Queensland Kendo Renmei summer seminar 11 and 12 December

Just a brief reminder. Saturday and Sunday the Club will be hosting the QKR summer seminar at the CBRC. We will be there for 8:00am till 5:00pm both days. Training will be across all three supported art (Kendo, Iaido and Jodo). Gradings will take place Sunday afternoon. Kendo and Iaido are locked in, but we are still awaiting border arrangements to confirm that we are able to form a jodo grading panel.

As previously mentioned, there will be no Jujutsu or Systema training possible on Saturday as the upstairs hall will be in use for the seminar. For those of you who are not QKR members, you are most welcome to come and watch, and if you are keen, it will be great to have your assistance through the weekend.

We are looking forward to hosting participants from right across the state, and I want to wish all the best for people putting final touches on their preparations for grading on Sunday!

Visit to BKC

Many thanks to Takashi Itakura sensei for hosting Sean, Kateena and I on Saturday for training with the Brisbane Kendo Club. Normally, weekend training at the BKC is focussed on beginners. However, Takashi organised the presence of some appropriate level members to come and push along the three of us in an attempt to put some final polish on our upcoming grading challenges (Sean and Kateena this Saturday, my self in July — hopefully). Ken, Nash, Marcello and Tony, thank you for making the effort to come in and generously provide some excellent challenge and useful feedback on our kendo.

It was incredibly valuable training for all three of us and we all enjoyed the stint in the “second dojo” having a chat over some late lunch. I am very much looking forward to more sessions in coming months as part of our ongoing commitment to have more regular face-to-face sessions with BKC, Gin Gin and Toowoomba through 2022.

Inter Club shiai training

On Saturday, Sean and I went down to Brisbane to participate in the inter-Club shiai training hosted by Kenshinkai. It was the first one that we have been able to make since they were restarted a few months ago by John Isaacs sensei and it was great to catch up with members from Shubukai Gold Coast and the Kenshinkai folk.

As always there were some good lessons to be learned from the experience and inspirational to compete in a bought with Hiroko Tsukadaira sensei, who completely belies the fact she is in her mid 70s. It is a lesson that you can very much maintain your vitality and skill in a competitive contact sport as you get older. And it was lovely to get my hands on the flags and sharpen up my shinpan skills as well.

There is one more session due in December before the new year’s break. However, due to the jujutsu grading being run that weekend we are unlikely to be able to attend. Instead, we will look forward to more opportunities to practice shiai and hopefully organise a full competition next year!

Brisbane trip Saturday 4 December

Kateena, Sean and I will be heading to train at the BKC this weekend in support of both Kateena and Sean’s grading challenge in just under a fortnight. As a result, we will not have any kendo training on Saturday 4 December. We will work out the availability of Iaido and Jujutsu classes later this week.

The Gin Gin report: Highly successful Kendo weekend seminar brings top quality training to the region

I’m opening today’s blog still feeling the glow from the weekend we have just had in our reinstated November trip to Gin Gin. The last time we were able to do so was in 2019— pre COVID and all the disruptions that is has wrought over the past 20 months or so.

It was a near perfect confluence of factors this time around. From managing to avoid delays at the Cooyar Roadworks lights on the way up, stopping past my favourite country bakery in Goomeri, getting a great sweat on with a jujutsu and iaido session on arrival, having the warmest of puppy welcomes from Tamara’s puddle of Labradors, and the weather Saturday and Sunday being near perfect with relatively low humidity and acceptable temperatures for Kendo training Saturday and Sunday, convivial company Saturday night at dinner, and just the feeling of having so many pieces of the training puzzle “click” (and then having much to focus on/engage with in the coming months).

There are a number of key thankyous that have to be made. First of all to Tamara for her indefatigable organisation, food provision, hospitality, cheer and just plain fun. As someone who usually fills the role as chief cook and bottle washer on our trips away, it felt like a benediction to just have everything done with such aplomb.

A second thank you to Ivan, who has been holding down the kendo fort for the past 20 months with only the occasional face to face input. It is hard enough being remote from where all of the most nightly qualified teachers and senior kenshi are in Brisbane/Gold Coast and Cairns, but to manage to progress mainly through Zoom based lessons is a sign of extraordinary dedication.

Third thanks to Kateena and Sean who came up this weekend to share the fun, and for Kateena her ute and the driving. I really noticed the difference in terms of my tiredness after the journey I’ve done so often over the past 3 1/2 years at either end of the weekend. And the quality of the conversation was a feature both up, down and in between while we were in the car. Lots to mull over, make plans for and coordinate, and Sean’s unflagging energy was infectious.

Finally, the biggest thankyou to Takashi Itakura sensei. His suggestion of a road trip during the September regional grading and mini seminar set the foundation of what was an enormously valuable training. It was obvious even before we went up the considerable thought that he had put into his lesson planning, including a careful consideration of the experience/goals of the participants, the safety consideration posed by the environment, the use of peer-led learning models to have everyone actively engage with the process of learning, the integration of sport science and coaching into the framing of what we were doing, and the use of on the spot video analysis to drive our understanding of things we did well, and things to make improvements on. For me, the biggest gift was to see how my own inclination and professional training was reflected in someone who has such a thorough understanding and focus on Kendo, and giving me indication of where to go next with teaching in Toowoomba and Gin Gin.

It was also just lovely to catch up in a social sense with all of my Gin Gin friends, and to have the opportunity to get to know both Takashi and his wife Miki so much better.

So we now have a month before the December Seminar and Grading that we are hosting here in Toowoomba. It will be marvellous to see Ivan, Tamara, Quentin, Jack and Reggie down here and participating with the wider Queensland Kendo, Iaido and Jodo community. We will all be working hard to implement what we learned this weekend, and looking forward to what we hope to be continued regular opportunities to train and learn together.

Regular programming this week

We should be back to a regular state of programming this week and for the next few weeks. Systema is planning a Saturday session, I will be at all of the week night and Saturday sessions, FlexiFit, after quite a bit of disruption this past few weeks will be on Sunday, as well and Tuesday and Thursday morning opportunities, and as for me personally, I made this morning’s gym session, and intend to do all my scheduled conditioning and gym sessions for the rest of the week.

It was great to hear from a few folk who have been away from training for a while that they are planning to come back over the next week or so. I’m always happy to see our “prodigals” and welcome them back to the training fold. I’d encourage some of you who I know are regular readers to consider whether you too might like to retake the training plunge, either in person or via video link. Your presence benefits everyone.

Any variations to programming (if they occur) will be sent through the usual channels. So as always, I’ll look forward to seeing you at the dojo.

Reminder: Gin Gin trip this weekend

I am looking forward to this weekend’s trip away to support our sister dojo in Gin Gin. Kateena, Sean and I will be travelling up on Friday afternoon from Toowoomba, and Takashi Itakura sensei making the trip up from Brisbane for a very full Saturday and packed Sunday morning training focussing on the requirements for the upcoming seminar and grading opportunity in December.

As a result, there will not be any Kendo or Iaido training in Toowoomba this Saturday, so I will hope to see folk at the Tuesday and Thursday evening sessions.

We will be trialling the use of video feedback over the weekend, which will be very interesting to use. We may even start to do similar in Toowoomba if the trial is successful.

Club systems and documents

As part of the end of year refresh/renewal of the Club’s systems, I will be spending some time this week setting up resources in our Martialytics student management software to make accessing your relevant grading documents easier, along with a range of other resources.

Keep an eye out in your e-mail for log-in details and links to the things you will need for your upcoming training/grading progression. I will also be trialling some of the additional features that have recently been made available, so I will be asking a few of you to help me over the next few days.

I will also want to take me updated photos of everyone from this week for the Club records. Some are many years old, and quite a few are missing all together. I’ll also be checking that all of your contact and other important details are up to date.

General dojo update

It is kind of nice to start a new month on a Monday. I know that it is an artificial alignment of “beginnings”, but it does help to sweep away some of the habitual excuses that we tend to fall into (I’ll start it tomorrow/next week/next month). So stripped of that framing, today provides a wonderful opportunity to start fresh and forge ahead on a few longer term plans.

First, we will be starting our run of preparation for gradings in jujutsu, kendo, iaido and jodo this week. I would ask that you have a look at your grading requirements in your respective arts, and bring some questions to the dojo to shape what we focus on in our sessions. This might be technical (the “how you do it” requirements), process-based (the “what you need to do” requirements), and conditioning (how to improve strength, balance and cardiovascular conditioning to achieve your goals). Everyone will be different in what they need to focus on, even if you are attempting the same grading level, so you need to be active in the process of your preparation in order to maximise your chance of success. Ask questions and we will tailor what you need to work on this week.

Second, Club group orders will be going into our suppliers. Knee pads are available at Grapplingstore, so have a think if you would like to purchase a set (knees are important after all), and have a look at their website to see if there is anything else you would like. Tozando ought be able to fulfil orders before the next QKR seminar if we get them in this week, so again, have a think about what you might like. This includes Kyudo related items such as a Kyudo gi, gomuyumi etc. that you may wish to obtain, and of course jujutsu uniforms.

Third, I will be trialling some new features within our Martialytics student database this week and spending some time at the back end of the Club’s systems to streamline some of our procedures. I will be checking that we have current details and photos for all members, so be warned that you may have a snap taken when you are in this week.

Fourth, we are scheduled to have an Executive meeting this Sunday, so if you have any suggestions or issues you would like to raise, please let your relevant instructor or discipline coordinators know.

Have fun everyone today, this week and this month, and, as always, I’ll look forward to seeing you in the dojo!

Kendo updates

It has been great to see some steady number back in the dojo this week for training. We are still working towards our two big events for the remainder of the year, the trip to Gin Gin next weekend (12–14 November) and the hosting the QKR State Seminar and grading opportunity (11–12 December).

Unfortunately, Greg Nicholas sensei, who was due to undertake some contract work in the Toowoomba region has experience some delays with the contract, so is more likely to be here to have a few sessions with us towards the end of the month. However, we will keep everyone posted as his timing becomes more clear.

I would also like to encourage interest in the remaining shiai practice sessions that are being hosted at the Kenshinkai both the 27th of this month and on 18 December. Again, we will remind you closer to the days we are going done in support of this.

As mentioned in the other post this week, we will be making an order with Tozando mid this week, so please get your item wish list into Sean or myself ASAP.

Finally, I am going to try to ensure that we start our sessions a little more promptly from this week coming. If you know that it takes you 15 mins to get organised from the time you arrive at the dojo in order to be ready to start training, please make sure that you give yourself sufficient time to do so. I will be making sure that Jodo finished early enough on a Thursday, and that I am early enough on a Saturday to facilitate this. Please take the opportunity to do the same.