rschoon said:
There are short forms 1 - 3 and long forms 1-3. Are there short forms 4 and above?
In general, no. Or at least, maybe some schools have added extra forms in recent years but I believe this type of addition has occurred since Mr Parker's passing rather than during his time.
For example our school in the UK (BKKU) practises a different "short 3" which I believe was Master Rose's blackbelt thesis form. Its a great form - but not one you will see too often as I should think it's fairly unique to the BKKU.
Because of this addition our "long 3" is more familiar to people as "short 3" and we have a "short 4" which is really "long 3" - i.e. these two forms were shifted along to make room for the additional form we practise.
rschoon said:
If not, why are they called Long 4, 5 ect?
Inquiring minds need to know
They aren't by everybody. I believe they are simply called "Form 4", "Form 5" etc, but are nick-named "long 4", "long 5" by convenience and by habit, and in the case of schools where extra forms were added, by necessity. But not everybody practises forms 4,5,6+ either.
The "short" versions of the forms didn't exist originally - at first there were "form 1", "form 2" and later on these forms were split apart to create the short and long versions - perhaps to provide more content for an expanding syllabus when kenpo started to get more widespread? I guess we're taking 60s/70s here.
But in general, there are no "short 4,5,6" and any form above 4 is simply "form 4,5,6"
James