Ron Buchanan was the first person I saw medley a square into a contra. I don't remember him doing the reverse, but he may have.

Going from square into contra is actually pretty easy. Sides chain, get the heads in between the sides (say, heads DSD opposite, current corner DSD), then go down the hall four in line. Turn alone, come back up, CL 3 places, partner swing. poof.

I haven't found a method for smoothly going from contra to a square on the fly. The best I've done is Circle left, now pause, and change into hands eight. Then circle left, open up. Then identify the square - and have sides chain across.

Seth Tepfer, MBA, CSM, PMP (he, him, his)

Senior IT Manager, Emory Primate Center

From: Jeff Kaufman via Contra Callers <contracallers@lists.sharedweight.net>
Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2023 8:12 AM
To: Contra Callers <contracallers@sharedweight.net>
Subject: [External] [Callers] Putting a square in a contra medley
 
"if we had more time we'd throw in a square"

The contra dance medley at NEFFA is normally six dances, each six times through (well, the last one is five or seven).  I was thinking about what you'd need to do if you actually wanted to include a square...

The main problem is that you need to switch the dancers from groups of four to groups of eight, and there isn't really a great way to do this.  In computer science speak the issue is that it takes time linear in the number of dancers.  But maybe you could have the top couple sashay down from the top, and everyone takes hands eight as they pass, which is fast enough even in a long hall that it's ok (~16 beats, and you adjust the time by figuring out how much intro to do on the square)?  And then tell anyone left out at the bottom to square up?

(Going back into contra lines from aligned squares should be easier: side couples circle left three quarters and twirl to swap, lines at the sides, etc)

Would this work?

Jeff