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287 results for “bake”
Centurion's Vine Staff (Vitis) & Pugio Dagger
The vine staff was the centurion's badge of office and disciplinary tool. The pugio was the last-resort dagger. Cassius used one on me. Authentic reproductions for historical reenactment and display.
Joan's Banner (Replica -- Fleur-de-lis on White)
Full-size replica of my war banner -- white linen, painted angels, fleur-de-lis, JHESUS MARIA. I carried this instead of a sword. I told the court: I loved my banner forty times more than my sword. The banner never killed anyone. It gave men something to follow.
Plate Armor Fitting & Movement Training
15th century plate armor training. Move, fight, mount a horse, get up from the ground in 50 pounds of steel. Tip: Armor does not make you slow. Bad armor makes you slow. Good armor moves with you.
French Arming Sword (15th Century Replica)
Single-handed arming sword, cruciform hilt, 32-inch blade. Standard Hundred Years War knight's weapon. I rarely drew mine -- my banner was my weapon. But I trained daily. Balanced for one-handed use with shield or on horseback.
Highland Guerrilla Tactics Workshop
Hit-and-run from the hills. Ambush techniques, using terrain to negate cavalry, scorched earth defense. How common men with farm tools beat professional knights. Tip: You do not need to win the war in one battle. You need to make the occupation too expensive to maintain.
Scottish Targe Shield & Dirk Set
Round targe shield (20 inches, studded leather over wood) and 12-inch dirk dagger. The Highlander's backup weapons. The targe catches the blade, the dirk finishes the work. I will teach you the off-hand techniques that made Highland warriors feared in close quarters.
Freedom & Resistance Seminar -- Leading the Impossible
When the cause is impossible, how do you lead? Recruitment, morale, operating without resources or official support. Case studies from Scotland, Ireland, the American colonies, and modern resistance movements. Tip: The cause outlives the man. I died badly. Scotland still became free.
Desert Guerrilla Tactics Workshop
How 38 warriors evaded 8,000 soldiers for years. Water caching, trail deception, ambush sites, disappearing into terrain. The Apache did not fight battles -- we fought a war of movement. Tip: Never be where they expect you. Move at night, rest by day, leave false trails. Make them chase ghosts.
Advanced Tracking & Counter-Tracking
Reading sign on rock, sand, and hardpan. Aging tracks by moisture and wind. Counter-tracking -- how to move without leaving sign. I could track a man across bare rock by the scuff marks and disturbed pebbles. Tip: Everything that moves leaves evidence. Your job is to see what others walk past.
Desert Survival Intensive -- 48 Hours With Nothing
Two days in the desert with a knife and the clothes on your back. Finding water from plants, catching small game, building shade shelters, navigating by stars and landmarks. The Chiricahua Apache lived in this desert for centuries. If you listen to the land, it will keep you alive.
Hunnic Horse Archery -- Ride & Shoot
The Huns were born in the saddle. Composite bow from horseback, forward and backward shooting, feigned retreat with volley fire. Tip: The feigned retreat is the deadliest tactic in cavalry warfare. Pretend to flee, let them chase in disorder, then turn and destroy them. It requires discipline to run and courage to turn.
Psychological Warfare Masterclass -- Break Them Before Battle
How to defeat an enemy before the first arrow flies. Reputation management, terror as strategy, negotiation from strength, making examples. Case studies: my campaigns against Rome, Sherman's March, modern information warfare. Tip: The cheapest victory is the one where the enemy surrenders without a fight.
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