Timestamp: Fall 503 AV
Location: Southern Sea Of Grass
Purpose: Dagger Training
Status: Closed/Flashback
Eachann continued to drill Kavala over the next weeks. They started with the basics which he constantly made her review – stances, grips, blocks, and even parries. A parry was a simple move really designed to not stop the full force of an attack but to deflect it neatly. Daggers were good at that. Kavala found that blocking with them was all but impossible for a Konti. She didn’t have the body strength or the bulk to make her blocks effective. And even though she learned the basic blocks, it still didn’t require her much in the way of effort to parry and so she focused on that.
The lesson was very clear. A dagger could be used to parry a thrust, slice, cut, or backslash directly but it was risky. There were complex mathematics involved, and one had to teach ones mind to do them on the fly or the risk of having a blade at full speed cut through a dagger’s defense was just too great. The blade alignment and timing needed to be exactly right to deflect the blow. Thrusts were easier. One just had to plan a singular movement, and the most complex issue one had to deal with was disengage around an opponent’s weapon with a semi-circular movement around the dagger because of its shorter length.
Kavala practiced this for hours, her sister running her katana and feinting thrusts at her. Circle and break off, circle and break off. Eachann directed the dance. It was nice to have help, someone willing to be a guinea pig to train off of. Vanator’s new wife, Tamar, was more than willing to help too and had offered to spar with Kavala later in her training. Folks wandered by, stayed for a while, and then wandered away. Weapons training was old hat around the Pavilion, the only difference was who was training in it. Kavala, timid and a little spoiled, was such an unlikely target that it did cause folks to speculate. Eachann held no mercy though. The lessons continued.
“Your dagger is always defensive against a blade if you remember a few things, Kavala.” He’d said. “Close a line of attack so your opponent doesn’t have any room and fewer options. It eliminates the ability for someone with a weapon of reach to feint easily.” Kavala nodded, and he continued. “Daggers, especially when wielded with both hands, can parry a thrust in one hand and undercut and take out an opponent in another. With a dagger, used against a sword, it allows you to control your opponents sword after a parry so they cannot continue their attack, but must disengage and re-attack giving you time to be ready to defend again.” He said.
It was easier said than done.
The basic principle was to dart in, interfere in their space, and prevent them from having the room to swing their sword back at you offensively. Keeping one on the defensive, however, was harder than it seemed. For that, hours of practice had to happen against the real thing – swords of all sorts. Kavala matched up with her sister’s katana, her brother’s long sword, and various clansmen and clanswomen’s assorted weapons. There were a few, like spears, that were all but impossible to defend against with a weapon the size of a dagger. For that, she had throwing daggers. She’d trained hard with them as well. In fact, she threw so many times that her hands blistered, bled, and then callused over. Sometimes they hurt so bad before the calluses formed that she had to soak them in salted water and coat them with herbs she mixed herself.
Comfrey, sage, and a rare flower called Candlevine really did the trick. They needed to be boiled down in tea, strained, and added with a little wax from bees to thicken. The resulting creams tended to sooth the angry nerves and reclaim the use of one’s hands for the future. Kavala felt like she made it by the gallons. If it wasn’t going on her hands, it was going on her rump where Akela or Vanator knocked her down. Especially Akela, enjoyed doing the knocking way too much.
Location: Southern Sea Of Grass
Purpose: Dagger Training
Status: Closed/Flashback
Eachann continued to drill Kavala over the next weeks. They started with the basics which he constantly made her review – stances, grips, blocks, and even parries. A parry was a simple move really designed to not stop the full force of an attack but to deflect it neatly. Daggers were good at that. Kavala found that blocking with them was all but impossible for a Konti. She didn’t have the body strength or the bulk to make her blocks effective. And even though she learned the basic blocks, it still didn’t require her much in the way of effort to parry and so she focused on that.
The lesson was very clear. A dagger could be used to parry a thrust, slice, cut, or backslash directly but it was risky. There were complex mathematics involved, and one had to teach ones mind to do them on the fly or the risk of having a blade at full speed cut through a dagger’s defense was just too great. The blade alignment and timing needed to be exactly right to deflect the blow. Thrusts were easier. One just had to plan a singular movement, and the most complex issue one had to deal with was disengage around an opponent’s weapon with a semi-circular movement around the dagger because of its shorter length.
Kavala practiced this for hours, her sister running her katana and feinting thrusts at her. Circle and break off, circle and break off. Eachann directed the dance. It was nice to have help, someone willing to be a guinea pig to train off of. Vanator’s new wife, Tamar, was more than willing to help too and had offered to spar with Kavala later in her training. Folks wandered by, stayed for a while, and then wandered away. Weapons training was old hat around the Pavilion, the only difference was who was training in it. Kavala, timid and a little spoiled, was such an unlikely target that it did cause folks to speculate. Eachann held no mercy though. The lessons continued.
“Your dagger is always defensive against a blade if you remember a few things, Kavala.” He’d said. “Close a line of attack so your opponent doesn’t have any room and fewer options. It eliminates the ability for someone with a weapon of reach to feint easily.” Kavala nodded, and he continued. “Daggers, especially when wielded with both hands, can parry a thrust in one hand and undercut and take out an opponent in another. With a dagger, used against a sword, it allows you to control your opponents sword after a parry so they cannot continue their attack, but must disengage and re-attack giving you time to be ready to defend again.” He said.
It was easier said than done.
The basic principle was to dart in, interfere in their space, and prevent them from having the room to swing their sword back at you offensively. Keeping one on the defensive, however, was harder than it seemed. For that, hours of practice had to happen against the real thing – swords of all sorts. Kavala matched up with her sister’s katana, her brother’s long sword, and various clansmen and clanswomen’s assorted weapons. There were a few, like spears, that were all but impossible to defend against with a weapon the size of a dagger. For that, she had throwing daggers. She’d trained hard with them as well. In fact, she threw so many times that her hands blistered, bled, and then callused over. Sometimes they hurt so bad before the calluses formed that she had to soak them in salted water and coat them with herbs she mixed herself.
Comfrey, sage, and a rare flower called Candlevine really did the trick. They needed to be boiled down in tea, strained, and added with a little wax from bees to thicken. The resulting creams tended to sooth the angry nerves and reclaim the use of one’s hands for the future. Kavala felt like she made it by the gallons. If it wasn’t going on her hands, it was going on her rump where Akela or Vanator knocked her down. Especially Akela, enjoyed doing the knocking way too much.