Dragon Section

The eighth and last section of the Tiger-Crane set. Here’s an excellent video (includes Drunken section, too), shown from behind so you can follow, with names.

hunterdragon

And the names of the moves are:

Pull sweep push sweep
Fist like an arrow
Pull sweep push sweep
Monkey steals the peaches
Dragon thrusts its claws
Sweep the sea and push the mountain
Dragon stretches its claws
Hook a star with the fist
Tiger pushes the mountain
Flying arrow fist
Dragon lands on the sand
A pair of butterflies
Turning stance to swiftly strike
Unicorn stepping
Butterfly palms
Continuous butterfly palms
Crescent moon hand and foot
Crouching tiger hidden dragon
Fierce tiger claws the sand
Draw bow to shoot arrow
Single dragon leaps from sea

Followed by the Five Animal Salute. End of form!

Drunken Fist

We’re up to the next-to-last section of the Tiger-Crane Set. It’s short, and Master Gohring’s videos combine it with the Dragon Section that comes after it. Here’s a good video of both sections, with names; the Drunken part is less than a minute.

drunkenchew

The names of the moves are as follows:

  • Eight drunken gods
  • Old man exits cave
  • One finger asks the question
  • First star punching method
  • Second star punching method
  • Two fists punching downward
  • Immediately punching upward
  • Fist like an arrow

Crane Section

This is the sixth of eight sections in the Tiger-Crane 108. Video:

crane

Names are:

Hard and soft crane walking
Descending arm hand and waist
One finger asks the question
Crane wing punching
Fist through the sleeve

[Repeat on the other side:]
Hard and soft crane walking
Descending arm hand and waist
One finger asks the question
Crane wing punching
Fist through the sleeve

Crane pecking
Reviving crane

Flying crane
Hungry crane stands on one leg
Hungry crane captures shrimp

[repeat on the other side:]
Flying crane
Hungry crane stands on one leg
Hungry crane captures shrimp

Crane head punching
Crane head punching

Dragon swings its tail
Monk summons corpse
Tame the tiger shoot the tiger

Footwork and Stances

步法 (bu fa) means footwork. I’ve been working on building a comprehensive list of names of steps and stances. I use the Chinese names, because translations of the everyday meanings of the Chinese words are mostly not applicable; these are terms of art. I do offer some English equivalents, especially where the English expression is well established.

弓步 gong bu (bow stance) is the long stride in which the leading foot points straight ahead and the back foot is at a 45-degree angle. How long, low, and wide the stride is varies with the individual and the style of tai chi. In the modern forms that I have studied, long and low is good, as long as you don’t have to lunge or lurch to move around, and about 8 inches in width is desirable. The weight is 60-70% on the leading foot.

Amin Wu is doing 24-form, in which gong bu is the basic forward step.

Amin Wu is doing 24-form, in which gong bu is the basic forward step.

In 虚步 xu bu (empty stance), the weight is entirely (or at least 90%) on one foot. The other can be in front with the ball of the foot or the heel touching and bearing a slight amount of weight. A variation is 点步, dian bu, in which the foot is pointed.

Xu Bu Xia Chuo from 32-sword

Xu Bu Xia Chuo from 32-sword

歇步 xie bu (resting stance) is a low position with the legs folded. The front foot points straight ahead and bears most of the weight. The knee of the back foot is turned in and rests on the back of the front leg. The heel of the back foot is off the ground. Xie bu can be specified as di (low), which means all the way down so the back knee is on or near the ground.

Master Faye Li Yip does Xie bu in Fan Form.

Master Faye Li Yip does Xie bu in Fan Form.

仆步 pu bu is a low stance in which the body is turned sideways and one leg is folded into a low squat while the other is extended. This stance is also called fu hu (tame the tiger), and is most famously exemplified in the taiji movement called Snake Creeps Down. Both feet face front, parallel, and the heel of the bent leg should be on the ground. The upper body should be upright.

Master Faye does Pu Bu Chuan Jian in Wudang Taiji Combined sword form.

Master Faye does Pu Bu Chuan Jian in Wudang Taiji Combined sword form.

扣步 kou bu is a pigeon-toed stance used when turning the body around.

Pigeon-toed, kou bu

Pigeon-toed, kou bu

马步 ma bu (horse stance, or horse-riding stance) is a wide stance with thighs parallel to the ground. Weight is equally distributed in plain ma bu, but the stance may be staggered left or right. It can also be easily shifted into left or right bow stance. In a general list of fighting stances, this one should probably have come first, but it is not so common or basic in taiji as in kung fu.

Ma Bu, Chen Zhenglei

Ma Bu, Chen Zhenglei

擦步 ca bu is the forward step in Chen style taiji, in which the heel skids forward (ca means brush or clean or polish).

Professor Li's wife does ca bu at the opening of Fan II.

Professor Li’s wife does ca bu at the opening of Fan II.

叉步 cha bu is a cross-step behind. When stepping into xie bu, one foot is set down behind the other, but just behind. In cha bu, the back foot crosses well behind.

Cha Bu Yun Shou, Fan II

Cha Bu Yun Shou, Fan II

Jesse Tsao, Cha Bu Fan Liao

Jesse Tsao, Cha Bu Fan Liao

盖步 gai bu is the opposite of cha bu: it is a cross-step in front.

Gai Bu, stepping across in front.

Gai Bu, stepping across in front.

并步 bing bu means feet together.

丁步 ding bu means feet are together, but the weight is on one foot, while the heel of the other foot is lifted. The empty foot may point forward or to the side.

开步 kai bu is a step to the side; kai means open. In Cloud Hands, the sidestep is kai bu.

Kai Bu Yun Shou (Fan II)

Kai Bu Yun Shou (Fan II)

撤步 che bu is a side-facing bow stance.

Che Bu, bow stance with hips turned sideways

Che Bu, bow stance with hips turned sideways

in 摆步 bai bu (swing step), the leading foot is set down on the heel and then swings outward 90-degrees. The heel of the back foot releases with the shift of weight, and the hips turn.

Bai Bu, swing step 90-degrees outward, releasing the heel of the back foot.

Bai Bu, swing step 90-degrees outward, releasing the heel of the back foot.

独立 du li [bu] is standing on one leg. The standing foot is at 45 degrees with respect to the body, as is the knee, which should be lifted waist-high, with the free foot pulled in toward the center of the body for balance.

du-li

跳步 tiao bu is a jump. This generally refers to the move traditionally called Horse Jumps Over the Stream.

tiao-bu

進步 jin bu is an advancing step.

退步 tui bu is a retreating step.

半步 ban bu is a half-step, where the back foot follows the front foot half-way, as for example, to set up Bai He Liang Chi (White Crane Spreads Wings) or Shou Hui Pipa (Playing the Guitar).

上步 shang bu means step up one step with the back leg, as in Shang Bu Qi Xing (Step Up Seven Stars).

行 步 xing bu is a walking step, usually in a circle as in Bagua Walking.

This list is not exhaustive–I keep coming across new steps! I haven’t found all the names of the shifted horse stances or the special empty step for Bai He Liang Chi (in which you set the toe in front, between the opponent’s legs, in preparation for a snap kick) or the staggered horse stance that you jump to in the fan forms (I do know there’s a special name for that, too). But this is most of them.

See also Wikipedia on Wushu Stances. Also, Jesse Tsao covers basic Taiji stances in his Tai Chi Fundamentals DVD, which is also available as Amazon Stremming Video. This book, Complete Taiji Dao, also covers many of the stances described in this post.