Shogun said:
While we are on the subject....How is Bill Atkins Shihan? he is the Junidan that one of the Shidoshi-ho in my area trains under.
Well, if what I saw at the April Tai Kai in Japan, and again over this past weekend, is any indication he's doing great. :supcool: I've known him since we began training at about the same time at the original Northern California dojo in Stockton with Mark Hodel under Jack Hoban's guidance, and Bill is definitely one of the best Booj folks in the US.
We just had our annual
Bujinkan Buyu Camp this past Saturday and Sunday. Jack Hoban was teaching, as always, and Bill Atkins taught as well. Lots of shidoshi around, and by my count there were ten at the "judan+" level.
The way the setup works is that Jack teaches a bit on Friday evening and on Saturday & Sunday mornings; then after lunch on both days, we have "breakout" sessions where several shidoshi will be teaching on various subjects of their choice, at the same time, for an hour and a half; then after a brief break there'll be another 1.5 hour session with another group of shidoshi teaching on different "tracks" (which allows the first group to attend some other shidoshi's classes if they want to, and vice versa). So everyone gets to "tailor" their personal training experience at the camp. Kind of a "Bujinkan buffet" where you just go and load up your plate with whatever tasty budo YOU want each day.
Anyone can attend, and any shidoshi who wants to can teach.
It's kind of a Native American "tribal hoop" concept, as when Lakota bands would come together in the summer for a rip-roaring good time, exchange of information and ideas, trade, and general "cultural maintenance". . .and then the bands would go back to their own territories to do their own thing until the following year.
Over the years, we've built something very solid and sustainable with this approach, and this year it's finally
expanding to the East Coast in September. See you there, perhaps?