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Celtic Javelin Set (3 Throwing Spears)
Three light throwing javelins, ash shafts with iron heads. Balanced for distance and accuracy. I will teach you the overhand and sidearm throws that my warriors used to open every engagement.
Uprising Leadership Workshop -- Building a Coalition
How to unite fractious tribes against a common enemy. Managing egos, distributing resources, maintaining alliance cohesion. Tip: People join a cause for different reasons. Give each tribe their reason. But give them ONE leader and ONE plan.
The Art of War Masterclass -- 13 Chapters Deep
Intensive study of all 13 chapters. Not the motivational poster version. Terrain, espionage, fire attacks, the use of spies. Each chapter is a weapon. Most people read Chapter 1 and think they understand war. They do not. Tip: Know yourself, know your enemy. A thousand battles, a thousand victories.
Celtic War Chariot Driving Experience
Two-horse chariot, wicker-and-oak frame. My charioteers galloped along the yoke pole and threw javelins at speed. Tip: The chariot is mobile infantry -- ride to the fight, dismount, fight, ride away.
Celtic Longsword & Round Shield (Iron Age Replicas)
Iron Age Celtic longsword (30-inch blade for slashing) and lime-wood round shield with iron boss. The Celts fought with fury and individual skill. The Romans fought with system. Both have their place. Weighted for training.
Chinese Jian Sword (Bronze, Warring States Style)
Double-edged bronze jian, 28-inch blade. The gentleman's weapon of ancient China. Balanced for both thrust and cut. I carried one, though I preferred to win without drawing it.
Empire Administration Seminar -- Yasa Law & Governance
I conquered the world and governed it. The Yasa established religious freedom, diplomatic immunity, meritocracy, and a continental postal relay. Tip: Conquer with the sword, govern with the law. An empire held only by fear will not survive its founder.
Lakota Bow & Arrow Set (Sinew-Backed, 20 Arrows)
Short sinew-backed bow, 45-pound draw, optimized for mounted use. Twenty dogwood arrows with iron and flint points. This is what we hunted buffalo with from horseback at full gallop -- one arrow could pass through a buffalo at close range.
Relativity Explained -- Thought Experiments for Everyone
Two-hour session. No equations (well, one equation). I'll explain special and general relativity using the same thought experiments I used to discover them. Riding a beam of light. Trains and lightning strikes. Falling elevators. If you can imagine it, you can understand it. Tip: Relativity is not abstract. Your GPS uses it. Without relativistic corrections, your navigation would be off by 10 kilometers per day.
Viking Shield Wall Drill -- Group Combat
Group training (8-16). The Viking shield wall: overlapping shields, spears over the top, axes hooking from the sides. When the wall holds, nothing breaks through. When it breaks, everyone dies. Tip: The man who steps back first kills the man beside him. Hold the wall.
Viking Navigation Workshop -- Stars, Sunstones & Currents
How the Norse navigated the open Atlantic without compass or sextant. Sunstones (calcite crystals) to find the sun on cloudy days, star patterns, wave reading, bird sighting. I sailed from Scandinavia to Paris to the Mediterranean. Tip: The sea has patterns. Learn them and the ocean is a road, not a barrier.
Viking Seax Knife & Leather Tool Roll
Large seax knife (12-inch single-edge blade) and leather roll with fire steel, whetstone, and bone needles. The seax was tool, weapon, and eating knife in one. Every Norseman carried one. Mine has a pattern-welded blade -- the maker's signature in the steel.
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