BAF Newsletter no 23 - The British Aikido Federation
Transcription
BAF Newsletter no 23 - The British Aikido Federation
British Aikido Federation Technical Director: Minoru Kanetsuka 7th Dan Aikikai Foundation, Tokyo Newsletter March 1996 No. 23 KANETSUKA SENSEI: 20 YEARS TECHNICAL DIRECTOR OF THE BRITISH AIKIDO FEDERATION Setting out from Japan after completing his university studies in 1964, the young Minoru Kanetsuka can hardly have imagined that he would never return, except for an occasional visit, to his native land. As one of a group of students making a sponsored tour of South-Asian countries with the object of introducing Japanese martial arts, he arrived in India to find that financial difficulties were going to interfere seriously with the project. He decided to make his way to Nepal, where he was hospitably received by a member of the royal family. He was to spend six happy years in that mountainous kingdom, where, among various activities, he taught Aikido to the royal bodyguards and managed a Japanese restaurant. In 1972 he came to Britain and introduced himself to Chiba Sensei, who was at that time Technical Director of the Aikikai of Great Britain (later to be renamed the British Aikido Federation). In the years that followed he trained under Chiba Sensei at his dojo in Hammersmith and eventually became his chief assistant. When Chiba Sensei left Britain in early 1976, Kanetsuka Sensei became the Technical Director of the B.A.F. Things looked very black for Kanetsuka Sensei in 1987 when he fell ill with cancer and his chances of survival seemed bleak in the extreme. Happily, thanks to successful treatment at hospitals in Oxford combined with his indomitable will and determination, he survived to continue his life’s passion: Aikido. Kanetsuka Sensei’s effortless Aikido demonstrated at a course in Cardiff in December 1995. His commitment to developing Aikido in the B.A.F. has never been anything but 100 per cent. His talents as a teacher with a burning desire to communicate and his genial personality, patience and engaging sense of humour have endeared him to countless Aikido students both inside and outside the British Aikido Federation. Kanetsuka Sensei’s busy schedule involves lunchtime and evening classes at the two Ryushinkan dojos in London near Euston Station: in the Bloomsbury Theatre (Gordon Street) and in the dance studios of The Place (Flaxman Terrace). At weekends he is conducting courses throughout the United Kingdom or in one of a number of European countries which this year will include Ireland, France, Spain, Norway, Holland, Russia and the Ukraine. On behalf of all the students of the British Aikido Federation we express immense gratitude for twenty years of unstinted effort, inculcating in us the principles of correct attitude and behaviour in the traditional Japanese martial art we are engaged in and directing the development of our Aikido upon a sound foundation of basic movements and techniques. We look forward to many more years of inspiring guidance and tuition from our remarkable Technical Director. B.A.F. SUMMER SCHOOL 1996 Celebrating 20 years with Kanetsuka Sensei as B.A.F. Technical Director Special Guest Instructor: Shihan Hayato Osawa from Aikikai Hombu Dojo Osawa Sensei is the son of the late Kisaburo Osawa, Director of the Hombu Dojo until his death in 1991 27 July − 3 August at Chester For details contact Stephen Parr: Tel. 0192 872 5013 or fax the B.A.F. Head Office: 01865 343500 The B.A.F. has Full Recognition from the Aikikai Foundation (Aikido World Headquarters, Tokyo), President: Kisshomaru Ueshiba; and it is a member of the International Aikido Federation and of the British Aikido Board. Head Office: Yew Tree Cottage, Toot Baldon, Oxford, OX44 9NE. Tel. & Fax: 01865 343500. WHAT AIKIDO HAS DONE FOR ME by Andrew Penman In March of 1989 I was involved in a road traffic accident and sustained serious head injuries with swelling on the brain. My chances of survival were slim. I was to spend five months in hospital. In the Intensive Care Infirmary at Llandough I was given an emergency tracheotomy and was in a coma for four weeks on a ventilator. My memory and speech were nonexistent and I was paralysed down my left side. Later I was transferred to the Rockwood Hospital in Llandaff for rehabilitation and extensive radiotherapy. In August I was discharged from hospital; but went to the Cardiff Royal Infirmary daily in a wheelchair for speech therapy and physiotherapy. All this had been organised for me, of course; but in 1991 I decided to start doing things for myself. I started very slowly with crutches, taking short walks, each day going a bit further. The doctors at the hospital were very pleased with my progress, since - as is often the case - I did not reach a plateau; and I progressed to using two sticks for six months, then one stick, and finally in 1993 no sticks. At the very beginning of my physiotherapy treatment I was told that there was only so much my instructors could do: the rest was up to me. This made me determined to succeed in learning to walk. I tried many sports but at the beginning I found training with other people too hard, so I tried a different though exacting approach. For two years I trained with light weights, then changed to sit-ups, slow press-ups, squat thrusts, pull-ups, finishing with a rowing machine and a bike to have a good sweat. All this gave me a firm body and a degree of fitness, but I still hadn’t really found what I needed. Besides training my body I knew I had to train my mind, as I was suffering from short term memory lapses and my speech was impaired. I decided to take some evening courses, which included French lessons, word processing and speech therapy. Not only did this help my concentration; I learnt to converse with people and regained some self-confidence. But I still wasn’t satisfied. In March 1995 I was introduced to Aikido and I realised that this was what I had been looking for. I have been very much inspired by the experience of Kanetsuka Sensei, who through his determination overcame his cancer and fought his way back to health and fitness. Since practising Aikido my memory, concentration, balance and general fitness have all improved significantly; and this improvement has been noticed not only by me but by others too. I have also tried Tai Chi and found that the movements helped my concentration and balance; but I’ve found Aikido much more beneficial to my needs. To keep myself occupied I do some training every day. Since joining the Aikido group in Cardiff I find myself more confident in going to practices at night - something I have not felt with other kinds of training. I feel I’m improving all the time, and in August 1995 I went to the B.A.F. Summer School in Chester. I had a great time and I’ll certainly be going again. I’ve come a long way from exercising alone in the house with dumbells and squeezing soft balls; walking up and down the stairs, walking sideways, crossing one leg over the other, in the hall! I have been very lucky: everything I’ve done in my recovery has come at the right time, and discovering Aikido seems of all things to have helped me most. The exercise helps my body (even though sometimes I don’t feel up to it, Im always glad afterwards). Its like advanced physiotherapy. My balance, concentration and memory have all benefited; and it has boosted my confidence a great deal. I look forward to continuing my practice for many years to come. (Andrew Penman is a member of the Sho Bu Kan Dojo, Cardiff) B THE IDEALS OF JAPANESE BUDO (Extract from the Hombu Dojo Aikido Training text) Japanese Budo (Martial Ways), although developed from techniques of bloodshed (bujutsu), have taken as their main purpose and ideal the qualities of harmony and love, or the path to self-realisation. This is the essence of Japanese Budo and it is especially apparent in Aikido, which includes techniques from the traditions of ju-jutsu, where one faces an adversary empty handed. One old precept of the martial arts of ancient Japan is called Shin-bu fu-satsu, meaning literally ‘divine bu, no killing’. It means that the way of killing or causing injury to another is a cause of shame. Many of the bujutsu (martial arts) rather than emphasising the aim of getting a head-start in battle by attacking first, trained the warrior to learn to adjust his movements in accordance to those of the enemy and then to find ways of attacking his weak points. To achieve this, to be able to have the enemy’s life in the palm of your hand, requires that you build up a massive store of shugo (austere training) and sufficient confidence. Sports, on the other hand, use artificially constructed rules which are designed to give victory to the person who excels in relative terms of more speed, more strength or more size. The ideals of budo are not to be simply inscribed on some tablet inside your own head; rather they are to be concretely and solidly grasped, through relationships with other people, by making your entire spirit, mind and body your target. D 2k NIKYO Demonstrated and explained by Kanetsuka Sensei (2) Suwari-waza Shomen-uchi Nikyo: Ura Nikyo (Second study) is sometimes called Kote-mawashi (wrist turning), but the elbow and shoulder joints are also involved. It can be a painful technique to experience, but with constant practice, as we relax and accept the pain, the wrist joints become more supple and strong. And if its any encouragement, Nikyo is believed to have a stimulating effect on the body as a whole and to be good for our health! 1 The first stage of the technique (Photos 1 − 4) is identical with that of Shomen-uchi Ikkyo: ura. Photo 1: As Uke attacks with shomen-uchi, Tori comes up onto his toes (kiza) to meet the attack and at the moment of contact he opens his body (ie. makes tenkan). His right hand (te-gatana) makes contact with the upper part of Uke’s attacking arm, while he controls Uke’s elbow with his left hand in a U-shaped formation. Photo 2: Continuing to open his body, Tori cuts down Uke’s attacking arm with his hand-blade. At the same time his left hand slides down Uke’s arm take his wrist. Photo 3: Tori rotates his wrist inwards, keeping his hand open and alive, to take Uke’s hand in the typical Nikyo grip, trapping the base of Uke’s thumb between his own thumb and index finger. 2 3 4 5 Photo 4: As he raises Uke’s wrist Tori shifts his centre of gravity a little to his rear and the movement of his gripping hands is circular, his weight coming more at this moment onto his right knee. Photo 5: Now Tori shifts his centre of gravity back onto his front knee and aligns his body towards Uke’s centre around the gripping point. Keeping his shoulders quite relaxed he attacks Uke’s centre through Uke’s wrist. His energy is flowing up from his toes and knees (note that he is still essentially in hanmi posture). 6 7 Photo 6: Once Uke’s resistance is broken, Tori moves his left knee to near Uke’s right knee, and pivoting on his left knee, he brings his left hand to just above Uke’s elbow. The movement now is very similar to this stage in Ikkyo ura (see Newsletter, Issue no.19). Photo 7: As he makes tenkan, Tori brings Uke’s body to the ground in an arc to pin Uke’s shoulder on the tatami. Do not drag your partner round in this movement. Roll Uke’s arm over. For the sake of clarity the rest of this text is based on photographs taken from the opposite side with Tori operating on Uke’s left arm. 8 9 Photos 8 & 9: Controlling Uke’s elbow with the heel of his right hand so as to keep Uke’s shoulder as near to the tatami as possible (but don’t force this), Tori pivots on his right knee to finish with his knees on each side of Uke’s shoulder. Tori moves around Uke’s elbow without applying force: simply controlling. Be careful to keep unbroken control of Uke’s arm during this manoeuvre. 10 11 Photos 10 & 11: Folding his right arm firmly around Uke’s forearm, Tori relinquishes his contact with Uke’s left hand only when he has Uke’s arm securely clamped in his closed elbow. Now he folds his right arm across his chest. Keeping his shoulders and arms relaxed Tori pins Uke’s arm against his abdomen and upper body. With his armpits closed but without squeezing Uke’s arm into his body, Tori completes the immobilisation by taking Uke’s arm in a circular movement around Uke’s left shoulder. It is important that Tori is sitting up on his toes in kiza and energy is flowing from his toes through his body towards Uke’s head. Apply pressure in a controlled way (never jerk) and stop applying pressure as soon as your partner taps. AN AIKIDO YEAR by Professor Peter Goldsbury IV: Winter (January to March) The Aikido year in Hiroshima is rounded off with three events at the university club. The first is event is misogi and takes place at the coldest time of the year, in late January or early February. I do not know whether our misogi training bears any resemblance to that given by O-Sensei, but it is certainly dramatic. We all assemble and travel to Iwakuni in the neighbouring Yamaguchi Prefecture. We spend the night at an inn and rise the following morning at about 5 am. We go down to the river bank near the Kintaikyo bridge and strip. Wearing only fundoshi (Japanese undergarments like loin cloths), we plunge into the freezing water and stay there for about 5 or 10 minutes. After which we recover our body heat and our sanity around a large fire on the river bank and then stagger back to Hiroshima. The second event is another rite of passage. The fourth year students will graduate and so the other members of the club must bid farewell to them in a proper fashion. The special farewell practice is similar to the kambu-kotai practice in the spring and many past members of the club try to attend it. The fourth-year students have to undergo 60 minutes of kakari-geiko at the hands of their seniors and juniors and are then thrown into the pond outside the dojo. But there is another added twist. The departing students are invited to a party, during which they are each presented with a wooden sword and a picture of themselves executing their favourite Aikido technique. They then have to stand up and drink from a large bowl (a traditional bowl used to serve sushi or sashimi) filled with a mixture of beer, Japanese sake, a petrol-like substance called shochu: anything which their juniors deem desirable. This type of drinking is known is iki-iki nomu and invariably results in momentary or prolonged collapse. However, the fourth-year students usually have to attend second or third parties as well, so they rarely remember the later period of their oidashi kompa (farewell party). They graduate and then reappear as O.B. or O.G. club members, sometimes with their children, and treasure the memories of their student Aikido days. For a number of them, these student days are the beginning of a lifelong activity in Aikido. The final event is a very appropriate way to end the year. The entire university club spends a week practising at the Hombu Dojo in Tokyo. The club travels up to Tokyo together and stays in a large room at the top of the Hombu Dojo. Unlike some university clubs, the Hiroshima University students do not have special classes but participate in the normal daily practice. The Hombu Dojo Aikido schedule is quite rigorous and very few people beyond the special students who are employed at the Hombu can cope with all the five hours of daily practice. The students, of course, take time off for the mundane matters of meals and washing keikogi etc. This special training, the haru gasshuku as it is called, is an important opportunity to experience the Hombu and see the whole range of practice. I travel to Tokyo relatively often and usually try to make one visit at this time, so Hiroshima University Aikido club students having a good time that I can practise with my own students but at the Hombu, the main shrine, so to speak. As I stated earlier, I have described a typical Aikido year as a professor at a large national university. Aikido practitioners in Hiroshima are either students, and practise at the university club, or are not, in which case they practise at the city dojo or one in the suburbs. Students go to the main dojo only for the special courses or for their grading tests and non-students never set foot inside a university dojo. This is one example of a factionalism (habatsu-shugi) which is very common in Japan and pervades all types of society, not just that of the martial arts. I have the advantage of being able to practise in both the city and the university dojo and so I am in a position to look at both worlds. In a normal situation, university practice and non-university should complement each other. I hardly need to add that members of the B.A.F. visiting this part of the world are always welcome to practise here in Hiroshima. I live in a traditional Japanese house, a bit like the ryokan where my students go for their summer gasshuku, about 15 minutes by bus from the headquarters dojo. The cost of living is very high in Japan and this includes travel. The value of the Japanese yen is also high in relation to the pound and the dollar. (£1 is about ¥160.) To give you some idea of yen equivalents: an English-language newspaper costs £1. A cup of coffee costs about £2.50. The journey by bus from my house to the dojo costs £1.20. However, I have to pay £6.25 if I travel from my house to Hiroshima University by public transport. So, I usually commute on my motorcycle and whenever I buy petrol, it costs about £4 for 15 litres. The monthly mat fee at the headquarters dojo is £25. A litre of milk costs £1.80. Last night I ate some tempura in a typical local Japanese restaurant. The bill, for a set meal with two bottles of local beer, came to nearly £59. However, lunch in the university dining room is much cheaper, though you cannot eat tempura (except as ten-don). I have never paid more than about £4.50 for an ample meal. Hiroshima is about 560 miles south-west of Tokyo and all the shinkansen bullet trains stop here. However, a one-way ticket costs about ¥21,000 (£130). Anyone thinking of coming to Japan and travelling around the country should buy a Japan Rail Pass, one of the very few bargains available to tourists in Japan. But everybody is welcome in Hiroshima. 25th Anniversary Celebrations of the HONG KONG AIKIDO ASSOCIATION 23rd−27th August with Dojo-cho, Moriteru Ueshiba, and several high grade instructors from the Hombu Dojo. A warm welcome is assured for all B.A.F. members. No training fees for overseas visitors, who will be guests of the H.K.A.A. at the celebratory dinner. For help in finding moderately priced accommodation contact as soon as possible: Ken Cottier, Flat 4, 8/F, Block E, Kong Fu Court, Aberdeen, Hong Kong (Tel. 25801461) B.A.F. SPRING COURSE 1996 Hosokawa Sensei 13th−14th April at Newtown, Powys with Shihans HIDEKI HOSOKAWA (7th Dan) Italian Aikido Federation MINORU KANETSUKA (7th Dan) British Aikido Federation YAMAGUCHI SEIGO SHIHAN (1924-1996) A PERSONAL MEMOIR The facts of Yamaguchi Shihan’s early experience of Aikido are very sparse and to my knowledge he never gave interviews to Aikido or martial arts magazines. After a wartime career in Japanese naval submarines, Yamaguchi Sensei joined the Hombu Dojo in 1951. This must have been a very exciting, not to say challenging, time to be practising Aikido. The Founder was in Iwama and the Tokyo dojo was short of money, instructors and students. Yamaguchi Sensei quickly rose up through the ranks and became one of the regular instructors, spending time as an Aikido instructor in Burma from around 1958. Yamaguchi Sensei’s regular teaching time was Monday evenings and it was during his Monday evening practice that he felt unwell and left the class early. Yamaguchi Sensei died early on Wednesday morning, January 24, aged 71. I first met Yamaguchi Sensei around 1980, not long after I arrived in Japan. I was on one of my visits to the Hombu Dojo and I had been told by Chiba Kazuo Shihan to practise in his classes. I went up at the appointed time and prepared for the class. I have to say that the class was quite unlike anything I had ever experienced before. The practice seemed to follow no particular teaching plan and everything was very fluid. Yamaguchi Sensei would wander around the dojo and approach someone. There would be a flurry of blurred movements and the approached someone would be writhing on the mat. There might be a brief conversation between Yamaguchi Sensei and the person doing the writhing and then he would wander off to the next someone. His uke were nearly all yudansha and they clearly put an awful lot into receiving his techniques, for they always seemed exhausted afterwards. As someone used to the ‘Wham-bang’ style of practice (you know, short, sweet, basic and very effective) current in the B.A.F. at the time I left in 1980, I found it very hard to avoid the impression that all his uke were putting on a big show. Later I met Chiba Sensei and told him that I had attended Yamaguchi Sensei’s class. (I did not dare tell him what I thought about the practice!) He expressed surprise, for he had told Yamaguchi Sensei that I would be in his class and afterwards Yamaguchi Sensei had asked him where I was. Very soon after that, I was formally introduced to him and from then on was always recognised - and greeted - whenever I took his classes. Not long after I had settled down to practise in Hiroshima, I discovered that Yamaguchi Sensei often gave special training courses here. In addition, I was delighted to find that after he got to know me, I was invariably one of his regular uke. Over the past 16 years, right up until Yamaguchi Sensei’s last visit, in November last year, I was always given the chance to experience his techniques at first hand. This was a great opportunity to work out for myself the answer to the great question posed above: did Yamaguchi Senseis techniques really work? I never realised that this question was so controversial; but it was also posed in a recent interview given by Christian Tissier Shihan, one of his most devoted disciples. Tissier Shihan alluded to the fact that many people felt that you had to believe in Yamaguchi Sensei’s style of practice for the techniques to work. Tissier Shihan himself, of course, does not share this opinion. However, it is a fact that Yamaguchi Sensei’s way of Aikido demands that the uke makes a determined attack and persists with the attack right to the end. It is also a fact that Yamaguchi Sensei’s classes were attended by a hard core of believers; agnostics and atheists tended to stay away. However, attendance is not always a reliable indication of the effectiveness of Aikido technique. There is another eminent Hombu shihan whose classes are always rather sparsely attended. The fact that his techniques always work, without a shadow of a doubt, is the main reason for this. Having the benefit of personal experience, I am certain that Yamaguchi Sensei’s techniques really worked. After the warm-up, we would begin practice and eventually I would see Yamaguchi Sensei approaching, with a slight smile. He would extend a hand and I would go for it. Of course, he knew my intention beforehand and I found myself either enveloped in the inevitable swirling movement, or suddenly flat out on the mat. If it was a swirling movement, I had to continue the attack and keep contact. If I was suddenly on the mat, I had to do the same, but I was always allowed an escape route, provided I found it and took it - which of course led right into the next technique. It is virtually impossible to describe the essence of his technique in one sentence, but Yamaguchi Sensei had a genius for accepting his partner’s movements, intentions, soul - whatever, and then subjecting it to gentle control. These swirlings around the mat, or sudden landings, would invariably be accompanied by a conversation (of course in Japanese). “How are you today, Peter-San? How is your university life? You must be very busy, now that you are a professor. However, you must take care not to become too stressed. Perhaps you should try to relax a bit more and lose your strength. Forget about your upper body and search for your centre. Then you would find all those university meetings more relaxing. This is the real philosophy of Aikido.” All this when both arms and legs were immobilised and I was being sat on! In fact, trying to keep or regain my balance after being thrown or pinned, whilst still attempting to carry on a normal, relaxed conversation with him, is one of the memories of Yamaguchi Sensei that I will treasure most. Yamaguchi Sensei loved to talk, so much so that sometimes other people found it difficult to get a word in edge ways. In Hiroshima, after the final practice of the course we would always go to a Chinese restaurant. Food would appear and after the initial kampai (toast), Yamaguchi Sensei would begin to talk. Topics ranged very widely, from fighting in Japanese submarines to Aikido’s relation with western philosophy. No subject was taboo and at the most recent course, he talked much about the use of ken in Aikido. It was obvious that he disagreed both with the idea that Aikido had no connection whatever with the sword and also with the view that Aikido and sword-work were two sides of the same coin. Yamaguchi Sensei believed that each shihan took his own interpretation of Aikido, his own personal package so to speak, from O Sensei and that students did the same from their own teachers. This flexible relationship between the student and his teacher, or teachers, was one of the crucial aspects of Aikido’s creativity and value. It was also clear to me that Yamaguchi Sensei found it very difficult to explain his own vision of Aikido in words. Talking was never a substitute for working things out on the tatami. The last time I met Yamaguchi Sensei was in November last year. He came to Hiroshima to take a two-day course. As ususal, as soon as I had warmed up and appeared on the mat, Sensei walked towards me. He held out his hand for an attack and the inevitable happened. On this occasion, however, the conversation was a little different and it is possible that he had a premonition that something was going to happen. He asked me if I understood what he had been trying to teach over the past few years. When a sensei of Yamaguchi’s stature asks a question like this, it is very difficult to answer. To say “Yes” seems arrogant; to say “No” seems culpably stupid. When I answered: “My brain understands, but my body is stiff”, he laughed and said that physical condition was not a factor in NEW B.U.A.F. DOJO An Aikido group at Aberyswyth University, organised by Professor Stephen Wulfstan, has recently become affiliated to the British Universities Aikido Federation. Don Morgan, Senior B.A.F. Instructor in South Wales, will take classes there. understanding his Aikido. Flexibility of mind came first. However, I and his other students had a duty to remember what he had been trying to teach and pass it on, for there would come a time when he would no longer be around to teach it. Yamaguchi Sensei’s funeral took place on January 28 and 29 at the Daisoji Temple in Shinjuku, Tokyo. The otsuya ceremony (watching the body) was held from 6 pm onwards and the burial service began at 1 pm the following day. I was privileged to attend both functions. I had never been to a Buddhist funeral before and I found the ceremony very simple and intensely moving. On the dais were arranged the coffin, Yamaguchi Sensei’s picture, and many, many flowers, sent from all over the world. As sutras were being chanted, all the mourners lined up to burn incense in front of the coffin, and, as about 700 people attended the otsuya ceremony, this took some time. At the funeral service the following day, the burning of incense was supplemented by eulogies given by Doshu, representatives from the Yamaguchi family and his Aikido students at Meijo University. The coffin was taken from the dais and put on trestles. it was opened and Yamaguchi Sensei’s face was visible, displaying the familiar, slight smile. Everybody, family, Doshu, friends, students, gathered handfuls of the flowers which had been displayed earlier and spread them over the body. Someone even included a pack of his favourite brand of cigarettes! Then the coffin lid was suspended over the coffin and everyone took hold of it and gently lowered it in place. Many willing hands then took over the coffin and carried it down the steps to the hearse. As the final eulogy was made, which laid stress on Yamaguchi Sensei’s openness, his approachability, his fondness for travel (the courses he gave at Oxford were mentioned) and for conversation, there was not a single dry eye in the place. He will be remembered by many people as a great Aikido technician and a great human being. Peter A. Goldsbury MARTIAL ARTS BOOKS BOOKS ON JAPAN IN ENGLISH BOOKSHOP 212 PICADILLY, LONDON W1V 9LD TEL: 0171-439 8035 FAX: 0171-287 1082 ETON COLLEGE AIKIDO CLUB JOINS B.A.F The Aikido Club at Eton College, Windsor, run by housemaster Mike Town, has recently become affiliated to the B.A.F. The club has in fact quite a long history, being founded in 1970 by Bryan Samuel, who like so many of those early pioneers in Britain hailed from South Wales. A group of a dozen or so of the school’s pupils hold practices in what has been named the Hopgarden Dojo. Why this unusual name? Well, it is housed in a building that some centuries ago was a farm house, and the land adjoining it, as well as being used for growing vegetables, was also used for cultivating hops to make beer in the days when Thames water was so bad that the boys were required to drink beer rather than water at meals! The dojo has recently acquired a new set of Shogun supermats to give a practice area of 7 x 5 metres on which the boys train twice weekly after school hours. Anyone who would like to drop in for practice on a Tuesday or Thursday between 6.30 and 7.30 pm would be very welcome.