Morgan,
Thanks for your review. It was indeed an honor to teach that session and also represent my teacher, Professor Sultan Uddin, who had to stay in Los Angeles for business. To be there with my teacher's teacher, Dr. Stanford McNeal, was awesome. I knew I had to be on point in presentation since he was there. The attendees, both instructor and student alike, were very open and enthusiastic.
As I said during the session, Eskrima Serrada is a complex style, like many of the other Pilipino martial arts. It wouldn't have done the art or participants any justice trying to teach Serrada in that hour and a half. It takes nearly a month for students to learn the first contra.
Fortunately, my teacher had put together a very effective and comprehensive program based on the five numbers, giving the movements his own distinct flavor as well as including some of the principles of Serrada.
But, at this point, the information I presented is somewhat down-rev, so to say. In a private session with my other two training partners this past weekend, he supercharged the movements, giving them even more of a direct combative approach. If you liked what you saw several weeks ago, you haven't seen anything yet.
I hope more of the attendees from the BMAS can make it out to the Kifaru/IESA workshop in Las Vegas on October 14th. I know several participants from the BMAS will be there in October and I look forward to seeing them all again. PG Steven Dowd has the information on this event in the latest FMA Digest.
If anyone is interested in having more of the Eskrima out on the East Coast, let me know and maybe we can arrange something. Who knows, maybe my teacher might even come out.
There's Eskrima, and then there's IESA's Eskrima.
Thank you again for your kind words and hope to see you in Vegas.
Salamat,
Guro Bob Manalo, Jr.
International Eskrima Serrada Association
www.sultanuddin.com