Author |
Message |
Steven E
Location: Alberta, Canada Joined: 27 Oct 2005
Posts: 4
|
Posted: Thu 27 Oct, 2005 4:00 pm Post subject: Quarterstaffs? |
|
|
Hey, I'm just wondering if anyone knows of a resource or site, written in language that can be understood by a newb,
which would tell me how to build a half-decent quarterstaff.
Thanks!
Mary had a little lamb,
Her father shot it dead.
The next time that lamb went to school,
It was between two slabs of bread
|
|
|
|
Carl Goff
|
Posted: Thu 27 Oct, 2005 10:43 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Order one. Don't try to do it yourself unless you absolutely want to (speaking from experience here). They're usually less than $50, including shipping. Go do a Google search for Purpleheart Armories-they've got good prices.
Oh, East of sands and sunlit gulf, your blood is thin, your gods are few;
You could not break the Northern wolf and now the wolf has turned on you.
The fires that light the coasts of Spain fling shadows on the Eastern strand.
Master, your slave has come again with torch and axe in his right hand!
-Robert E. Howard
|
|
|
|
Edward Hitchens
|
Posted: Fri 28 Oct, 2005 5:54 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Carl Goff wrote: | Go do a Google search for Purpleheart Armories-they've got good prices. |
Yes! Purpleheart makes outstanding products! woodenswords.com I believe it is. I bought two wooden longswords from them earlier this year; tons of fun! I have a very well made quarterstaff from ........ uh ...........oh yeah, Sabersmith.
I love using my quarterstaff; very formidable and easy-to-learn weapon.
By the way, why is it called a 'quarterstaff?' And difference between it and a 'bo'?
"The whole art of government consists in the art of being honest." Thomas Jefferson
|
|
|
|
Geoffrey H
|
Posted: Fri 28 Oct, 2005 10:35 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Well, having zero knowledge of the topic, heres my two cents.
Bo and Quaterstaff are remarkably similar. However, a Quaterstaff as we call it is the Western term for a staff made for fighting (any shaped stick of wood is called a staff) wheras a Bo is the commonly used eastern term for a staff made for fighting. No doubt both the eastern and western versions of the item have had different names over time in the areas where they were used. And no doubt the essential design has also changed slightly from place to place and time to time.[/i]
Lurker
|
|
|
|
Johan S. Moen
Location: Kristiansand, Norway Joined: 26 Jan 2004
Posts: 259
|
Posted: Sat 29 Oct, 2005 12:34 am Post subject: |
|
|
Isn't a bo usually around 180 cm, whereas a quarterstaff ranges from 210 cm(as per Zach Wylde) to 8 feet or thereabouts(mine is 240 cm)? Of course, one has halfstaffs and longstaffs also.
Johan Schubert Moen
|
|
|
|
Gary Grzybek
Location: Stillwater N.J. Joined: 25 Aug 2003
Posts: 559
|
Posted: Sun 30 Oct, 2005 8:00 am Post subject: |
|
|
Edward Hitchens wrote: | Carl Goff wrote: | Go do a Google search for Purpleheart Armories-they've got good prices. |
Yes! Purpleheart makes outstanding products! woodenswords.com I believe it is. I bought two wooden longswords from them earlier this year; tons of fun! I have a very well made quarterstaff from ........ uh ...........oh yeah, Sabersmith.
I love using my quarterstaff; very formidable and easy-to-learn weapon.
By the way, why is it called a 'quarterstaff?' And difference between it and a 'bo'? |
I gave up spending $30 or more trying to ship them. My last one was from home depot. Those 6' hardwood hanger rods work okay.
I was told that the term Quarterstaff came from the standard grip of holding the staff with your lead hand at one quarter of it's length. The rear hand a few inches from the end. This gives you good reach while still maintaining control. Lengths can vary upon preference. I found 6 feet to be just fine.
Gary Grzybek
ARMA Northern N.J.
www.armastudy.org
|
|
|
|
Jay Barron
|
Posted: Sun 30 Oct, 2005 11:39 am Post subject: |
|
|
Many years ago I purchased a diamondwood staff from Museum Replicas. It is super sturdy bordering on indestructable. The color is an ash that looks very natural. It's 1" in diameter which feels just right for a staff. The only downside is that the longest you could get it was 5'. That is a bit short for a historical European staff but I never let that bother me. I'm really happy with mine. I'm not sure if their still available, however.
Constant and true.
|
|
|
|
Chuck Wyatt
|
Posted: Sun 30 Oct, 2005 12:22 pm Post subject: |
|
|
If the calling for making one is still with you, try the below link in the About section. The site recommends letting the staff dry a few months before stripping the bark , I would let it dry for a year, still in the bark and covering the freshly cut ends with wax . This lets the moisture out slow , through the bark preventing cracking.
http://www.quarterstaff.org/frame.html
|
|
|
|
T.L. Johnson
|
Posted: Mon 31 Oct, 2005 1:40 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Edward Hitchens wrote: | ...By the way, why is it called a 'quarterstaff?' And difference between it and a 'bo'? |
You lever the staff with one hand holding it a quarter of the way down from one end.
And the plural is 'staves', though modern English has accepted 'staffs' as a word.
|
|
|
|
Felix Wang
|
Posted: Tue 01 Nov, 2005 9:44 am Post subject: |
|
|
Technically speaking, "quarterstaff" is a position or way of holding a staff - as TL Johnson says, one-quarter of the way from the butt. "Halfstaff" is holding a staff in the middle-third (which is the position typically seen in Robin Hood movies and the like).
|
|
|
|
David Black Mastro
|
Posted: Tue 01 Nov, 2005 10:54 am Post subject: |
|
|
Johan S. Moen wrote: | Isn't a bo usually around 180 cm, whereas a quarterstaff ranges from 210 cm(as per Zach Wylde) to 8 feet or thereabouts(mine is 240 cm)? Of course, one has halfstaffs and longstaffs also.
Johan Schubert Moen |
I have always understood the bo as being 6 feet long, whereas quarterstaves average 8-9 feet in length (though, FWIW, the quarterstaves used by 18th century prizefighters appear to have been only about 6 feet long).
"Why meddle with us--you are not strong enough to break us--you know that you have won the battle and slaughtered our army--be content with your honor, and leave us alone, for by God's good will only have we escaped from this business" --unknown Spanish captain to the Chevalier Bayard, at the Battle of Ravenna, 1512
|
|
|
|
|