It's a source of great bitterness that I didn't emigrate to Calgary in the early 2000's like I planned. What can I say, met a girl, she didn't want to leave her folks in Blighty

. If I had,
Langen we could've been sparring partners

. Then again, I might not have learned iai if I had - swings and roundabouts.
I just wanted to clarify a term that my friend used above -
kenjutsu. It has a bit of a cloudy interpretation around the globe and tends to be misused a lot.
Really it just means 'the art of fighting with a sword' and encompasses arts such as mine,
muso jikiden eishin ryu iaido as well as more 'partner kata', multi-weapon orientated arts such as
Katori shinto ryu. It is starting to take on the connotation in some useage of only those sword arts that involve partner drills.
This is, however, misleading.
Iaido is kata based because it is, frankly, too dangerous to 'spar' with live blade katana but there are kata performed with a partner using bokken. Plus, all kata performed with either iaito or shinken are done with an internalised sense of the combat being played out - if you are not imagining what's going on then you're not training

.
I don't want any kendoka's here to take offence at what I say next but Kendo has strayed deep into sports territory and altho' there are certain mental elements that are common to all sword discipines the techniques are quite different. Some schools do teach a very limited form of iaido in addition to sparring with the
shinai but that is as close to swordwork as it gets. Many kendoka do also study iaido too, tho', which gives them a much more rounded appreciation of the arts.
In the end, if you want to learn how the katana was wielded in times gone by, then you really should be looking at an Iaido school or one for Katori. The latter went through a period of intense political upheaval not so many years ago but that appears to be colling now and the 'break away' groups (or
ha) are not as ostracised as they once were.