Showing posts with label kaicho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kaicho. Show all posts

Thursday, October 19, 2017

Dothan Tournament

The next Dothan tournament will be held on this Saturday November 4. 

Tsutsui Sensei will be coming from Japan with 4 of his students and other guests are coming from Germany, California, Miami and Texas.

To honor the memory of Soke Yamamoto, we will leave an empty chair at the official table on the stage above the arena during the event. 

Sumi-e painting of Soke


For the opening ceremony :

  • Shihan and up will be wearing their Suits.
  • Third and Fourth degrees will be wearing Hakama.
  • All other Black Belts wear their regular Gi.

  • All Black Belts please bring a Bo.

Please encourage all your friends and fellow students to attend and compete.


Kaicho Toyama and Culbreth

Saturday, October 17, 2015

An Inspiration to each one of us !



Happy 67th Birthday and a long and happy Life to Kaicho Toyama ! 


Kaicho Toyama and Shihan Paul Turner


Sunday, June 21, 2015

California Summer Camp. July 11th, 2015.

 
To all Yoshukai students and parents: 

We are having our annual Summer Seminar/Workout on July 11th in the Palisades. It will be a great time to come train and meet both of the World Yoshukai Karate Kobudo Organization Directors, Mr. Toyama (8th Degree Black Belt) and Mr. Culbreth (8th Degree Black Belt), along with other visiting high- ranking Black Belts from across the U.S.A.

Traditional white uniforms (gi) must be worn during the workout. The cost for the whole day is $50 per person, $85 for two, and $100 for three or more. All kids that participate in the Seminar will receive a karate medal. 


 
The Summer Seminar/Workout will culminate with a party at the Pearl Dragon, celebrating Gerry Blanck’s 33rd Anniversary in the Palisades. If you would like to join us for dinner, it will be at 7:30 pm.


Saturday, July 11th
  • 10:00 to 12:00 – Traditional Yoshukai Training by rank
  • 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. – Lunch break (you can bring your own lunch or you can get lunch from the nearby eateries)
  • 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. – Traditional Yoshukai Training for adults
  • 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. – Traditional Yoshukai Training for kids.
  • 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. – Fun and Games for the kids
  • 9:00 p.m. On – Party at the Pearl Dragon, DJ and Dancing! 15229 W. Sunset Blvd, Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 , (310) 459-9790

Hope to see you all there, OSU !!!

Sensei Gerry Blanck

Monday, May 25, 2015

WYKKO Summer Camp, Part II: Quality of Instruction & the Importance of Evaluations


This is the second of a series of 3 articles about our coming Summer Camp on June 12, 2015.

The planning team works hard to craft a schedule with some of the best instructors in our style. Our camp instructors want to help you and are excited to share their knowledge and experience with you. Our instructors plan ahead and prepare to teach, so please remember to thank each of your instructors this Summer Camp because we could not hold such excellent events without their dedication and support.

Many of our instructors cross train and have a lot of skills to share with you outside of our traditional Yoshukai curriculum that will help you augment your training. Our goal in offering these non-traditional classes is to expose you to other areas of study that may help your Yoshukai skills, for example when designing self-defense routines or combinations.


Kaicho Mike Culberth - Shihan Dennis Trawick
 
You’ll notice that the majority of our camp instructors are certified WYKKO instructors, many of whom have their own schools and/or are fourth degree black belts or higher.  Camp instructors who are not official WYKKO instructors get to teach at our camps because they have been recommended by other instructors and have extensive teaching experience in their own dojo. If you are a black belt and are interested in teaching a class at one of our camps, please email or talk to any of the organizers.

Finally, every summer camp, we’ve asked you to complete course and instructor evaluations. We want to take a moment to thank you so much for doing that. We take them seriously and the information you’ve given us in the past is a large part of what determines what classes we’ll offer in the future. That said, as wildly popular as they may have been, you won’t see some classes (like environmental fighting or weapons disarming) offered every year. But absence makes the heart grow fonder, and you’ll surely see them offered again in 2016.  We’re always looking for new classes to offer, so if you have any ideas (no matter what your rank is), please contact me. We appreciate any feedback that we receive from participants, parents, guests, and our instructors, as that is what ensures that each camp is better and better than the last.

We hope that you are as excited as we are to attend this year’s Summer Camp, and we can’t wait to see you all there.

Osu!
 

Sherrie Hines, on behalf of the WYKKO Camp Planning Team

Monday, May 18, 2015

WYKKO Summer Camp - Part 1 : Philosophy


Summer Camp is coming up on June 12, 2015, and we hope that you are all signed up and ready to go. The planning team (Josh McCullars, Erik Hofmeister, Chris Mattison, and Sherrie Hines) is busy at work finalizing the schedule, and we expect that it will be our biggest and most varied camp yet.  Why does the WYKKO host camps and why should you attend them? To help answer these questions, we’ve prepared a series of articles about our camps and the planning process behind them.
This is the first of this series of three articles.

World Yoshukai has been planning and hosting Winter and Summer Camps for over three decades!  The current camp philosophy is that Winter Camp will be the more traditional camp and that Summer Camp is time to step outside of the box a bit and practice things that might not usually be offered in class. This year we’re excited to present a large roster of classes related to sparring and knockdown fighting. This is also the first time that we’ll be offering intermediate classes in grappling and hapkido for students who’ve taken the introductory classes at previous camps. We’re also excited to continue offering classes for parents and guests, as well as other unique classes like sabaki, yoga, wrist locking techniques, and judo throws.



After 35 years of camps, there are many reasons why people continue to come back to each one. Part of it is the camaraderie of getting to train with other students from all over the nation and getting to socialize with them afterwards. We often form strong friendships with other practitioners, and these events are a great opportunity to meet up with each other. It’s also a great opportunity to work with high-quality and high-ranking instructors. It’s also exciting to have the opportunity to meet and socialize with some of the highest-ranking members of our organization. For some, it’s the desire to support our organization through participation, which also helps ensure that when we go to black belt testing, instructors won’t find themselves asking “Who is that person? Has he ever come to a camp before?” But we hope that one of the most important reasons you’ll attend our camps is the high quality of classes and instruction offered at each camp.



We hope that when you come to a camp that you’ll walk away having learned something new, whether that’s a new technique, a new drill, or even a new method of teaching something. One of the best things about our camps is that you learn material that you can then take back to your own dojo and share with those who were not able to attend. Some dojo even strategically discuss who is going to attend what class to ensure that they have as many people attending as many different classes as possible so that they can all report back about what they’ve learned later.

For 2015, we have instituted something relatively new in determining eligibility to take a course. From now on, kyu grade students may not attend kata classes (open hand or weapons) unless they know the kata well enough to walk through it.  This allows the instructors to focus on refinement, rather than having to split the class into those who have and have not learned the kata.  Trying to learn a new kata in a single class is tough!

The philosophy is to encourage students to focus on refining and polishing things they have already been practicing rather than on trying to learn something totally new in a rushed setting. We’re positive you’ll learn new things at all of the camps.  Even if you take a class on something like basic blocks and striking or 27 movements, you’ll learn something new and fun.

Camps give us all a chance to come together and train and make sure that we’re all on the same page. This is why recent camps have held mandatory sessions for certified instructors to make sure that all of our teachers are up to date on any changes that may have been made to the curriculum. Similarly, if you learn something at camp that’s different from what your instructor has been teaching you, that is an opportunity to begin a discussion and consult the Yoshukai handbook with your instructor. Some schools teach things differently and some aspects of our training are stylistic or aesthetic where hard and fast rules may not apply, but others are determined by Soke or the Kaicho. Your instructor will be able to help you further understand our material and advise you as to any changes that you may or may not need to make. Overall, camps help us ensure that we are all practicing our art the way Soke and Kaicho intend us to, and we look forward to training with you soon.

Osu!



Sherrie Hines, on behalf of the WYKKO Camp Planning Team

Friday, May 1, 2015

Hachi Dan !


Congratulations to Sensei Mike Culbreth who was awarded his Hachi Dan (8th degree Black Belt) at the Victoria Cup tournament in Canada last week.