5.28.2008

Weekend update: Memorial Day weekend

Friday: aikido

Saturday: Wired the set cabinets destined to be the new stained glass work table for the fluorescent fixtures. Caused myself some minor damage in the process. Lots of blood, though. Aikido. Dinner at Durango's. 3 DVDs: Casino Royale, Music & Lyrics and Lucky Number Slevin.

Sunday: Up early to fetch Kim and the in-laws from their cruise ship. I went early enough, I thought, to get into Galveston in time for some breakfast. I was looking for the restaurant when I got a call from Kim saying they were ready. So, I went and picked them up and they joined me at the restaurant to watch me eat breakfast.

In the afternoon I grilled out burgers and we dined well.

Monday: Yard work in the morning during which I discovered that the riding mower needs some work. In the afternoon, I grilled fish, shrimp and sausage. Once again, the family dined well. Oh, I also made some shortcakes and a coffee cake. Good stuff.

Saturday Afternoon at the dojo 5/24/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Richard, and Brad.

Ukemi: No big falls. Full complement of left- and right-sided otherwise.

The Walk: No walk today.

Releases: None today.

Techniques:

11-17 left-sided only with Richard.

We did some exploring of the new approach to some of these techniques with Richard. He'd not seen some of the changes that we're incorporating. We spent a lot of time on Sumi-otoshi. Looking at the differences between it and Uke-otoshi.

I did ok. Some work on Shihonage and Mae-otoshi, as well as Sumi-otoshi.

Aftermath: Still stiff left calf muscle..

Friday Night at the dojo 5/23/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, and Trey.

Ukemi: Took a big fall, right-sided. Landed weird on the left calf muscle and it complained.

The Walk: Went ok.

Releases: With Trey. Went ok. Working on an alternative to having to duck on 5 and 7 by pushing up more. It requires staying much closer to uke.

Techniques:

1-10 left-sided only for both of us. It was a struggle. It was interesting to see how much a difference doing no right-sided techniques to jog the memory makes. I was very grabby on a number of the techniques, but I did manage to clean it up a little.

We went back to 1-step distance to clean up some issues from time to time and it helped. We explored some options for ushiro-ate for someone of Trey's height trying to handle someone of my height.

Aftermath: Very sore left calf muscle. Pulled? Strained?

5.23.2008

RIP: Robert Asprin

I met him only once in person, at AggieCon a few years ago. The picture
I've got of him outside, doing a panel on sword work, is one of my
favorites I've taken

I met him through his written word, many times. I'm saddened that his
new worlds will be no more.

At the movies: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull : 3

Harken back to the days of the Temple of Doom and the Lost Ark and you'll find yourself properly prepared for the newest installation of the Indy franchise where the lead character is named after his dad's dog.

This time our ragtag group of archeaologists is not taking something from an ancient civilization, but returning something to one. And that, I think, takes a lot of dramatic tension away from the movie. There are a few instances of surprise, but I never felt that the result was in doubt. Maybe it would have been better if I'd not seen and Indy movie before? I don't know.

Still, I'm glad I went.

5.22.2008

At the movies: Iron Man

Iron Man: 3

The origin story of Tony Stark/Iron Man

I expected summer popcorn stuff and was not disappointed. It showed playboy Tony Stark grow into a more socially responsible person. I did not know anything about Iron Man going into the movie, so I have no idea how close it is to the actual comic.

If you can accept the comic book physics, it's a fun flick. The actors did a decent job. I recognized the 3 big names, but for the life of me I could not get Gwyneth Paltrow's name to come to mind while I was in the theatre.

Also, stick around until the end of the credits, there is an extra scene.

5.19.2008

Weekend update

Friday: aikido

Saturday: chilled around the house while Kim was out and about. Our Taurus is a little iffy on the reliability side (i.e., it will die while moving at 55mph and not restart for a while), so I chose to hang out instead of going any where.

Aikido after she was done with her truck-necessary stuff and back at work.

Her parents and I then went to the library to help her close up the Book Sale and get the room clean for the next week.

Then off to Joe's for dinner. I made a pig of myself as I had not eaten much all day.

Sunday: Packed 'em all off for a cruise around the Caribbean for a week. I'm staying home due to a lack on interest in being stuck on a boat for seven days. I did some boat work in high school and I'm terribly interested in doing it again at the moment.

Went to see Redbelt on the way back from dropping them off at the cruise ship. Great movie!

Grilled some hamburgers out for my meals for the week. Mmmmm. I added some onion soup mix and some Dubliner cheese. It gave it a very nice flavor.

Most of Friendswood lost power for about an hour, so I went out and chatted with neighbors down the street. Everyone knew me as soon as I was introduced as "Kim's husband". :D

At the movies: Redbelt

Redbelt: 4

From imdb: A fateful event leads to a job in the film business for top mixed-martial arts instructor Mike Terry. Though he refuses to participate in prize bouts, circumstances conspire to force him to consider entering such a competition.

The movie does a good job of portraying an instructor who has principles and is not in it strictly for the money. They operate on razor-thin margins, struggling to make rent for their space.

The events that occur are plausible, and the ramifications make sense.

The portrayal of the dojo is plausible, as well, although the set was too big if the dojo was as struggling as stated in the movie. The dojo would have moved to a more affordable venue.

The only minor quibble I have is when the lawyer came into the dojo for her first training session, she already knew that a red belt was the highest rank. The colors of belts, and their meanings, differ from one art to the next and one style of art to the next. But, it's a minor quibble.

I might end up purchasing this one.

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo - 5/17/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Trey and Brad.

Ukemi: One big fall, right-sided. Wahoo! I did land kind of hard on the left calf, and it cramped up a bit.

I'll probably add static big falls on both sides next week, then back to my dynamic attacks on Tim that result in big falls the week after. Did the full complement of left- and right-sided falls otherwise.

The Walk: As usual. I counted the pace once. Faster than I normally like to count for some reason.

Releases: With Trey. Went ok.

Tim gave me an alternative approach for 5 and 7 to make it so I don't have to kneel and pivot with shorter ukes. The key is to push up, but stay very close to uke to prevent getting clotheslined.

Techniques:

1-10, except 9, for Trey. I served as uke all night. 3 step approach for all. We reverted back to 1-step when he got stuck on a technique, to try to resolve the issue a little quicker. That happened on ushiro-ate, and ude-hineri.

We also did some detail work on left-sided initial off-balances at the end of class to improve that basic skill.

Aftermath: Sore calf, slightly sore ankle. Generally sore overall. I took a bunch of falls, and got back up. Ibuprofen was called for.

Friday Night at the Dojo - 5/16/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Kim, and Trey.

Ukemi: No big falls. Full complement of left- and right-sided otherwise.

The Walk: Forgot the second pivot stone, momentarily. That messed up Kim and Trey.

Releases: With Trey. Went ok. Get off-line, push and follow

Techniques:

3 and 4 for Trey. I work as tori once for about every 5 times Trey served as tori. I was not moving well at the beginning, not getting off-line. That quickly improved and I was managing to complete the techniques.

Trey noted I wasn't getting much eye-flash on gedan-ate, so I beefed up that portion and got a little better flow from the technique.

We also did some duck-in-the-middle knife avoidance work. A nice precursor to full out randori, neither of which we do very often.

Tim got thrown around by Kim all evening. He would later report that it was a two-Aleve evening.

Aftermath: Slightly sore ankle.

5.15.2008

New Zelazny novel coming out

Hard Case Crime is going to be publishing "Dead Man's Brother", a thriller Roger wrote around 1970. You bet I'm going to be getting it as soon as it comes out.

I just went and looked at the cover . It looks like more of a bodice-ripper and crime novel.

Mississippi Kite, redux


MKite01
Originally uploaded by madmoravian
The kites showed up in our backyard again yesterday. For a while, two of them were right next to each other on a branch of this pine tree. There were not, however, accommodating to the photographer.

I took about 60 pictures and culled out most. The lighting was not great. My attempts with my big lens were really hampered by the poor lighting. They stuck around long enough that I should have pulled out the tripod.

Maybe they'll be around over the next couple of days for me to try again.

5.14.2008

Mississippi Kite


KiteUnknown1
Originally uploaded by madmoravian
This guy showed up in our area over the weekend. I hope he and his mate stick around. They've got a nice call.

Owaza Ju Pon

Now that I'm having to learn this kata, I figured I'd post the techniques for reference.

1. Kubi-guruma - neck wheel
2. Kata-otoshi - shoulder drop
3. Ude-guruma - arm wheel
4. Hiji-guruma - elbow wheel
5. Aiki-nage - fitting in throw
6. Shiho-nage - four corner (all directions) throw
7. Ushiro-ate - behind (from the rear) strike
8. Kote-gaeshi - wrist turn
9. Ushiro-kubi-gatame - hold from behind (the rear)
10. Shizumi-otoshi - sinking body drop

The Phantom, the Ghost who walks

The Houston Chronicle carries a bunch of comics on a daily basis. One of them is "The Phantom."

In the current storyline, he and his wife have gone down to Galveston to bid on a rare airplane. Leaving Galveston, they're flying the airplane and the Phantom says they'll follow the coast, go by New Orleans and then on down to South America.

Now, I suppose they could have left Galveston and flown up the coast past New Orleans, testing the flight worthiness of the airplane, but I think they made a huge geographical error.

Anyone else see it?

5.13.2008

Dojo advertising

Here's a picture of the back of my truck with the new lettering applied.

Weekend update

Friday night: Aikido!

Saturday: 1.5 hours of mowing. 1.5 hours of sweeping. 1.5 hours of aikido. Dinner at Durango's with the in-laws

Sunday: Mother's Day brunch at District 7 Grill and then off to see the movie "Flawless"

At the movies: Flawless

Flawless: 3

A diamond caper movie starring Michael Caine and Demi Moore. Set in the 60's, Demi is the highest ranking female in the London Diamond company. She's been passed over for promotion several times and runs into a janitor who also has a grudge that stealing diamonds will assuage.

It was nicely done, the time was well-represented and the actors did a good job.

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo - 5/10/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Richard, and Trey.

Ukemi: No big falls. Just a few left-sided falls as the injured foot is the one that lands first on those. Did the full complement of right-sided falls.

The Walk: As usual. I counted the pace once in Czech. Tim noted some sloppiness in my feet. Maybe because of the ankle injury? I don't know

Releases: With Trey. Went ok. I do have some issues with #5 and #7 trying to be careful of the right ankle.

Techniques:

1 and 2 for Trey. I served as uke all night. We worked on three-step approach to both of these. He had some great Shomen-ates at the end.

Aftermath: Slightly sore ankle.

Friday Night at the Dojo - 5/9/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Kim, and Trey.

Back on the mat. Yahoo!

Ukemi: No big falls. Just a few left-sided falls as the injured foot is the one that lands first on those. Did the full complement of right-sided falls.

The Walk: As usual

Releases: With Trey. Went ok. I do have some issues with #5 and #7 trying to be careful of the right ankle.

Techniques:

6-10 for Trey and Kim. I served as uke all night. I'm not confident in the ankle enough to do the small circle footwork yet.

Aftermath: Slightly sore ankle.

5.09.2008

In the woodshop

Got into the shop for a couple of hours last night. It was nice and hot. That's gonna give me motivation to get the dog screen for the unfenced shop door built.

Managed to get the light box insert (for use while doing stained glass work) built for the set of cabinets in which it will reside. Looks like this weekend's goal will be to get it wired up.

I've got aikido, mowing and Mother's Day to deal with, so no telling if I'll get some shop time.

At the movies: Broken Flowers

Broken Flowers: 3

Bill Murray stars in a movie where he is trying to find out which of his many ex-girlfriends might be the mother of his rumored son.

An interesting movie, but I got tired of all of the fade-to-black transitions. I understand why it was done, but it was still annoying.

There was no solid resolution at the end of the movie. There's a suggested one, but the movie fades to black at the end, leaving the audience hanging.

At the movies: 12 Monkeys

12 Monkeys: 3

Bruce Willis and Brad Pitt in a Terry Gilliam (Time Bandits, Brazil, Adv. of Baron Munchausen) movie about time travel and doomsday viruses.

This was a different movie than I expected. I was really expecting it to be far more of a horror movie. Instead it's more of a steam punk time travel movie.

Brad Pitt did a decent job with the not-quite-sane, son of a virulogist. Bruce did a decent job as the protagonist time-traveler.

A very quirky movie, with the indelible imprint of Terry Gilliam. I enjoyed getting this one off of my list of wanted-to-see movies.

5.07.2008

At the movies: Smokin' Aces

Smokin' Aces: 3

Concept: Mafia boss is turning federal witness. Competing mafia boss had put a contract out on MB #1. Everyone and their dog wants the $1 million prize. FBI wants to keep folks from making the hit.

Death, blood and gunfights. Over-the-top, but fun. I had the reveal figured out fairly early on, but it was still worth watching.

At the movies: Domino

Domino: 3

A vehicle for Keira Knightley, and it's a decent vehicle. Lots of mayhem, explosions and opportunities for her to pout.

KK joins a crew of bounty hunters. With her family and good looks, she evenutally gets a reality show called Bounty Hunters. They get filmed on lots of captures, but finally take on one with too little documentation. Bounty Hunters end up, mistakenly, capturing a Mafia bosses kids. Stuff ensues with lots of loss of life.

Mickey Rourke and Lucy Liu have roles in this, along with some start from BH 90210

5.05.2008

Dojo advertising

I stopped by a local sign shop last week to inquire about signage for the back of my pickup. I've been planning on putting something back there for a while to try to promote the dojo. I finally made the time to stop someplace and look into the costs.

It's gonna cost me about $75 to have a sign made and applied to the rear window of the truck. I hope it'll be ready sometime this week, but I really have no idea as to their timetables.

I hope it looks good and doesn't just generate comments on my driving.

Weekend update

Friday night: aikido spectating for me

Saturday: drove Kim to her genealogy thing as she was having vertigo. We then crashed for the afternoon in order to be ready for our cooking class at Central Market.

The cooking class was pretty good. It was on outdoor grilling. One of the three entrees was a steak with a coffee-based rub. It was one of the best steaks I've ever had. Tender, tasty, and nicely cooked. Wow.

Sunday: slept in some more fighting off our respective ailments. I spent the afternoon completing the backyard deck for our grill. I'd completed the frame earlier in the week, so all that was left was cutting, and securing, the lumber for the top of the deck.

Neither of us slept well overnight. Ugh.

Friday Night at the Dojo 5/2/08

Aikidokas: Tim, and Larry.

They worked through part of San kata, I think.

I sat and watched all evening. I've been under the weather from a cold-like object and doing Pt on the ankle. I think I'll get back on the mat this coming Friday. The ankle's feeling pretty good after therapy sessions, and I'm managing to accomplish more difficult tasks during therapy.

Aftermath: None of note

4.21.2008

Friday Night at the Dojo 4/18/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Larry, and Kim.

They worked Kim through 1-10 of the Ju Nana Hon Kata and Larry through some of the big 10 with Kim and others as uke.

I sat and chatted with Sensei Raymond who stopped by for the evening.

Aftermath: PT starts on Thursday.

4.15.2008

Bruuuuuuuuuuuuuuce

We went to see Bruce Springsteen in concert last night. My ears have still not recovered completely. It was a good concert, the first time I've seen him live.

He did start about 70 minutes after the posted time on the tickets, but that's not terribly surprising. The arena was about 40% full at the posted start time.

The sound board folks had either the drums or the bass guitar pumped up too much. It was actually causing me pain in my chest from the sound waves.

It was a good set. I think he changed it in the middle, on the spur of the moment. He pulled out a request froom the audience about midway through and put the "E Street Shuffle" into the set. I think "Terry's Song" may have been included at the request of a letter sent to Bruce before the show.

It was nice of Bruce to let us in a little closer by sending greetings from the band members who were not there. He said his wife needed to keep rein on their teenage kids.

And below is the set list for the concert.

Cadillac Ranch
Radio Nowhere
Lonesome Day
Atlantic City
Magic
Because the Night
Candy's Room
She's the One
Out in the Street
Livin' in the Future
The Promised Land
Girls in Their Summer Clothes
The E Street Shuffle
Terry's Song
Devil's Arcade
The Rising
Last to Die
Long Walk Home
Badlands
Thunder Road

Encore

Always a Friend (w/ Alejandro Escovedo)
All Just to Get to You (w/ Joe Ely)
Rosalita
Born to Run
Tenth Avenue Freeze-out
American Land

Friday Night at the Dojo 4/11

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, and Trey.

They worked Trey through 1-10 of the Ju Nana Hon Kata.

I sat and took a bunch of pictures.

Aftermath: Waiting for clearance to start training.









Ring Day

My Aggie Ring got stolen last year when our house got burglarized. I'm sure they got a minute amount of money for it, they're not easily resellable. It had to get melted down.

Anyway, these rings can only be purchased through the Association of Former Students at scheduled times. I got the money organized and placed my order.

You could go to A&M for the Ring Day festivities or have the ring sent to you via UPS overnight. I originally planned on going up to A&M for the festivities, but the schedule was going to be very tight and I would have just been up there the previous weekend. So, I changed my mind and had them send the ring to me. It cost me less than the gas to travel there.

It arrived and it was gorgeous. Kim and I did the ceremonial dropping in to a glass of beer. I then drank the beer until the ring came rushing at me, at which point tradition dictated I was allowed to put the ring on. It fit perfectly.

I feel whole again.

4.08.2008

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 4/5

Aikidokas: Tim, Richard, Trey and Brad

I'm still off the mat, but I helped Brad work through the releases he knows and introduced him to another one. I was kibbitzing from off the mat while Tim was working with Richard and Trey. I'm glad my boot is able to rotate fairly easily on tile floors so I could do a semblance of the releases for Brad to watch.

Friday Night at the Dojo 4/4

Aikidokas: Tim and Kim

No, I did not get on the mat. Still in the boot for the ankle. I did go and watch my wife work. She and Tim worked on the Nami No Waza, similar to KG's chains, I think.

She had some really good moments when she flowed from one technique to the other without really knowing what was supposed to come next.

4.02.2008

Boot to the ankle

Report from the Dr. : sprained ankle.

Prescription: Wear a boot on the foot for a couple of weeks and then some PT.

So, I'd guess, four weeks until I'm back on the mat or on the volleyball court.

4.01.2008

Aggiecon 39

I've been going to this con since, I think, #14. Definitely since #15. So, I was determined to go, even with my twisted ankle.

In fact, it's probably better that I was limited in mobility than not. If I'd been more mobile, I would likely have been more disappointed in the con, overall.

The number of panels that were of interest was small. The number of author guests was small. That was probably a fallout from inviting someone to be Guest of Honor and then uninviting them. A number of folks heard about it and decided not to make the trip to College Station.

I spent most of my time behind the F.A.C.T. table, "helping" the Siros brothers. I got some reading done and a bunch of visiting, too. Given that I paid for a hotel room and entry into the con, it was a fiscally irresponsible weekend if you consider the number of panels I attended (3). I did not compound the issue by buying stuff in the Dealer's Room. This was my first con ever where I did not buy something in either the Art Show or the Dealer's Room. Amazing.

The Art Show was an interesting study in censorship this year. According to rumor, the Texas A&M Board of Regents was having their occasional meeting in the MSC this weekend. The MSC, wishing to avoid a confrontation with the Regents, told the art show folks to cover up any visible "naughty bits". They did so, under a bit of protest, with blue tape. A large number of con attendees subsequently taped over their own naughty bits with blue tape in protest.

I heard a rumor that the con chair's husband had did of an aneurysm recently. That would certainly adversely affect the planning for the con. The con seemed to be run fairly well over the weekend.

I hope they learn a lot from this one, because I'm actually considering not going in the future. It's the only guaranteed time during the year that I make it back to my alma mater. And I really enjoy going to College Station. It's a nice drive and a nice town. I need to additional incentive of a con to get me off the dime and get up there.

3.27.2008

Ankle, and out

Volleyball, first game, Tuesday night. I went up for a block and came down on the opposing player's foot. My ankle twisted and I collapsed to the ground.

I'm able to put some weight on it, which is much better than 17 years ago when I really messed up the same ankle. I think I'll just be out a few weeks, but I'm going to try to get into a doc to get it checked.

I think we lost all three games, too.

Curses!

3.24.2008

Friday Night at the Dojo - 3/21/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Larry, and Trey.

Ukemi: Full ukemi warmup. Went well. No big falls.

The Walk: Went ok. Remembered what I forgot during the demonstration.

Releases: Went ok. I know we did some explorations of them , but I can't remember what we were exploring.

Techniques:

Worked, as uke, with Trey on Oshi-taoshi.

Worked, as tori, with Trey and Larry on 1, 2, 3 and 5 of Owaza Ju Pon. The footwork is very similar on all of these, so once I got it down for one, I had fewer issues on the rest. I did still manage to screw it up. I was getting too far off-line.

Did the aikinage left and right side. Too much muscle and too much movement on the footwork. Small circles are necessary.

Aftermath: Bruised foot seems to be getting better. Did I break it, or something similar?

3.19.2008

Ikkyu

Had my demonstration for Ikkyu over the weekend. On the trip back from the seminar, strong hints were made that I'm going to be working my tail off in order to get to Shodan before the end of the year. The requirement for 6 months in grade is seen as the main limiting factor.

I don't know if I'll have to do the demonstration in front of the Technical Board, or just my two usual Senseis. Although, if the local Senseis showed up, it would be 5 members of the technical board. That's the same Senseis who were at the seminar this past weekend.

Anyone want to take some Garuma falls for me?

Volleyball, 2-1

We had 5, they had 3. We still got trashed in the middle game. 21-10, or something equally as ridiculous. We played well the other two games.

3.18.2008

Killeen Seminar - Saturday 3/15/08

We were scheduled to get going at 9:00 a.m. We managed to get past a bunch of tasks and get onto the mat at around 10:30.

We reviewed the 12 double-hand grabs that we'd worked on Friday and then moved on to the final 2. It seems like we must have done more in the morning, but I can't remember what it might have been.

We broke for lunch around 12:30 and got back on the mat around 1:30.

The first order of business after lunch was demonstrations. I was demonstrating for Ikkyu, Larry was demonstrating for Shodan, and Jeff was demonstrating for Nidan.

Larry and I were serving as each other's uke, so we got good workouts.

I messed up on the walk. Larry gave me a few issues on the releases. We gave each other some issues on his demonstration of Oshi-taoshi. Neither of us could remember what technique we were supposed to be doing, so I attacked and he just came up with something. He thinks it was Shomen-ate. I think it was Aigamae-ate. Only the video tape can say for certain.

To save time, we each had to demonstrate on only one side. For Ju Nana Hon Kata, we both got to demonstrate on right-side. For the Owaza Ju Pon, Larry had to demonstrate the techniques from the left side. This would not have been so bad, but I had never uke'd for him left side. I had never seen him do the techniques left side.

I was in a bit of a panic, because the falls are garumas and I've had my neck twinged on those from time to time. And this time was no exception. On the first technique, things were a little off. I landed and my neck complained. I did a head-to-toe system check and all lights came back green, so I got up and we continued on.

My techniques: I know I messed up on the three I had to learn for this belt: Mae-otoshi, Sumi-otoshi and Hiki-otoshi. They were decent, but were imperfect.

We then got to sit down and recuperate while Jeff ran through his demonstration.

The technical board got together and pow-wowed for a few minutes, called us up, and awarded us our new ranks. Actually, Jeff already had his Nidan, so he just got additional acclaim.

After congratulations were passed around, we all got back on the mat for more seminar time.

The subject of the afternoon's session was Nami no Waza ("Way of the Wave"). This is a stringing of techniques together, starting from a release.

For instance, the first release falls into the 6, 7, 8 and 9 techniques.

The second release flows into the fifth release which then flows into T6, 7, 8 and 9

The second release, when uke drops all of his weight on the hand, flows into a hip switch and then into T15, 14, 17, and 16.

From here on is likely poor memory.

The third release -> T10, 12

Fourth release -> seventh release, T6,7,8,9

Fourth release -> locked -> hip switch -> T11

Ok. Beyond this I've forgotten the transitions. After a couple of hours of this work, my brain was full and I bowed off the mat. The rest of the seminar ended shortly thereafter.

A great dinner of spaghetti was dished out shortly. We spent a couple of hours chatting with everyone and then returned to the hotel. We got an early start Sunday morning and made it back to Houston in good time.

3.17.2008

Killeen Seminar - Friday Night 3/14/08

We pulled into Killeen and then around 2:30 after a nice, uneventful drive. The crew from Alabama were already there and recovering from their 11-hour drive. We had a chance to chill for several hours before the scheduled start of the festivities. We got the chance to play with "Lizard" and "Chance", Jeff and Gail's dogs. Lizard played far too hard and had to be tended to for a good portion of the afternoon.

The evening was devoted to exploring Riki Kogure's double hand grabs. These are a series of exercises meant to explore off-balances. There are 14 of these. We managed to cover the first 12 in the evening session.

Let's see if I can remember them:

double-hand to the center
one hand to the center
tenchinage
double-hand tenchinage
ushiro-ate
spinning armbar
waki-gatamae
double hand waki-gatamae
shihonage
kote-gaeshi
mae-otoshi
sumi-otoshi
wheel throw
hip throw

Sensei Mike (who has 3 dan grade certificates signed by Sensei Tomiki and two signed by Sensei Oba) had us switching partners every time we switched exercises, so I got to work with almost everyone there.

We broke up around 10pm and had an excellent dinner grilled by one of the attendees. I managed to get into bed around 12:30 and we were scheduled for a 9:00 am start on Saturday morning

3.10.2008

A lost weekend

It feels like a lost weekend. I did not get nearly as much done as I would have liked. And, probably due to a gut bug, I slept far more than normal.

Friday night: aikido

Saturday: spent 11 hours at a judo seminar videotaping. Lunch was at Wendy's and I think the food disagreed with me. I was in discomfort much of the time until Monday morning.

Sunday: Sleeping and gardening. I was awake only 6 hours. Bummer. I think I may have come close to passing out while gardening. I know I felt very pale.

Friday Night at the Dojo - 3/7/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Mike, Larry, and Trey.

Ukemi: Full ukemi warmup. Went well. Getting compliments on the big falls.

3 Nanadans running the class. Mike might be a Hachidan, I can't remember.

Mike was there to watch Larry and me run through our demos. He also tweaked some of our etiquette for the demo.

The Walk: Mike counted through this one quickly. He did make some changes to my version. Ack! I don't know if I can successfully incorporate it in two weeks.

Releases: Went ok.

Techniques:

1-17 right-sided for me. We made some adjustments for my Sumi-otoshi that made it much more effective.

1-17 left-sided for Larry, plus 1-5 of Owaza Ju Pon. My wrist got tweaked a little on Shihonage and that threw Larry out of his mindset for the last three. I noticed that he was off a little, but the final three techniques were good.

Owaza Ju Pon went well. I discovered where the soreness in my left calf is coming from. Owaza Ju Pon. I landed half-on/half-off of the additional mat we bring on for the garumas and that caused my calf to let me know it wasn't pleased.

I'm kind of concerned about some of the etiquette things being discussed. They run counter to every demonstration I've seen so far.

Aftermath: Bruised foot is still making its presence known.

3.05.2008

Volleyball, 1-2

We actually had 6 folks playing on the team last night. We played well, but did not win the match. I think we won the first game 21-19, lost the second one 19-21 and the third was fairly close, probably 12-15 or something.

My eye is still feeling the effects of the game. I took a spike straight on the left side of my face from about 2 feet. No black eye, but feels a little abused.

I was going to go to the local caucus after the match, but I was confused as to where it was. From what I heard, it was a madhouse. Four precincts trying to hold their caucuses in an area fit for just one, given the turnout.voll

3.03.2008

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 3/1/2008

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Jeff, Gail, and Trey

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Took some big falls during this time for the first time with the new mats.

The Walk: as usual

Releases: Not today

Techniques:

I was a tackling dummy for the day. I served as uke for Jeff all afternoon. We worked on Koryu Dai San No Kata. I think. Some suwari waza stuff.

Lots of falling. A good, and educational, day.

Aftermath: Still have a tight left calf muscle and bruised foot.

Friday Night at the Dojo 2/29/2008

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Mike, Larry, Kim, and Brad.

Ukemi: We arrived a little late, so had to do a quick ukemi session. I think I bruised the area of the foot next to the little toe on my right foot during this.

3 Nanadans running the class. Mike might be a Hachidan, I can't remember.

Mike was there to watch Larry and me run through our demos. He also tweaked some of our etiquette for the demo.

The Walk: Mike counted through this one quickly. He did make some changes to my version. Ack! I don't know if I can successfully incorporate it in two weeks.

Releases: Went ok.

Techniques:

1-17 right-sided for me.

1-17 right-sided for Larry, plus 1-5 of Owaza Ju Pon. I took my first big falls on the new mat during this process. Larry's Hiki-otoshi was a little unsettling. Tim came over and expressed concern for my safety as uke.

We spent a lot of time on Larry's Hiki-otoshi. We also reviewed Waki-gatamae to try and eliminate an early arm bar that causes me to tap out before the usual end of the technique.

Aftermath: Bruised foot. And, I've got a gorgeous bruise on my right forearm, probably from the previous week's Hiki-otoshi

2.26.2008

Weekend update 2/22-24

Let's see.

Aikido on Friday and Saturday.

Shoveling dirt for the vegetable garden Saturday morning. Vegetable mix is a lot tougher to shovel than sand for some reason. I need to get a yard of pine bark mulch for the blueberries as soon as the ground is hard enough for me to drive the truck out to the bushes.

Saturday evening: dinner with a friend at our favorite Mexican restaurant. Then we went out and did some washing machine shopping with her. Hers had just given up the ghost.

Sunday: work out in the shop getting the shelves for the glass used in stained glass creation made. Also looked at replacing the casters for the lathe stand. Took off the old ones and started preparing for installing new ones.

Then watched most of the Oscars. I was afraid Regis Philbin was going to be the host, so I wasn't planning on watching the show. When I found out Jon Stewart was the host, I changed my plans.

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 2/23/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Richard, Kim, and Trey

Ukemi: Ukemi went well.

The Walk: as usual

Releases: With Kim and Trey

Techniques:

I was tackling dummy for the day. I served as uke for Richard, Kim and Trey. Trey had some of his family in the audience and Tim wanted to give them a good flavor of the capabilities of aikido. So, everyone got to throw the big man.

We spent a lot of time on Oshi-taoshi. Trey is learning it now that he's a green belt and Kim needs it for her next demo, as well. Richard got to see the changes we've made in the techniques recently.

All in all, I got to fall a lot. A good day.

Aftermath: Still have a tight left calf muscle.

Update:

Forgot to talk about the "Name No Waza" (I think that's the spelling). The Way of the Wave. I think it's what Pat of Mokuren Dojo calls his "chains". You take a release, say number 1, and continue it beyond it's normal ending. Uke decides he wants to get back into the fight and it turns into techniques #6, Oshi-taoshi. Uke doesn't like that, pushes out of it, and it turns into Ude-gaeshi. Uke reacts out of that and it turns into Ude-hineri. Uke sees the face strike coming and reacts, turning it into Hiki-taoshi, which is a terminal technique.

Anyway, I was uke for all 3 folks on this. We worked on it for quite a bit. I was the only one who'd seen it much before, so it made sense for me to show folks what happens. Uke's response really drives the whole chain of events.

Friday Night at the Dojo 2/22/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Larry, Greg, and Trey.

New mats, new mats, new mats. We replaced the mats that have been around since the dawn of martial arts in this area with some brand new ones. We purchased the puzzle-type mats. I think they're 1-5/8" mats from greatmats.com, but I'm not sure.

The benefits to the new mats? They get to stay in place. We don't have to put them down and pick them up around each session.

The bad side? They're a little firmer for falling. I haven't tried a big fall. On the plus side, they do make popping up a little easier after a front fall.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Getting pleasant reviews on the big falls

The Walk: as usual.

Releases: With Larry. We explored his body drop entrance and added more off-line, as he was going too deep

Techniques:

Larry and I worked on 10, 11, 12, and 13. Left-sided.

Need to remember that there is an initial off-balance for #10.

Need to keep good posture on the arm bar finish for #11.

Need to stay behind uke's elbow for Kote-gaeshi

Need to wait for uke to recover after the first off-balance on Tenkai-kote-hineri.

Aftermath: A tight left calf muscle. Not sure of the cause.

2.22.2008

Blast from the past

I received a phone call from a previous business partner the other night. I though it was in response to an email I'd sent him earlier that day, out of the blue. After we got off the phone, a couple of hours later, I receive an email from him saying that he'd called me out of the blue. A weird coincidence.

Anyway, he said he's getting on his feet, business-wise, and will be paying me the money due me in our contract. I really hope he comes through. He said he was mailing off the first check tomorrow, which, with my delay in posting, was yesterday. He also said he hopes to have me completely paid off in May.

This would be a goodness. Should the money go to paying off more of the mortgage, into equipment for the shop, or into savings?

Now, can I get my web work client to pay up? Lord, it's annoying.

New volleyball season, 0-3

What a wonderful start to a new season, losing the entire match. :(

We haven't played in about 2 months, so we were rusty. My serves were off, but I got a couple of good digs and one stellar block.

We had some teams in the Open division that really don't belong there. The people in charge are going to rearrange the teams and adjust the schedules to account for the team changes. Or, so we've been told.

2.19.2008

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 2/16/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Jeff, Gail, Richard, Trey, and Wellington

Ukemi: Ukemi went well.

The Walk: as usual

Releases: None

First order of business, after The Walk, was a dry-run of Trey's demonstration. He had the choice of either me or Richard as uke and chose me. Little did he know that this was not a dry run demonstration, but the real thing.

We went through The Walk, releas4es for both him and me and then the first 5 techniques. He did very well. I don't think I screwed him up on too many things.

Techniques:

Trey and Wellington served as my ukes as I worked my way down from 17 to 13 left-sided. We did some playing with off-balances and compared them with the ones with which Larry feels comfortable. There are differences. We need to get with Larry and see if they work for him or not.

Aftermath: No new mats, yet. They are supposedly in town and due to be delivered Monday (yesterday, as I'm posting this on Tuesday).

2.18.2008

Friday Night at the Dojo 2/15/08

Aikidokas: Tim, and Randy. I had two Nanadans all to myself.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Getting pleasant reviews on the big falls

The Walk: Not tonight.

Releases: Not tonight.

Techniques:

I wanted some work on 17, Hiki-otoshi, left-sided. So, we spent some time working through the entry and getting up to gake.

After that, we spent the rest of the evening on hand randori. There are times I feel I'll never get the hang of it. And, when working with the Senseis, it's more likely to feel that way than not. They're just so damn good at it.

Whenever I manage to get the upper hand, I know it's because they're letting it occur. Still, it's a learning tool. And, I supposedly need to be somewhat competent at demonstration-time. They don't do any on-mat review of hand randori capabilities during the demonstration.

Aftermath: None of note

2.11.2008

Winter Gardening

After some resting of the sore muscles, it was time for some light gardening. No sod moving. No sand shoveling.

Just some pruning and prepping plants for movement around the yard. The plum tree, Crepe Myrtles, grapes, blackberries and Blood Oranges all got a little trim.

As a benefit, while trimming the Blood Orange, I found I fruit I'd missed when I harvested the rest of them in December. A nice, sweet treat.

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 2/9/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Richard, Kim, Trey, and Brad

Ukemi: Ukemi went well.

The Walk: as usual

Releases: with Trey. It was good to work with someone shorter than Larry. Break me out of ruts.

Techniques:

I worked with Brad on Shomen-ate. He'd been away for a while, so we started from the ground floor. He got a couple of throws.

We also had Trey take some pictures of Kim throwing me with Shomen-ate. We're going to add those to the website when Trey gets them to me.

Aftermath: Beat from gardening combined with aikido. Need a drink and/or some ibuprofen. It turns out we're supposed to get new mats for the dojo this weekend. The ones we're falling on at the moment are about 30 years old.

Winter Gardening

According to the calendar it's still winter. According to the weather on Saturday, it was Spring.

We got out and put down two pallets of St. Augustine. During that exercise, we also dug out some clay deposits left behind by the construction folks. Those clay deposits formed a hill on the side of the yard that would cause water to stay near the shop.

With little concern for our muscles, we then spread out a yard of sand in the dog yard. We need to get another yard of sand for the spots we didn't get to with just one yard. We also need a yard of pine bark mulch to give the blueberry plants enough acid.

Much soreness of muscles ensued.

Friday Night at the Dojo 2/8/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Larry, Greg, Kim and Trey Sensei Raymond was on the sidelines.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Completely freaked out on first warm-up roll. I landed safely, but merely by chance, I think. Big falls were cool.

The Walk: as usual

Releases: with Larry. We played around with only left-sided and with tori starting with hands in a neutral position. Weird. Got chided for improper posture from Sensei Raymond.

Techniques:

Larry and I spent the evening working on 17, 16, 15, 14 and 13. In that order. With me as tori.

We spent a lot of time working seeing Larry's reaction to the off-balances and seeing his recovery steps. I need to extend him to a corner on the initial off-balances for the last 4.

For Hiki, the second off-balance needs to continue along the line of the first off balance. Then I disappear.

For Sumi, the second off-balance is about 90 from the first and gake is about 180 degrees from the second off-balance.

Mae-otoshi seems to fall in place after the first off-balance.

The first off-balance for Shiho is the same as the other three.

Aftermath: None of note

2.08.2008

I am Greebo






Which Discworld Character are you like (with pics)
created with QuizFarm.com
You scored as Greebo

You are Greebo! The most evil cat in the entire Disc! Due to an old spell, your morphogenic field is a little mixed up, so you sometimes turn into a man. You enjoy killing, raping, torturing, playing with yarn and inspiring fear. When bored, you like to look for wolves to â€Å“play" with.


Greebo


81%

The Librarian


69%

Carrot Ironfounderson


63%

Death


44%

Gytha (Nanny) Ogg


44%

Commander Samuel Vimes


38%

Lord Havelock Vetinari


25%

Cohen The Barbarian


25%

Rincewind


19%

Esmerelda (Granny) Weatherwax


19%


2.04.2008

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 2/2/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Jeff, Gail, and Larry

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Left side big falls are still weird. The end result is good, but the way I'm getting there is strange.

Techniques:

I went through reps of 14-17 of Ju Nana Hon Kata, some of 3 & 4, and 8, 9 & 10. Working with Larry again. He opened my eyes up to initial off-balances on some of the later techniques.

On Hiki-otoshi, after meeting at ma-ai, I need to take a step to the back corner for the initial off-balance. After that improvement, the technique started flowing.

He also suggested some tweaks for the initial off-balance for 8 and 9. For these techniques, the second off-balance needs to be to a back corner. Actually, it does for #8. For #9 it's the lack of a dramatic second off-blaance that allows uke to recover and react in to Hiki-taoshi.

We discovered something I needed to do to complete Waki-gatamae. After the entry, and the arm-lock, I need to extend the off-balance a bit with a step out. Then I can breathe out and get the tap-out from uke.

Then Larry did some work on 1-5 of Owaza Ju Pon. And I uked for those techniques for the first time. They went well, except for #2. This technique should be a simple front roll for uke. Larry somehow managed to hook the arm onto which I would roll. I ended up taking a big fall, but without any support from tori. I landed on my ribs on the near side to tori, instead of getting further around and landing on the far side. I almost had the wind knocked out of me. Jeff took my place for the rest of Larry's practice.

Aftermath: Sore legs and arms. A couple of bruises. Sore ribs. A good session, though.

Friday Night at the Dojo 2/1/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, and Larry

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Left side big falls are still weird. The end result is good, but the way I'm getting there is strange.

Techniques:

Larry is going to be demonstrating for his Shodan in March and I'm doing the same for my Ikkyu. We're probably going to uke for each other.

So, the goal was to run through 1-17 of Ju Nana Hon Kata. Actually, it was to run through a dry run of the demonatration. So, we went through the Walk and then the Releases and then the techniques.

I think I tori'd first and, according to the Senseis, did ok. I need work on Sumi-otoshi and Hiki-otoshi. Also Waki-gatamae.

Aftermath: None of note

Tagged with a Meme

Pat over at Mokuren Dojo tagged me with a meme. The rules: "Pick up the nearest book of 123 pages or more. (No cheating!) Find Page 123. Find the first 5 sentences. Post the next 3 sentences. Tag 5 people."

We'll see if I can come up with 5 folks to tag.

The nearest book, here at work is Tad Williams' "Shadowmarch"

"He's a god, afterall."
"You say that so strangely, Qin. Are you feeling ill?"


Who knows if they read here, but what the heck.
Berry at Berry's weblog
Kim at Kim
Melanie at Hoosier-red
Poxbox at Poxbox's Aikido Blog
aikilass2006 at So, you want to start aikido

1.31.2008

Texas A&M pounds Texas, 80-63

Ah, sweet victory.

I was doing stuff out in the workshop and got delayed getting in for tip-off. I have a completely functional shop, even if it still needs to have cabinets built.

When I got inside, I was apprehensive about turning on the game. I'm glad I turned it on, it was 22-7 when I did. I'm glad that the arrival of the in-laws caused me to get satellite so I was able to watch the game.

I was coughing throughout most of the game as I try to get over this cold. I hope the remnants of the cold don't keep me from aikido this weekend.

1.23.2008

Saturday Afternoon at the Dojo 1/19/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Jeff, Gail, Greg, Trey, and Gary

The Walk: Once

Ukemi: Still turning in on left-sided big falls

Releases: with Jeff. Brutal, absolutely brutal. The style he teaches them at his dojo is quite a bit different than how we normally do them. We did not blend well at all on them.

Techniques:

I served as uke for Gary. Gary's an ex-SEAL who's just recently taken up aikido. We worked on Shomen-ate, Aigamae-ate, and Ushiro-ate. I had a tough time with him the few times I tori'd for him. I did not see the attacks coming.

I like to think he made some progress in understanding the techniques. I know we (Tim and I) pointed out some changes to make: shoulders square, push from your center, etc. We'll see at the seminar in March, I guess. Unless he comes back before then.

Aftermath: None of note.

Friday Night at the Dojo 1/18/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Kim and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Left side big falls are still weird.

Releases: with Randy. Very, very slowly

Techniques:

The goal of the evening was to have everyone run through their demonstration techniques at least once. So, I had to run through 17, Kim had to run through 10 and Trey had to run through 5.

Mine were ok. I stumbled through Sumi-otoshi and Hiki-otoshi. I forgot what the 13th technique was (Tenkai Kote-hineri). I was beat by the end of the evening.

About all I remember from the rest of the evening (I went first on the techniques) was Trey's Gyakugamea-ate. He didn't have it first, but he kept drawing me out and drawing me out. He was then able to get the eye flash and make me fall. If that had happened in an actual demonstration, I would have given him a green belt no matter what else happened during the demonstration. It was awesome.

Aftermath: None of note

1.14.2008

The arrival of the tools

The new woodworking tools have arrived and boy, are the boxes pretty.

3 of them arrived Friday via Southeastern Freight. On pallets. Thankfully, the trucking company knew to bring them out on a truck with a lift gate. Without it, I would not have been able to take delivery.

The driver was a great guy who helped me load the boxes onto my furniture dolly and wheel them into the shop, one by one. It took us the better portion of an hour to get all of them off of the truck and into the shop.

I sent him on his way with some homemade cookies. Looking back, I should have tipped him cash, but I did not even think of it.

Now to uncrate and assemble the contents of the boxes.

Garage sale

Due to the construction, we put a lot of stuff into a storage unit. Now that construction is *this close* to being complete, we're slowly getting stuff out of storage. However, some of that stuff does not need to come back out. It needs to go away.

To achieve that, we had a garage sale on Saturday.

A bunch of stuff from my in-laws, a couple of items from my mom, and a bunch of our own stuff.

The weather was absolutely gorgeous. In the past, we've had a garage sale in the summer and we've closed up shop by 11:00 am to get out of the heat. Saturday, the high was in the low 70's so we were quite happy to stay out selling stuff until 2:00pm.

All of the big stuff (lawn mower, picnic table, table saw) sold. Most of the little stuff sold, too. What didn't sell is now out in front of our house, free for the taking.

While we didn't make a lot of money in absolute terms, we did bring in enough to make it worth our while. And we cleared out a bunch of junk.

Friday Night at the Dojo 1/11/08

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Greg, Kim and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Left side big falls are weird at the moment.

Releases: with Greg.

Techniques:

Mae-otoshi: Worked as tori with Greg. I feel like I'm not getting a bump at the chest level on uke. That is kind of tough for me, considering how much taller I am than most.

Shihonagi: Worked with Greg from soups to nuts.

Kote-hineri: Worked with Greg from soups to nuts. Uke's elbow should go through the uke's ear. No grabbing. Non-working hand should aim for uke's elbow, not upper arm.

Shomen-ate: Worked with Greg. Most of the time as uke. I did tori a couple of times and was using a lot of muscle. Snort-do, not aikido.

Aftermath: None of note

1.07.2008

At the Movies

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street : 3

A lot of blood. Decent singing. A sad twist at the end.

I'd not seen or heard much about the storyline, so I was a new victim for the story. I enjoyed the film fairly well. My niece did not think much of the singing.

Saturday Afternoon at the dojo - 1/05

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Jeff, and Gail

The Walk: Not today

Ukemi: No warm-up ukemi today

Releases: None today

Techniques:

I showed up today to serve as uke for Jeff and Gail on various Nidan and Sandan techniques. A whole bunch of techniques. I think we ended up going through about 10 or so.

Some of them were suwari-waza, so I got to uke from my knees for a few techniques. One of the ones I did not do was Kote-gaeshi from my knees. I'm not sure I'm ready to try that yet. I probably can, but don't feel capable.

I'm trying to guess how many falls I took during the 3 hours. I'd guess around 70, but I don't know if that's close or not. Jeff took some falls for Gail, but I took almost all of the falls for Jeff.

On some of the throws, Jeff was cupping my leading hand. That turned a roll-out into a big fall. No problems. We got that corrected fairly quickly.

I do know that my brain was toast at the end of the session, even just uke'ing.

We've managed to come up with a workable mat layout that eliminates a majority of the sliding and iffy footing.

Aftermath: One nice big bruise on my right forearm. I have no idea how it got there.

Friday Night at the Dojo - 1/04/2008

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, Larry, Greg, Kim and Trey

The Walk: as usual. Trey got to count for the first time and did well

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. One big fall.

Releases: with Greg.

Techniques:

Shomen-ate: Worked with Greg and Larry on this all night long. Most of the time as uke. I did tori a couple of times and finally feel competent in the new version.

Aftermath: None of note

Friday Night at the Dojo - 12/28

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, and Trey. I think

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. Big falls! Big falls! Big falls! Yahoo!

That's about all I remember of the evening. Trying to stay away from a computer while on vacation makes remember bloggable events difficult.

Aftermath: None of note

Saturday Afternoon at the dojo - 12/22

Aikidokas: Tim

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. No big falls. Soon.

Releases: Per usual.

Techniques:

Sensei Tim and I worked on Sumi, Mae, and Hiki as much as we could.

Since the Christmas holidays have intervened between then and now, that's about all I can remember.

12.18.2007

The Hobbit

Peter Jackson and New Line have kissed and made up.

Peter and Fran are going to Ex. Produce "The Hobbit"!

Yahoo!

12.16.2007

Friday Night at a new Dojo 12/14

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. No big falls. Soon.

Releases: Per usual, with Randy.

Techniques:

Sensei Tim broke the news that he wants both Trey and I demonstrating soon. No sense as to how soon that might actually be.

In respect of that announcement, we did some work on demonstration etiquette.

We also did some work on techniques. Trey and I both worked on the first 5. My 5 were ate 3-step distance as opposed to the usual 1-step distance. So, we had to introduce Trey to 3-step attacks. He picked it up very quickly.

Aftermath: Major kerfuffle has occurred. Our previous sensei, Sensei R., wanted to get away from the stress of running a dojo. So, he turned the dojo over to a local judo sensei over the past few months. Things occurred Wednesday that resulted in the aikido program having to a find a new home immediately.

Friday night was our first night in the new location.

Everything is different.

The mats are different, and far less springy/comfortable. The surface is far less stable. The covering over the cushioning material tends to move a little and that makes the footing a little peculiar at the moment. It caused a bit of trouble throughout the evening, but we will adjust.

It seems to be a little more slick. When we work on ukemi, we're all sliding some after the fall. In the old place, we would generally stick once we hit the ground. Some of us were sliding 6-8 inches after landing.

The times that we have access to the training space have changed, too. We now have Friday evening and Saturday afternoon. As opposed to Monday, Wednesday, and Friday evening plus Saturday morning. It's going to make it easier for my wife to make it more consistently, but I'm going to be getting fewer hours in.

Speaking of which, we need to get a training recorder set up. We had a nice computer program at the old place. Need to see about some sort of program or something for the new place. Web database or something?

Half of the monthly dues for training are now going into a mat fund. I'm tossing around ideas for a semi-portable base upon which to place the mats during training. Something to add a little spring to the mats, but not enough so that they fail. They need to be stackable so they can be moved out of the way. they need to be light enough to move. They need to be stable enough when in position so they don't move away from each other.

12.13.2007

Wednesday Not at the Dojo 12/12

Had to work late, so no opportunity for aikido. Bummer.

Volleyball, 0-3

Last match of the season. I got a heck of a workout moving for blocks and hits and did ok.

I think our issue is inconsistency of line-up. Maybe we'll have better luck next season.

Monday Night at the Dojo 12/10

Aikidokas: Randy, Marty, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Ukemi went well. No big falls. Soon.

Releases: Per usual, with Marty.

Techniques:

Kind of a round robin affair.

I got to work on Tenkai Kote-hineri and Mae-otoshi, and Shihonage.

Got a tip from Randy on the turn to the third off-balance on Shiho that I hope to incorporate.

I sprained or tweaked Trey's thumb on Mae-otoshi. I'm letting uke go too low to the ground.

I need to not over-extend uke on Tenkai.

Aftermath: No a/c in the dojo for some reason. A very exhausting session.

12.10.2007

Bruuuuuuce!

Managed to get tickets to the upcoming Bruce Springsteen concert. I got online right when they went on sale. All of the floor tickets were gone and most of the lower prom. I did manage to score lower prom tickets, though.

First time to see Mr. S. in concert. Should be awesome!

Construction update 12/10

We're getting very close. We've planned to start moving furniture in on the weekend before Christmas. Let's hope it happens.

Status:

Exterior still needs:
x - new driveway
yard grading
guttering

Shop still needs:
Lock on roll-up door
floor outlets leveled with slab

Apartment still needs:
minor touchups

Garage still needs:
x - water heater
washer (we'll do this ourselves if it gets done at all)
dryer (we'll do this ourselves if it gets done at all)
ramps to doorways
x - garage door opener

We walked on our new driveway Saturday morning. They poured it on Friday. The builder does not want us driving on it for 28 days. The supervisor for our project says we can drive on it starting today. We might wait until the end of the week. We were without a functional driveway for about 3 weeks. A real pain.

They're planning on grading the yard toward the end of the week. That will require driving a Bobcat on the driveway, moving quantities of sand around.

12.06.2007

Wednesday Night at the Dojo 12/5

Aikidokas: Tim, Marty, Rob, and Brad

The Walk: Rob counted one in Japanese and I counted the second in Czech

Ukemi: Standing right-sided rolls!! No pain!!

Releases: Worked with Marty. He only does them when he's down here in Texas, so it's always educational.

Techniques:

Marty and I worked on some of the changed techniques (Shomen-ate, Ushiro-ate, Oshi-taoshi, Kote-gaeshi, Mae-otoshi, and Sumi-otoshi).

Aftermath: Lots of changes coming at the dojo. I'm not sure how much to reveal until they actually occur.

Volleyball 3-0, 0-3

A decent performance. We played fairly well. The second match the games were pretty close even if we did lose all three. We had a great lady substituting for us in the second match.

Keep on diggin'

Saturday Morning at the Dojo 12/1

Aikidokas: Tim, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: No issues. Still not taking standing right-sided.

Releases: Per usual

Techniques:

Shomen-ate, Aigamae-ate, Gyakugamae-ate, Gedan-ate and Ushiro-ate: Little by little, Trey's getting better at these. I'd say he's 70%, maybe 80%, ready for a promotion.

Tim had Trey take a few big falls during warm-ups. He took those easily enough that he got to uke for me on some of the more advanced techniques. I was able to work on Mae-otoshi and Sumi-otoshi. Yahoo! I actually was successful at one rep of Sumi-otoshi.


Aftermath: Sinus infection or cold arrived on the scene a couple of hours before I woke up.

11.29.2007

'bout time

The Texas Aggies had a good weekend. A win over tu and the resignation of Fran.

I never saw the reason to replace RC, and Fran had dubious credentials to his name.

Now, time for basketball season. Hmmm. I wonder if we're playing over the Xmas holidays at Reed Arena? I might try to make a trip to see a game.

Wednesday Night at the Dojo 11/28

Aikidokas: Tim, Brad, and Trey

The Walk: one rep with me counting and one rep with Tim counting at a higher speed. I goofed up on the higher speed one, which caused Trey to goof up. Oh well.

Ukemi: more rolls! Did the 3 regular type rolls left side, just from the knees on the right.

Releases: They went ok. We spent a good portion of time on them.

Techniques:

Trey was tori for two of his usual set of techniques: Gedan-ate and Ushiro-ate. I think we saw some light bulbs, but we still to get some more reps in for him.

Aftermath: none of note.

Volleyball, 0-3

We're actually better than this. This week we changed up the rotation to a 6-2. This is kind of difficult with 3 women and 3 men. It's much easier with 2 women and 4 men.

The games weren't even close.

Keep on diggin'

Monday Night at the Dojo 11/26

Aikidokas: Randy, Kim, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Still no right side standing, maybe in a couple of days. The shoulder's been feeling a little sore, so I'm giving it some more time.

Releases: Per usual

Techniques:

Shomen-ate: Trey worked on this technique.

Aigamae-ate: Trey worked on this technique.

I ran through the following with Randy while Trey and Kim worked on techniques 3 and 4.

Sumi-otoshi: I spent a good 15 minutes on this and got close, right side only. Randy couldn't figure out what the problem was. He was wishing for another set of experienced eyes.

Aftermath: none of note.

11.26.2007

Tool update

I went to Cutting Edge this weekend in preparation for stocking "da Bribe." I also made a stop at the nearby, soon-to-open Woodcraft store. Woodcraft had no prices up, so I had to make do with Cutting Edge. CE says they will match prices, and I think I'd prefer to shop there. We'll see how things play out in December.

SCMS
Makita : $730

Jointer
Powermatic 6" : $800 + $130MB + $25 GC/Rebate
Powermatic 8" : $1300 + $130MB + $50 GC/Rebate

Planer
Jet 13" (JPM 13OS) : $850 + $85 MB + $50 GC/Rebate
Jet 16" (JWP 16OS) : $1000 + $50 GC/Rebate
Delta 15" : $1300
Powermatic 15" (15S) : $1600

Tablesaw
Delta 36-L31X-BC50 : $1950 + $0 MB + $100 GC/Rebate

Bandsaw
Jet 18" 1-3/4 HP : $1200 + $200 MB + $100 GC/Rebate
Jet 18" 3 HP : $1350 + $200 MB + $100 GC/Rebate


Let's do a quick, most-expensive-case total

SCMS : $0730
Jointer : $1430
Planer : $1600
Bandsaw : $1550
TS : $1950
---------------
$7260
Tax : $0600
---------------
Total : $7860
GC/Rebate $0250
---------------
$7610

Ouch!

Tax

Saturday Morning at the Dojo 11/24

Aikidokas: Tim, Richard, and Kim

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: No issues. Still not taking standing right-sided.

Releases: We spent a good portion of the day reviewing releases. Richard is a Yondan from the KG days of most of the Senseis. He's been mainly working on Jyodo for the past few years.

Techniques:

Shomen-ate and Gyakugamae-ate: I served as uke and did not get many, if any, reps in as tori. There was a neat almost occurrence during one of my falls. It was raining quite a bit outside the dojo. At one point a massive blast of thunder occurred just after I took a fall. It would have been hilarious if it had occurred just as I reached the mat.

Aftermath: none of note.

11.20.2007

Monday NOT at the Dojo 11/20

I wasn't feeling up to snuff and, with the Holidays around the corner, decided to sleep through the evening instead of possibly infecting other folks. 14 hours of sleep.

I think I'm in better shape.

11.19.2007

Saturday Morning at the Dojo 11/17

Aikidokas: Tim, Kim, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: No issues. Still not taking standing right-sided.

Releases: none today.

Techniques:

Randori and Blum line drills. A very free form day at the dojo.

The first part of the randori was just get off-line. 3 ukes and one tori in the middle moving off-line from each of the attacks. Next phase was altering uke's path as you moved off-line during their attack. The third phase was attempting a technique as you move off-line.

Tim was able to find the problem I've had ever since getting back on the mat: I am getting too far off-line. Making too big of a step. I think this will help me tremendously, as long as I can remember it.

I got brutalized on a couple of falls during randori, but the discomfort was short-lived and not related to the shoulder.

Aftermath: none of note. 500th post. Wow!

11.15.2007

Wednesday Night at the Dojo 11/14

Aikidokas: Tim, Brad, and Trey

The Walk: as usual. We stopped midway through the first iteration to talk about something. What was it.... Ah... constant movement. Don't stop when transitioning from one point to the next. Smooth. Rolling.

Ukemi: more rolls! Did the 3 regular type rolls left side, just from the knees on the right.

Releases: They went ok. We worked dynamically this evening. Sensei Tim has issues with the rotate around the elbow/drop the center versions. I can see his point as this way of release is an invitation for a tall tori to get into trouble with a smaller uke.

Techniques:

Trey was tori for two of his usual set of techniques: Shomen-ate, and Aigamae-ate. It was a rough night.

I was struggling to enlighten him on what was going wrong on Aigamae-ate. I think, just before we broke, we came up with a tidbit. He'd been stepping into me when reversing my direction for gake. What, I think, we want him to do is to hip-switch in place and then continue the motion with a strike to the face.

Aftermath: Ibuprofen is my friend again. I forgot to put Heet on my left shoulder, so it's a little tingly today. I took a rough fall on a final Aigamae-ate and I thought it might cause some repercussions, but it did not.

11.14.2007

Volleyball, 1-2

Another disappointing evening. We played poorly and we were outmanned 4 to 5.

My serves stunk, I couldn't block and my kills were non-existent.

Onward.

11.13.2007

Monday Night at the Dojo 11/12

Aikidokas: Randy, Kim, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: Forward Rolls!!! I did left-sided kneeling and standing. I did some right-sided kneeling. No issues!!

Releases: We did some work with the new approach to releases that came out of this weekend's ATAA Technical Board Seminar. The new approach is to be used on the odd number releases. And it's mainly for the introduction of new students to releases.

The intro to students will have them doing releases statically, with uke clamped down on their wrists. Tori will then start the release by doing a center drop and rotating around his elbow. Previously, tori would rotate around his wrist.

Techniques:

Shomen-ate: Trey and I both worked on this technique. Still having issues, but he did nail it a couple of times.

Aigamae-ate: Trey worked on this technique. Nailed it a couple of times.

Gyakugamea-ate: Trey worked on this technique. Nailed it a couple of times.

I ran through the following with Randy while Trey and Kim worked on more of the first 10.

Mae-otoshi: I managed to succeed on both left and right side. Randy considered me proficient in the technique for the evening.

Aftermath: Kim had another good evening. Mine wasn't too bad, either. Shoulder complained a little after the session. I meant to take some ibu, but forgot.

Friday Night at the Dojo 11/9

Aikidokas: Tim, Randy, John, and Kim

The Walk: none tonight

Ukemi: Still no rolls.

Releases: none tonight

Techniques:

Kim wanted to be thrown around again this evening, so I spent the evening as tori.

We got a little work in before the folks for the technical board seminar arrived.

I think we spent some time on

8. Ude-hineri ::: pull and push down
9. Hiki-taoshi ::: arm twist

My footwork was off on Ude-hineri. That can cause uke to slam into my shin, which is not a good thing. I got it corrected by the end of our time on the mat.

Aftermath: none of note. I spent the rest of the evening videotaping the technical board.

11.08.2007

Construction update 11/8

A lot of stuff has been accomplished over the past few days. So much, in fact, that it is livable. The city hasn't come out for the occupancy certification yet, but I think it would pass.

Status:

Exterior still needs:
x - final paint
x - light fixtures
x - ceiling fans
x - speakers
new driveway
yard grading

Shop still needs:
x - Sink
x - Outlets
x - Light fixtures
x - roll-up doors
Lock on roll-up door
floor outlets leveled with slab

Apartment still needs:
x - Final coats of paint
x - floorboards
x - linoleum
x - cabinet doors
x - countertops
x - cabinet stain
x - appliances
x - lights
x - outlets
x - door hardware
x - closet shelves
x - A/C
x - Sewer connection
x - speakers
minor touchups

Garage still needs:
x - water heater
washer (we'll do this ourselves if it gets done at all)
dryer (we'll do this ourselves if it gets done at all)
ramps to doorways
x - garage door opener

Destruction of the old driveway is due to commence Real Soon Now.

Wednesday Night at the Dojo 11/7

Aikidokas: Tim, Brad, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: nothing to report. We brought out the crash pad for Brad tonight to give him a really soft landing spot to straighten out his rolls. It helped quite a bit.

Releases: They went ok

Techniques:

Trey was tori for his usual set of techniques: Shomen-ate, Aigamae-ate, Gyakugamae-ate, and Ushiro-ate. He did amazingly well. He had a great night and I took lots of falls.

We also did some work on Gedan-ate. He managed to take me down with the technique several times, but at about 70% correct. We've got some tweaking to do.

Aftermath: I slept well after taking all of those falls. Forward rolls on Monday. I hope.

Volleyball, 0-3

Opponent: Fandango

We played the best team in the league and played poorly. We got stomped. I didn't get any kills for the evening, I don't believe. Much confusion on our alignment.

sigh.

11.06.2007

Monday Night at the Dojo 11/5

Aikidokas: Randy, Kim, and Trey

The Walk: as usual.

Ukemi: nothing to report.

Releases: Randy had us repeat releases until Trey got them right. We spent a lot of time on the first release as one of us would spot something that needed fixing each time.

I also tori'd a set with Kim as uke. She was being brutal and I was not responding well to the change.

Techniques:

Shomen-ate: Trey and I both worked on this technique. Still having issues.

Aigamae-ate: Trey worked on this technique. I wonder if my performance as uke is hurting his development?

I ran through the following with Randy while Trey watched.

Hiki-otoshi: I worked on this with Randy at the end of the evening. I ran through a couple of attempts with no gake. Then I ran through a couple of attempts where Randy did a roll-out. And then one with Randy taking the big fall. It went fairly well.

Aftermath: Kim had a great evening. She hasn't been this happy coming off the mat in quite some time.

11.05.2007

Wednesday Night at the Dojo 10/31

Jyodokas: Tim

The Walk: once

Since it was just me and Tim, we broke off from aikido and did Jyodo instead

I was introduced to two attacks and one "poke".

Grabbing some information from the UCO Aikido Club website, I think what I was introduced to were the following:

# Honte uchi - normal
# Gyakute uchi - reverse

I have no idea what the name of the "poke" was. I should have posted right after the class, but things were quite frantic getting ready for the weekend.

Aftermath: none of note.