Bo Staffs
- J. K. Barger
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Do we have any martial artists familiar with homemade bo? I've seen quite a bit of folks who have made them from closet rods- but I also have noticed the professional ones are 'tempered' to prevent breakage and splintering.
Should I make my own or should I buy a professional grade one?
Anyone have any experience, advice or stories?
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- steamboat28
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- Si vis pacem, para bellum.
Side note: bo implies "staff" in its translation, so "bo staff" is redundant, just like "chain mail" and "pizza pie".
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J. K. Barger wrote: Hey there everyone
Do we have any martial artists familiar with homemade bo? I've seen quite a bit of folks who have made them from closet rods- but I also have noticed the professional ones are 'tempered' to prevent breakage and splintering.
Should I make my own or should I buy a professional grade one?
Anyone have any experience, advice or stories?
I do have experience with it.. not ask me why please. Depending on the style you practice, adding metal ends on the bo will ensure to give it a longer live span and protection from splitting your bo staff when smacking it in the ground during some specialized ''Kata'' forms.
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- Breeze el Tierno
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If you are doing paired practice, I'd spend a bit of money. When they split in your hand, it's pretty ugly.
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i have made several myself out of closet dowels, commercial grade broom handles made of ash wood, oak branches....if you put the time in anything can be used...i've even made them out of pvc plumbing (they eventually shatter at the ends)
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I practice with an equivalent length of steel pipe.
Tiger Claw sells this sort of thing.
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Rattan is a light and flexible material that is an excellent choice for sparring training, demonstrations, and tournaments
Oak Wood
Oak is a heavy hardwood. Oak staffs are an excellent choice for those who want to do strength and conditioning training using a staff. Oak is subject to splintering, consequently striking the ground with an oak staff can cause it to splinter. Oak is considered to be the perfect material for those wanting a staff that is a combat weapon.
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See in the beginning you are NOT training to hit, but to be precise and to do repetitions over and over in flowing motions to build muscle memory as well as precision which is far more important than hitting power. Depending on what you learn in, I learned in Japan & Philippines both Aikido and Stick Fighting.... later in America, a Korean form system based from Aikido called Hapkido. All three martial art forms in all three countries require precision over strength. I would do my "I" forms over and over, tapping a 1/2" target at each junction/end.
Something cheap and flexible is good, but not too flexible. Also I would see it as you are buying cheap to learn how to preserve the weapon you will later make when you have mastered the beginning elements.
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