The History of Aikido in Melbourne - 1967-1971

The History of Aikido in Melbourne – Mt Banks 1972

The follow up to the First Summer School was our attendance at Winter Training on Mt Banks, in the Blue Mountains, NSW.   A small group of us including Tony, Keith, Bruce Hatfield and me took the overnight train from Melbourne to Sydney on Friday evening.   In those days, before Standard Gauge was introduced, you had to change trains at Albury, sometime in the early hours of the morning.   There had been an accident on the line at Goulburn so we were considerably delayed.   Eventually, we got to Central Station, Sydney, and a taxi to Baulkham Hills where we picked up a car which had been left for us.   Finally, we got to Mt Banks late on Saturday evening.   I remember our arrival in an old Holden.   So pleased to have just got there.   Tony was driving and when we spotted white keikogis, he started sounding the horn and we cheered.   Unfortunately, Sensei and the Sydney students, who had just returned from practice and were preparing for misogi supper and meditation, didn’t appreciate our “enthusiasm”.

Despite our rude arrival, we were warmly welcomed and quickly initiated into the ways of the “dojo”. To say the least, we were unprepared.   I can still feel the freezing cold of that night, trying to snuggle up in a thin sleeping bag on the hard ground:   Perhaps I got some sleep.

But there were the inevitable funny moments.   Keith awoke and got up, out of his sleeping bag next morning, asking if it had rained during the night:  his sleeping bag was wet.   We all said, “No”.   Then there followed a guilty silence as, collectively, we realised that probably one of us had relieved himself in the bushes around Keith’s bivouac.   I guess that was Keith and why we loved him so much.  He had unlimited capacity to attract disorder.   He was fun to be around.

It was still dark as we followed sensei up to the top of the mountain where, tops off, we did funekogi with enormous vigour to ward off the cold.   Then we sat on the rocks to watch the sun rise.   I still remember those moments, staring at the gradually rising sun, feeling its incremental warmth.   For me, it was as close as I could get to the moment of Creation.   It’s personal and so my most treasured Aikido momento is the copy of the then popular Desiderata, signed by sensei, which he gave to each of us at the end of the keiko.

I was promoted to shodan by sensei , at Monash in 1974.   David Brown (then shodan) moved to Melbourne about this time.   The two of practised together on Sunday mornings at Caulfield.   He was keen to delve deeper into what he had learned from Sugano sensei in Sydney.  I was, at least, as keen to learn, so keen that I moved to Sydney myself shortly after, so it seems appropriate that I end my tale there.   I will be only too pleased if others want to continue the story.

 

Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Secret Link