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A basketball hoop will do. The basketball court is easier to find. In fact, wooden stakes are not so difficult to do.
If you are a bridge player, you want the hardness of the wooden figure. It's a basketball fight or something, just practice the technique, so it's not very difficult to do it yourself.
If you are in the countryside, find two long benches, join them, stand on the ground, and remove the legs of the benches.
Make tic-tac-toe fixation below, it's better to get started, look at it yourself, rubber band + wire bundling.
If you are in the city and can't find a wooden bench, then you can look for a bed board, palm wide, length customized, folded, and wrapped with a curtain or something. If you have a bit of carpentry ability, you can make a replacement for a wooden stake yourself without a hundred.
Of course, the appearance or something is definitely not as good as 1,800 yuan.
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Self-study? Talented. The wooden stake is just a ruler. You can practice without a wooden stake. It is possible to empty the wooden stake.
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Hehe, parallel bars are fine, the 2 horizontal bars of parallel bars are the same as the 2 wooden arms of the wooden stake, but the wooden stake is missing, you can use the support under the parallel bar as the wooden leg of the wooden stake, you can go around the school around your house.
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Was the wooden stake invented by the Wing Chun people? No.
The invention of the wooden pile was actually the famous anti-Japanese general of the Ming Dynasty and the national hero Qi Jiguang, who summed up the battlefield experience and invented the wooden pile in order to train the soldiers' hand-to-hand combat ability.
At the same time, he not only invented the wooden stake, but also improved the traditional broadsword.
Therefore, the earliest prototype of the wooden stake should be the "single-hand" training in the traditional military camp.
In Ip Man 4", Bruce Lee's apprentices are ready to introduce wooden stakes into the military camp as a training subject, which makes sense.
In fact, in addition to Wing Chun, there were also a few branches in Bajiquan and Taijiquan that practiced wooden stakes; It's just that relatively speaking, the Wing Chun people have maximized the use of wooden pile training.
At present, among some of the descendants of Qijiaquan, there are still traditional training methods of wooden stakes.
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There is a traditional wooden stake to size"Strict requirements"The wooden stake is used to correct the body shape, and it is not fixed"Standard size"It is specially customized according to the different height and body type of users.
However, practitioners in modern society basically buy about the right size when buying piles, not too much"Strict requirements"Finish.
According to our many years of customization: the biggest difference between the pile of Wing Chun and the pile of Jeet Kune Do is that the pile of Jeet Kune Do is generally relatively high, which is generally influenced by the wooden pile designed by Bruce Lee (**), because most of Bruce Lee's opponents abroad are higher than himself, if he practices the pile as high as himself, it may have an impact in actual combat.
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In the same way, Jeet Kune Do is an improved version of Wing Chun!!
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There is no difference, but Bruce Lee himself invented several unique wooden stakes, but none of them have spread because they are too complicated.
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Is there a difference between different rulers and the same, is this an invention of scientists? This is used instead of practicing martial arts without real people, there are both high and low, and people also have high and low, do they have to be born the same height, the same fat and thin? What standard size is necessary, international standard?
Dead idiot, don't ask these retarded questions.
The full set of Wing Chun wooden piles is as follows: >>>More
I don't understand what you're trying to say. And Wing Chun is fine without wooden stakes, and Bruce Lee didn't learn much wooden stakes in the end. Jeet Kune Do is actually closer to a way of thinking, in fact, there is no particularly rigid formula or anything like that. >>>More
It takes a few years to really learn. If it's just a simple fight, it's a few months. It is recommended to practice little by little from a young age. As long as the little thoughts are polished thoroughly, the wooden stake cares.
Okay, 13 years old, 169 can still touch the net? It's definitely okay to practice more in the future, and I was surprised by what the assistant upstairs said, does he know how high the board is? You're only 13 years old and you'll be able to touch the net, it's amazing, you'll grow taller in the future, slam dunk should be fine, practice bouncing more. >>>More
Strength? If you practice so little, it will have an impact on your height. In other words, that's how I turned out. >>>More