KOBUDO

Ancient Martial Way - yet alive

Since the sword and spear and hand are a way that can injure others its essential that these ways are connected to the ethical way of Zen. 

Practicing martial techniques for the sole purpose of injuring others is not Martial Art. In the 21st century there is no need to use swords for warfare, that is dead, instead we should practice Bu-do 'Martial Way', which is to study hand and sword and mind as Zen, that is alive.

To train in the Kobudo group with us you must also be training in the zazenkai as well.

Katori Shinto Ryu

The school traces it’s founding to 1447 by Isaza Chosai, and has remained authentic, maintaining it’s functionality while stressing the Martial Art as the Way of Peace.

Typical Training comprises a period of meditation, solo repetition exercise with the steel swords Iaijutsu, and partnered exercises with wooden swords and other weapons Kenjutsu, Bojutsu, Sojutsu, Jujutsu. There are also etiquette and strategies to learn.

 

Safety

Kobudo is non-contact, non-sporting. Safety is maintained at all times therefore by attention and personal awareness. This is the way it's always been taught. 

​​HOW DO WE TRAIN? 

To begin a normal training session consists of some warm up exercises and then moves to drilling basic draws and footwork with what are called Iaito or steel Japanese training swords.

Followed by intensive instruction and practice. This is never done with a partner for safety reasons. Following that we may change to wooden weapons and begin partnered training as well. There is no contact with weapons on people, though there is some contact between wooden weapons during strict partnered forms.

 The group trains in Iaijutsu (fast drawing the sword), Kenjutsu (fencing the Sword), other weapons traditional Jujutsu and strategy from the Tradition is called KATORI SHINTO RYU Mochizuki-ha Kobudo.  Katori Shinto ryu is an 800 year old school of swordsmanship dating from early Samurai times.​