Very clever!  Each couple progresses clockwise each time through the  
dance, so this would be a perfect dance to do when the numbers of  
couples has dwindled. Thanks for sharing.
Linda Leslie
On May 15, 2010, at 12:37 AM, Richard Hart wrote:
  I saw Byron tonight and he gave me an ok to share his
dance here, so  
 here is Chasing the "L".
 *Chasing the “L”* - Byron Ricker “Quad” Becket
 A Quad Becket is a dance that can be done with just 4 couples, as no  
 one is ever out at the ends
 *A1:* On the L Diagonal, Right & Left Through;
 Ladies Chain Straight Across
 *A2:* Men Allemande L 1 ½ x (to partner)
 Gypsy with Partner
 *B1:* Hey for 4 (Women start with L sh)
 *B2:* Partner Balance & Swing
 Laur remarked on 5/13/2010 1:29 AM:
  That  would be great!  Hope you can share the
ones that work  well  
 with us,  with  his permission,  of course.
 At a dance we rarely have that  few  people left, but for an  
 informal gathering I'm always  looking for ways to keep people on  
 the floor.
 laur
 --- On Thu, 5/13/10, Richard Hart <rich(a)harts.mv.com> wrote:
 From: Richard Hart <rich(a)harts.mv.com>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Dance length
 To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Date: Thursday, May 13, 2010, 12:58 AM
 I usually consider 5 couple a minimum for a regular contra dance,  
 but triples like Money Musk require more people.
 A caller up here, Byron Ricker, has been writing a few dances that  
 he calls "quad beckets."  Quad becket dances are becket dances that  
 can be danced with 4 or more couples and that never leaves anyone  
 out (unless there are an odd number of couples). Many, but not all  
 becket dances work this way.  With just 4 couples left, I've  
 sometimes called a quad becket with some success.
 Rich.
 
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