Posts Tagged ‘ashtanga yoga’

Melbourne Christmas/Summer Ashtanga Yoga Classes

These details are taken from an Ashtanga yoga school mailing lists that I’m on. They’re located in Fitzroy. I recommend this yoga centre if you’re visiting Melbourne over the summer.

“Ashtanga Yoga Centre of Melbourne
Level 1, 110 Argyle Street
Fitzroy VIC 3065
T: (03) 9419 1598
M: 0421 799 365
E: info@ashtangamelbourne.com.au
W: www.ashtangamelbourne.com.au

Please note that these classes will be fairly demanding, and are geared to students with a regular practice. Introductory students should speak to Greg on 0421 799 365 before attending any of these…

The last day of the general timetable will be Wednesday 23rd December. The full timetable resumes at 6.30am on Monday 4th January, including the new Wednesday 10.30am Mysore class. In between, our classes will be:

Thursday 24th December – Mysore, starting at 6.30am and runs for 3 hours
Friday 25th December – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Saturday 26th December – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Sunday 27th December – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Monday 28th December – led class, starting at 8am for 2 hours
Tuesday 29th December – Mysore, starting at 8am for 2 hours
Wednesday 30th December – Mysore, starting at 8am for 2 hours
Thursday 31st December – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Friday 1st January – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Saturday 2nd January – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Sunday 3rd January – led class, starting at 9.30am for 2 hours
Monday 4th January – normal timetable resumes (see website for more details)”

A new course starts here in Launceston on Jan 5th. Details will soon be posted.

Question: where does a yoga beginner begin yoga?

A good friend of mine recently asked me where to being when looking for a yoga class and this was my response. It’s a good question, and the answer is simply, commit and follow your nose. If you’re thinking of starting, or changing teachers or forms, have a wee read of this mail to give you tips on what to consider.

Below is a copy of our correspondence about beginning the yoga teacher search.

Hey S,

Your “Do you know of good teachers in Melbourne?” question has many many answers; many answers but really it only ever has one answer. Follow your nose, sniff it out with your heart.

There are lots of forms of yoga … and they vary enough for some people to become devoted to a form because it may somehow speak something to the practitioner that they understand, or want to understand. It’s important to remember that movement arts are, at their simplest, a form of communication.

At the moment I’m trying to get my body around Ashtanga, but in the past I’ve loved Iyenga. My attraction to Ashtanga is unclear to me right now.

I’ve a basic rule of thumb when going to any class: I always go to a new teacher on word of mouth and commit to 5 classes, then move on and do the same until I find the teacher and the form that I love.

I have a 100% faith in movement practice being entirely and perfectly right for me, so I go into all classes with an open-opportunity gateway in my soul and recognise that all classes and all teachers are good for me. Having said that health food is good for us but often tastes like shit, so … initially and ultimately it’s about commitment and following through. No Pain-No Gain is inapplicable to yoga, btw.

There is a great space in Fitzroy very close to you:

My friend loves the classes taught by Eoin @ the Melbourne Ashtanga Yoga Centre. I’m coming over in April to do one of his lead classes on a Sunday morning.

Maybe enroll in a beginners Ashtanga course.
The space down there in Firtzroy is beautiful.
Ashtanga will get you REAL strong and REAL fit REAL fast.

I like to tone my practice down in the winter and top up on slow regenerative Hatha style practice. Learning to break down the poses and getting to know them on a intuitive level is really important. Yoga works on all of the subtle bodies of Us; breaks down our proverbial onion skins, layer by layer.

Ashtanga is taught in a set series of movements that always follow the same sequence.
It’s strong and fast and gives little time to contemplate what’s happening: I love it!
Wear shorts and a tight singlet and bring a towel.

Iyenga style spend more time in the postures, have a more analytical mode of teaching, slightly more pared back than Ashtanga. I love Iyenga too. Wear long tight leggings and a singlet. Take a long sleeve too. This school has had a good rep for years: http://www.rathdowneyogaroom.com.au

Hatha is more sit and breathe and maybe chant, and all that jive: more om shanti, so to speak. Wear your favourite trackies.

Does this help?
Love
D

Retreat Recommendation: Northfield Yoga Retreat, QLD

Greetings,

I just got the below publicity for a Queensland yoga retreat in the mail. I’d consider donating an organ if it got me to this retreat. I’ve been known to bang-on about these teachers, so I’ll save you the carry-on. But: if you’re interested in learning Ashtanga from gooood teachers and also up for a break to renew you, lets say a holiday that’s an investment … then DO IT!

The below copy has been taken directly from their publicity.

Be Good,
D

Here is a link to a Flickr account of pics taken at a Northfield retreat on Paros, Greece last year: http://flickr.com/photos/53521895@N00/sets/72157606279017763/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

YOGA PARADISO with Leonie and Graeme Northfield

Sunday 19th April – Friday 1st May 2009, Australia

NORTH STRADBROKE ISLAND or ‘Straddie’ as it is best known is the largest of the great sandy beaches of Moreton Bay and lies just off the coast of Brisbane. The spectacular beaches, headlands, lakes and environment showcase nature at its breathtaking best!

THE WORKSHOP offers morning Astanga Yoga self-practice classes, catering for the specific needs and aims of each individual. Afternoon sessions on alternate days provide the opportunity for technical enquiry, pranayama and meditation.

Arrival is Sunday 19th April and the first class is Monday 20th at 8am. Free day is Sunday 26th.
Course completes after Friday 1st morning class.
The workshop is suitable for all levels – beginners are welcome!

ACCOMMODATION on STRADDIE is by your own choice and arrangement.
Options range from camping and cabins to a great variety of units and houses at Point Lookout.
Check out the websites listed below for accommodation, ferries and island information.
Our practice place is the Community Hall at Point Lookout (opp. the Bowling Club).
Cylinders, Deadman’s and Home Beaches are all within walking distance.

Course Fee A$850 /Accommodation not includedLink
FURTHER ENQUIRIES
graemeandleonie@gmail.com
www.absoluteastangayoga.net

SUGGESTED WEBSITES
Real Estate Agents: www.straddie.info; www.raywhitestraddie.com; stradbrokeisland@rhq.com.au
Accommodation: www.stradbrokeholidays.com.au
Camping: Adder Rock Camping and Cabins – www.straddieholidayparks.com.au
Ferries: www.stradbrokeferries.com.au; www.seastradbroke.com

More Amazing Ashtanga Pics

These pics are extremely motivational to me because, though private yoga practice is a pivotal part of the culture/learning, like anything Human-interested, there is an ever greater sense of the discipline and what it offers in Numbers. Check out these pics and maybe they will motivate you to carry on with your practice and find a wild and wonderful workshop somewhere on the planet to be a part of … just maybe!

R. Sharath in Tokyo (click for more)
by Govindakai (click for his photostream)
and pics from ashtanga intensive in Poland @babajagna’s photostream

Primary Series Yoga Video (click to read about)

To Yoga DVD or to Not Yoga DVD?

I just got this yoga video in the mail. It’s the full Ashtanga Primary series with R. Sharath.
Should we be doing our yoga practice in front of the television? Well, simply, Yes. If you don’t do home practice, then anything that serves as a motivator is good by me.

Some days I hit the mat and nothing happens. Some days my practice is sloppy and seemingly pointless. Inside I know and accept that any practice is better than no practice. I tell the lovely peeps in my class this over and over as both a personal reminder and hope-filled motivator to their fine selves.

Today I did the Primary Series in front of the telly, and it busted my bottox, to say the least. I’m still only a few months into restarting my home yoga practice after stopping when my mum died (of all the least helpful times to stop??) 2 years ago. So I’m still puffing, panting aching and struggling with my monkey-mind and tired body. I know from experience that if I just keep it up, my yoga will boot in … it is already. So, for me, right now, this DVD is perfect, especially since the intensive wkshops that I’m attending on the weekend are Ashtanga based.

Visually the video is fine. Aurally it’s easy peasy (no over articulated American accents and schmaltzy new age music). The content is brilliant. The Ashtanga Primary Series is a huge challenge and worth committing to over the long haul; it takes years and years, if not forever, to embody with comfort. OUr 4-year old has already taken to it, so … Just DO IT, as they say.

So, in a nutshell: $30 well spent. Here is a sample:

Inspirational Ashtanga Yoga Photographs

Govinda Kai is a person I don’t know. Have a peek at these pics he took in India at the Mysore shala; home of Ashtanga Yoga.
Alan Little also has some nice pics that might help you to see your yoga practice in a broader context. These pics of a workshop in NYC are particularly thrilling to me. I mean it: they blow my mind!

I’m going to an Ashtanga workshop in Melbourne in October and can’t wait. The hosting yoga school is these clever folk.

Graeme and Leonie Northfield
are the instructors of this workshop. They’re coming to Hobart in early October and I really really recommend you trying to track them down to learn from them. They are truly wonderful teachers. I could rave about them for hours.

Nice.

Right. I’m finishing work now, going for a jog and doing some yoga before the wee one gets home; bugger this sitting at a desk!

Happy Days!
D