A swordsman's tale

Friends, I have found my drug of choice.
It’s live steel combat.
On Sunday I was delayed by being on the church setup team and having to stay late. But as soon as I could get away, I tootled over to Minnehaha Park in Minneapolis, where the rest of the Vikings had already been set up for some time.
Minnehaha Park (home of Minnehaha Falls, immortalized by the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who never actually visited there) has a sort of dedicated service road along its length, punctuated by (inadequate) parking areas. Since the day was nice and the Norway Day festival was going on, I figured I wouldn’t get a nearby place, so I parked in about the first slot I saw.
This was a mistake. I’d forgotten how long that park is. I had already determined that the smartest way to get my armor to the camp site was to wear it (mail is much easier to wear than to carry). So I set off walking toward the festival area.
And walked. And walked.
I think I must have parked at least a half mile from the site. I passed many open parking spaces, but reckoning (inaccurately) how far I had yet to go against how far I’d come, I decided to trudge on.
I made it at last (today my feet are extremely sore from the pounding they took in my thin-soled Viking shoes). I was too tired to join in the fight that was starting just then, but I got in a while later.
They put me up against Eirik, son of Ragnar, an old hand at live steel.
I beat him. Twice.
I’m still entertaining the suspicion that Eirik threw the fights, just to encourage me.
In any case, the guys told me that I’m pretty good. I didn’t beat Ragnar Hairyfoot when I went up against him, of course. Ragnar is wily and old and a Special Forces veteran. But he told me, with a straight face, that I gave him one or two worried moments. Then again, Ragnar has been known to embellish a story.
Be that as it may, I came away tremendously bucked, as I generally do after live steel (I’ve had training before, and participated in a couple small battles, but had never done a one-on-one duel before). For a guy as geeky as I, who has never, ever been any good at any athletic activity of any kind, to suddenly find myself playing with the big kids in simulated Viking combat was tremendously affirming. It’s a common nerd fantasy – “I was born out of my proper time. If I’d been born in an earlier age, I’d have been a mighty warrior.”
It’s not true, of course, but now I can pretend it is.
I know what you’re saying. You’re saying, “He makes all these grandiose claims, but can he back it up with video documentation?
As it happens, I can. This Quicktime movie comes courtesy of the Viking Age Club & Society of the Sons of Norway. I am the guy with the red-and-blue shield on your left in the shield wall at the beginning. Note who is the Last Man Standing.
Fear my wrath.

0 thoughts on “A swordsman's tale”

  1. That death blow while the guy was toppling was not cricket! hee hee hee…

    That was cool. My boys enjoyed it. But I have a question… What was your Viking Name? C’mon, do tell!

  2. We always put them out of their misery. It’s the Viking Way, I guess.

    I’ve actually never used a Viking name (I commend you for knowing that Lars isn’t one). I’ve decided I’ll use “Halvdan” if it ever comes up, but it hasn’t so far.

  3. No commendation deserved! I just figured that you must have had a name other than your regular one…cause I didn’t believe that Ragnar was really christened thus! Halvdan… Hmmm. Well I’m married to a “Whole-Dan!” Ha ha ha ha!!!

    (feel free to slap me for that one! But my husband really is named Danny,so I couldn’t help it)

  4. I think we had eight down in Elk Horn, Iowa, when we trained with another group. We hope to have even more when we go back to Elk Horn in the fall.

  5. Lars, have you played paintball? I haven’t, but I always though I would enjoy it if the field or arena was a good one.

  6. “I think I must have parked at least a half mile from the site.” – I don’t know Lars; that doesn’t sound like much of a walk. Wasn’t it Dickens who walked 15-20 miles a day? (I’m personally hoping this is the secret to literary success.)

  7. Hey, I could have exaggerated if I’d chosen (and I didn’t measure the distance). You try a half mile on a hot day in 40 lbs. of armor. 😛

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