Saturday, November 14, 2009

Anyone able to shed any light on what its like to learn/ live Muay Thai Sangka?

Anyone able to shed any light on what its like to study Muay Thai Sangka?


If anyone has trained in Thailand could you share some info please. I was thinking of teaching english to support myself for a year. Will i be too tired to teach? can i be selective on the days i train (so i can earn a living)? Are you able to wear protective headgear (i read somewhere that no padding is aloud - im not bothered about anything but getting my nose broken - sadly im ugly enough as it is and have a rather large nose) Doubt anyone one will answer, but thanks if you do.|||Check out this website:


http://www.ancientmuaythai.com/faqs/#4





Hope this helps and good luck...|||Strictly speaking, you are not allowed to work in Thailand without a work permit. Illegal English teachers are paid less than well. Check out www.Ajarn.com





Unless you are intent on becoming a pro, 2x2 hours of training per day should be the maximum time needed plus 1 hour for cardio training. You should take one or two days off per week to allow your body/bones/muscles time to recover.





Protective gear is used during training, but not during professional fights.





Schools are scattered around the country. Only in Bangkok and in the main tourist spots (e.g., Lamai, Hua Hin, Koh Lanta, Phuket, Pattaya) do the boxing instructors speak some English.|||It%26#039;s up to you . There are places here in Bangkok where you can train like a pro or just do simple training with no real sparring if you like.Alot of the tourists come here to do the basic training and not so much full contact like most of the Thai%26#039;s.You can just do pad work if you want.Like i say its up to you how far you wan%26#039;t to go.

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