new time arrangements work. However, it contains a great opportunity for Brady, Minty, Sian and Tracy to step up and practice their teaching craft.

Stay posted as we will be updating the website this week with all the new training details, and sending out a list to all active members this week. As always, I'll look forward to seeing you in the dojo!

Taiko workshop: 7 March with Takatsuki Taiko

Exciting news!

Toowoomba's sister city in Japan, Takatsuki, is generously donating several Wadaikos (taiko drums) to Toowoomba, for use by our taiko group. 

We would like to invite people in Toowoomba region to participate in a Taiko workshop, followed by the Mayoral Reception, on Wednesday, 7th of March, from 9:30am to 13:30pm at the Empire church theatre.

Members of Takatsuki Taiko group will perform and also instruct in taiko drumming. All are welcome and it is free. 

Come feel the sound of wadaiko!

Kenjutsu workshop

Hello All,

Just a reminder that the first kenjutsu (sword) workshop for the year will be this coming Sunday, 4 March starting at 9:30 am at the MEAC.

This workshop is open to all BBRD members who are involved in the use of the sword (iaido, kendo & jodo), and it may prove insightful to BBRD members who practice arts that utilise stave weapons (e.g. jujutsu) in that the methods of gripping and striking with these weapons are quite similar.

This is the first of four workshops to be held throughout the year with each individual workshop concentrating on one of the three sword arts practised at BBRD (ZNKR seitei iaido, ZNKR kendo and SMR kasumi shinto-ryu kenjutsu)  and with one being a combined arts workshop.

Look forward to seeing everyone there!

Eric

A new Club in the North!

While on exciting news, with my studies in Bundaberg having me up there for the next few years, I have been approached to found a new Club based in Gin Gin.

I am proud to announce that the Ken Jin Kan (剣人会) has been officially recognised under the banner of the Queensland Kendo Renmei, and we will be starting our first class on Wednesday 14 March, in the National Fitness Hall, Bruce Highway.

Many thanks to Tamara and Ivan for the invite to teach and for their enthusiasm for expanding local opportunities for the practice of Japanese martial arts in their district. My vision it to use the new Club as a foundation to see if there is any interest in franchising the BBRD concept at CQU over the next few years. I am very much looking forward to spreading the practice of Kendo and related arts, and with any luck we may see some of these new folk a the July seminar!

Welcome to the Toowoomba Fencing Club

I am happy to announce that BBRD will soon be supporting the practice of Olympic fencing here in Toowoomba.

Fencing is a University Games sport, and the Toowoomba Fencing Club has looked to provide opportunities for their USQ student members to focus on competing at that level. We are still bedding down some of the particulars regarding training times and location, but we hope to have that sorted by Market Day on Wednesday so that we can promote it to the University community. We have flyers and posters ready to go, and will set up a web page for them shortly. 

I'd like to thank Jamie Webb and Michael Stockwell for approaching the Club with their request to join under our Club banner. I will look forward to working with both of them to grow numbers of USQ students and general community members practising the art, and learning the finer points of the European sword traditions.

Taiko Drum donation

I am very proud to announce that the Club is to be the recipient of a substantial donation of taiko drums, gifted from the Takatsuki City to the City of Toowoomba. As the home of Toowoomba Taiko, BBRD will be storing and facilitating the use of this gift, which when shipping and travel of Taiko sensei are factored in amounts to close to $20,000. 

It is an honour to be involved in this inter-community donation. Sian Carlyon will be in Takatsuki this week on the back of participating in a Wadaiko Festival and a personal holiday to officially thank the Takatsuki community for their gift. 

The official welcoming ceremony in Toowoomba will be held Wednesday next week (7 March), and there will be a taiko workshop run in conjunction with the visit from the Takatsuki Taiko delegation.  

We will be posting updates through this week. Stay tuned!

 

Club Muster/Phoenix Carnival this Wednesday

In a break from tradition, the first Club Muster of the year will be held in Week 1 rather than O Week. This will hopefully see more on-campus students come past the Club’s stall and demonstration areas than have done so in the last few years.  

We will be doing our usual load out with an 8x8 m training area and a stall inside the main marquee in the USQ Toowoomba Quad. We are planning to have as full a spread of the Club’s disciplines on display as we can, and will need the support of Club members throughout the day, but especially over the busiest period of 12–2 pm. 

We will be packing up the dojo on Tuesday night in preparation for Wednesday. Kateena has generously offered the loan of her box trailer, so we will be loading mats into it as we go, and ensure that the cars are also packed with necessary equipment. 

“Bump in” is from 8.30 am and must be completed by 10 am. We will need to have at least three people available from 10 am–1.30pm, and then manage “Bump out” no later than 4 pm. 

Some requests: If someone could donate the use of an external monitor and a tested/tagged powerboard for the day, we will run some demonstration videos in the marquee stall. Second, if you could give me an indication ASAP as to your availablity for the day, and especially for “bump out” and restock the dojo, that would be very helpful. We are down a few folk who would regularly be there to assist, between new work commitments, travel, and a few long term members having left town. 

I hope to see many of you there on the day, even if only to stop past and say hello!