Area kids learn the fine art of fencing
If you were to try to conjure
up an image of a sword-wielding swashbuckler, you would literally
pass right over Max. After all he stands less than 4 feet tall
in his sneakers, prefers jeans to flowing pantaloons and is without
a plumed hat.
Besides there's no way his
mon's letting him out of the house after dark to perform acts
of derring-do.
But that hasn't kept Max
from joining a growing number of Santa Cruz area youngsters who,
thanks to a determined mother and a helpful fencing coach, have
come together for weekly lessons in the fine art of fencing.
Cynthia Geske found early
on that her son Zach had a bent for this classic form of martial
arts. "When he was just 3 years old he came up to me and
said, "Mom i need more swords." We had swords all over
the house, but it wasn't enough.
Fast forward another eight
years and Zach, having experienced sward play in the form of
entertainment from Peter Pan to the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,
was looking to expand his fencing world.
Geske turned to UC Santa
Cruz hoping to find a student in fencing to help Zach along and
instead found Courtney Blackburn, fencing and tai chi instructor
on The Hill. Blackburn expressed an interest in fostering his
sport among area youngsters and a successful partnership was
born.
"We started in a park," says
Geske, "but we got rained on and the grass and dirt weren't
suitable for teaching fencing. I searched around and we moved
into the Vets Hall (in downtown Santa Cruz) in March of 2001."
Young fencers have come out
of the woodwork since. There are three classes each week at the
Veterans Memorial Building and another for home-schooled kids
at Harvey West Park. And, starting this Wednesday night, from
5:30 - 6:30, Geske and Blackburn will offer a family fencing
night at the Vets Hall. Parents are invited to bring their youngsters
for a bit of instruction and need pay only for their child while
getting in a few thrusts and parries of their own gratis.
There are also plans to hold
a tournament or two again this summer as last year so the little
fencers can show off their skills and pick up trophy, too.
In these days of video games
and skateboards, what is the attraction for modern youngsters
of weapons that date back to nearly the dawn of man?
Geske believes that the drive
for hand-to-hand combat is ingrained in us from an earlier time,
when the ability to handle a weapon directly influenced you life
span. "The people who survived were the ones who learned
to fight well and were successful at hand-to-hand combat," Geske
says. "It's ingrained in us. Courtney always says that when
the little boys, or even the big ones, come into a class for
the first time they can't wait to get their hand on a sword."
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