I have a couple that you are welcome to call. Chris Page has written  
a nice one that perhaps he would share, too. Oh, and I don't know why  
when I paste from Word I get double spacing or how to fix it, so sorry!
King Bee Hey
Martha Wild
Duple improper         February 21, 2004
A1         Do-si-do neighbor
          Allemande right neighbor 1 ½
A2       Ricochet hey (men pass left shoulder, women push off)*
B1         Men pass left one more time, swing partner
B2         Men allemande left 1 ½
          Women join in behind partner for a left hands across star 1X
*The men dance the full hey, passing left shoulders in the middle.
^ On the men allemande left, the women have to let the men get around  
once and then as their partner passes they move in behind him to join  
the left hand star. A bit of a moving start on the part of the women  
helps.
The first ricochet hey I ever did was a dance called "Huntsville's  
Queen Bee Hey". The women do the hey, the men ricochet. So I called  
this one a King Bee Hey.
Then I decided to do a few "Worker Bee" heys:
Worker Bee Hey #1
Martha Wild
Duple improper         September 24, 2006
A1         Down the set four in line (1s inside)
          Turn as neighbor couples and return*, face center of the line^
A2         “Worker bee” hey@, 2s start passing right shoulder
B1         2s gypsy and swing, end swing facing up!
B2         Handy-hand allemande ~1 ½ times (2s step inside)
          1s swing and face down
* A little odd as the men are on the right of the women for the turn.
^ The line is not bent, all just turn to face center, 2s facing each  
other, 1s behind.
@ I thought it would be nice to do the push off of a “queen bee” hey  
with one’s own partner. In this case, the #2 couple does a full hey,  
passing right shoulders to start, while the #1 couple meets at the  
center and pushes off backwards in little counterclockwise circles.  
If the 1's adjust a little for the 2's while they swing so they are  
ready for the handy-hand allemande, this works well.
Worker Bee Hey #2
Martha Wild
Duple Improper         September 24, 2006
A1         Do-si-do neighbor
          Swing neighbor
A2         Four in line down the set
          Turn as couples, come back up
B1         Face in, “Worker Bee” hey, 1s start^
B2         1s gypsy and swing
^ Worker bee hey is as described above.
I like version 1 because both 1s and 2s get a partner swing. This is  
an easier version, but unequal.
On Dec 8, 2010, at 9:00 AM, callers-request(a)sharedweight.net wrote:
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 Today's Topics:
    1. Teaching a Ricochet Hey (John Sweeney)
    2. Re: Teaching a Ricochet Hey (Ron Nelson)
    3. Re: ricochet or push-back hey - Tapsalteerie (Lisa Greenleaf)
    4. Re: Teaching a Ricochet Hey (Martha Edwards)
    5. Re: Teaching a Ricochet Hey (Andrea Nettleton)
    6. Re: Ricochet Hey (John Sweeney)
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 Message: 1
 Date: Tue, 7 Dec 2010 17:43:13 -0000
 From: "John Sweeney" <info(a)contrafusion.co.uk>
 To: <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: [Callers] Teaching a Ricochet Hey
 Message-ID: <CA0CE9090DD943DB981F833BFF1A9940@JohnT400>
 Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="us-ascii"
 The key thing for the caller to understand is that when the two  
 dancers
 ricochet they take each other's place in the hey, and are now going
 backwards.
 This means that they must NOT just bounce back the way they came,  
 or to
 a neutral position on their own side - they have to follow the looping
 flow of the hey.
 I never actually explain that though.  I just tell them to bounce back
 at the opposite angle to the way they came in.  Describing it as a
 triangle usually helps. And one quick demo usually solves 90% of the
 problems.
 The other 10% of the problems come from people who bounce back and  
 then
 stop!  They are still part of the hey and have to keep moving.
 So instructions like these sometimes work: "As you come to the middle
 you will meet someone on a diagonal; bounce off that person and head
 backwards on the other diagonal, then move left* and come in again;  
 you
 are going around the same triangle over and over again."
 *or right, depends on the dance.
 Note: As you bounce you change direction by just under 90 degrees,  
 it is
 very easy to let that rotation continue and throw a couple of spins in
 :-)
             Happy dancing,
                         John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England   john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 &
 07802 940 574
 
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events, Instructional  
 DVDs and
 Interactive Maps
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Contra Dancing in Kent
 ------------------------------
 Message: 2
 Date: Tue, 7 Dec 2010 17:57:38 +0000
 From: Ron Nelson <callerman(a)hotmail.com>
 To: <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Teaching a Ricochet Hey
 Message-ID: <BAY158-W162F5D0B4F05A84D3CAA57B82C0(a)phx.gbl>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
 Very perceptive description John. It helped me considerably as I  
 prepare to teach this movement.
 Thanks,
 Ron Nelson
  From: info(a)contrafusion.co.uk
 To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
 Date: Tue, 7 Dec 2010 17:43:13 +0000
 Subject: [Callers] Teaching a Ricochet Hey
 The key thing for the caller to understand is that when the two  
 dancers
 ricochet they take each other's place in the hey, and are now going
 backwards.
 This means that they must NOT just bounce back the way they came,  
 or to
 a neutral position on their own side - they have to follow the  
 looping
 flow of the hey.
 I never actually explain that though. I just tell them to bounce back
 at the opposite angle to the way they came in. Describing it as a
 triangle usually helps. And one quick demo usually solves 90% of the
 problems.
 The other 10% of the problems come from people who bounce back and  
 then
 stop! They are still part of the hey and have to keep moving.
 So instructions like these sometimes work: "As you come to the middle
 you will meet someone on a diagonal; bounce off that person and head
 backwards on the other diagonal, then move left* and come in  
 again; you
 are going around the same triangle over and over again."
 *or right, depends on the dance.
 Note: As you bounce you change direction by just under 90 degrees,  
 it is
 very easy to let that rotation continue and throw a couple of  
 spins in
 :-)
 Happy dancing,
 John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 &
 07802 940 574
 
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events, Instructional  
 DVDs and
 Interactive Maps
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Contra Dancing in Kent
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net
 
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers   		 	   		
 ------------------------------
 Message: 3
 Date: Tue, 07 Dec 2010 12:58:42 -0500
 From: Lisa Greenleaf <laleaf(a)verizon.net>
 To: Caller's discussion list <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] ricochet or push-back hey - Tapsalteerie
 Message-ID: <9B6B880F-78F1-42C9-A29B-F4CBB2E9FC71(a)verizon.net>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
   Adam Carlson's Queen Bee 
 A little history here:  Adam was the first to take this dance  
 flourish and put it in a dance.  He called it the figure a Queen  
 Bee hey after a neighborhood in Seattle.  I liked the move but  
 wanted a name that reflected the action of the figure, so I called  
 it a ricochet hey  and wrote a dance with the same name; the dance  
 is a riff on Tony Parkes' Flirtation Reel.
 My original dance had alternating 1s and 2s, but that worked only  
 with experienced or up-for-anything crowds.  I don't call this any  
 more, as other folks have written much better dances!
 Ricochet Hey	Duple Improper
 A1 (8) Down 4 in line , 1s in middle, turn alone	(8) Up, face N (1s  
 BTB in middle)	
 A2 (16) Passing Neighbor R,  1s whole hey, 2s Ricochet		
 B1 (16) B&S N		
 B2 (8) For & Back	 (8) 1s Sw, face down		
 	
 Lisa Greenleaf
 ------------------------------
 Message: 4
 Date: Tue, 7 Dec 2010 15:32:52 -0600
 From: Martha Edwards <meedwards(a)westendweb.com>
 To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Teaching a Ricochet Hey
 Message-ID:
 	<AANLkTikPqPe2xhMfu3fuLO2ckOyeERGBpnSi71ThgRpm(a)mail.gmail.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
 I find that if it's a regular hey (ladies start by the right  
 shoulder) a
 ricochet hey feels a bit like a reverse Mad Robin - walking a sort  
 of dosido
 track while facing across - adding, of course, the push-off...
 M
 E
 On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 11:43 AM, John Sweeney  
 <info(a)contrafusion.co.uk>wrote;wrote:
  The key thing for the caller to understand is
that when the two  
 dancers
 ricochet they take each other's place in the hey, and are now going
 backwards.
 This means that they must NOT just bounce back the way they came,  
 or to
 a neutral position on their own side - they have to follow the  
 looping
 flow of the hey.
 I never actually explain that though.  I just tell them to bounce  
 back
 at the opposite angle to the way they came in.  Describing it as a
 triangle usually helps. And one quick demo usually solves 90% of the
 problems.
 The other 10% of the problems come from people who bounce back and  
 then
 stop!  They are still part of the hey and have to keep moving.
 So instructions like these sometimes work: "As you come to the middle
 you will meet someone on a diagonal; bounce off that person and head
 backwards on the other diagonal, then move left* and come in  
 again; you
 are going around the same triangle over and over again."
 *or right, depends on the dance.
 Note: As you bounce you change direction by just under 90 degrees,  
 it is
 very easy to let that rotation continue and throw a couple of  
 spins in
 :-)
            Happy dancing,
                        John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England   john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 &
 07802 940 574
 
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events, Instructional  
 DVDs and
 Interactive Maps
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Contra Dancing in Kent
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net
 
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
 
 -- 
 For the good are always the merry,
 Save by an evil chance,
 And the merry love the fiddle
 And the merry love to dance. ~ William Butler Yeats
 ------------------------------
 Message: 5
 Date: Tue, 07 Dec 2010 18:09:34 -0500
 From: Andrea Nettleton <twirly-girl(a)bellsouth.net>
 To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Teaching a Ricochet Hey
 Message-ID: <4CFEBEAE.4050903(a)bellsouth.net>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
 I teach a ricochet hey like a slice of pizza.  You go in up the  
 side of
 the slice, angle back out down the other side of the slice, and curve
 back to place along the crust.  The other dancers dance the crust  
 first
 then either cross, or in a double ricochet hey, go into the center and
 back out along the sides of the slice of pizza. Worked when I  
 taught my
 dance, Mambo, to my skit cast for West Side Contra.  I wrote a move
 which I believe is novel, which I called a Half Ricochet Allemande  
 Hey.
 It actually returns all participants to their original places,  
 which are
 already progressed, but gets them moving in the right direction.   
 In it,
 the ladies travel the pizza slice as described above, but the  
 gents, who
 are across the set from their partners, travel the crust first, and
 instead of passing by the right to cross over, continue the circle  
 they
 began by allemande-ing back to place and on to meet their new  
 neighbor.
 It has a beautiful  flow, the circle folding in on itself like waves
 tumbling over one another in the ocean.  Here is the dance, not as we
 danced it in the skit, which we had to do shifted forward a half  
 phrase
 to accommodate the hits in the music, but as you would teach it to a
 hall of dancers, but probably not one full of newbies.  :-)
 MAMBO!   (Improper)
 A1 Partners face and Mad Robin
       Circle L 1x
 A2 Balance the ring, Spin R 1 place (Petronella)
       Partner Swing
 B1 R & L Through
       Ladies Chain
 B2 1/2 Ricochet Allemande Hey [OR California Roll] *See below
       New Nbr. Gypsy
 *In a 1/2 Ricochet Allemande Hey, the Ladies, who are coming out of  
 the
 Courtesy Turn following the Ladies Chain, go into the center, ricochet
 (push one another back and to the left.)  They arrive at their Nbr's
 place turn and curve out and towards their starting place, then beyond
 for the gypsy.  The Gents curve back and to the right then into the
 center for an Allemande L (some would call it a 1/2, some 3/4, I say
 till they are back where they began the 'Hey'), and continue past the
 starting place to Gypsy a New Nbr. to Gypsy.  It isn't exactly a Hey,
 though that's where I started with the move.  It does have a nice
 folding quality to it and spits everyone out moving toward the New  
 Nbr.
 I think of the Ladies as doing a slice of pizza, making the tasty  
 point
 first, ending with the crust, while the Gents do a whole pie, starting
 with the same bit of crust the Ladies will later do.  Tasty for all.
 To do the California Roll in this dance: when the Ladies come out of
 said Courtesy Turn, all free up their hands and face into their  
 original
 hands four as they would if they circled,  with Partners standing  
 across
 the set.  Partners take the handy hand, which is the Lady's R, the
 Gent's L, lift joined hands, the lady curls in toward her partner and
 walks under while he walks past, to swap, reverse direction, and face
 New Nbrs.  Not yet proper, they immediately do a Roll Away with a Half
 Sashay to swap places but continue to face the New Neighbors, whom  
 they
 might then Gypsy.  I used the move to end the dance.  It gives very
 elastic and satisfying connection with the partner for such a purpose,
 but could also function as a perfectly good progression.  It is less
 good in that capacity for this dance because the first New Nbr.
 interaction is a forward moving one.  It might be more properly  
 termed a
 Nevada Roll due to the starting positions, but who can resist  
 something
 as funny and catchy as a California Roll?
 On 12/7/2010 4:32 PM, Martha Edwards wrote:
  I find that if it's a regular hey (ladies
start by the right  
 shoulder) a
 ricochet hey feels a bit like a reverse Mad Robin - walking a sort  
 of dosido
 track while facing across - adding, of course, the push-off...
 M
 E
 On Tue, Dec 7, 2010 at 11:43 AM, John  
 Sweeney<info(a)contrafusion.co.uk>wrote;wrote:
  The key thing for the caller to understand is
that when the two  
 dancers
 ricochet they take each other's place in the hey, and are now going
 backwards.
 This means that they must NOT just bounce back the way they came,  
 or to
 a neutral position on their own side - they have to follow the  
 looping
 flow of the hey.
 I never actually explain that though.  I just tell them to bounce  
 back
 at the opposite angle to the way they came in.  Describing it as a
 triangle usually helps. And one quick demo usually solves 90% of the
 problems.
 The other 10% of the problems come from people who bounce back  
 and then
 stop!  They are still part of the hey and have to keep moving.
 So instructions like these sometimes work: "As you come to the  
 middle
 you will meet someone on a diagonal; bounce off that person and head
 backwards on the other diagonal, then move left* and come in  
 again; you
 are going around the same triangle over and over again."
 *or right, depends on the dance.
 Note: As you bounce you change direction by just under 90  
 degrees, it is
 very easy to let that rotation continue and throw a couple of  
 spins in
 :-)
             Happy dancing,
                         John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England   john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362&
 07802 940 574
 
http://www.modernjive.com for Modern Jive Events, Instructional  
 DVDs and
 Interactive Maps
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Contra Dancing in Kent
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net
 
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
 
 ------------------------------
 Message: 6
 Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 14:49:23 -0000
 From: "John Sweeney" <info(a)contrafusion.co.uk>
 To: <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Ricochet Hey
 Message-ID: <58F0164537EA4103B3909D045E0477C1@JohnT400>
 Content-Type: text/plain;	charset="us-ascii"
 The ones I know are:
 Ricochet Hey #1 (no idea who wrote it, sorry)
 Contra; Improper
 Start in lines of four facing down, #1s in the middle
 A1:	Down the Hall in Lines of Four; Turn Alone
 	Up the Hall in Lines of Four; #1s face #2s
 A2:	Full Hey: normal Hey for #1s; Ricochet Hey for #2s
 B1:	Neighbour Balance & Swing
 B2:	Long Lines Forward & Back
 	#1s Swing - end facing down to pick up next #2s
 Rolling Hey (by Charley Harvey)
 Contra; Improper
 A1:	Circle Left; Neighbor Swing
 A2:	Circle Left 3/4; Partner Swing
 B1:	Star Right; Ladies' Chain
 B2:	Ricochet Hey for all - start with Ladies into the centre on a
 slight Right diagonal; push back on a slight Left diagonal, then  
 step to
 the right; Men do the same, starting with the step to the right;  
 REPEAT)
 - so no-one ever crosses the set during the Hey.
 	Ladies keep moving to the right into a new circle.  Men turn to
 their left out of the last push into a new circle.
             Happy dancing,
                         John
 John Sweeney, Dancer, England   john(a)modernjive.com 01233 625 362 &
 07802 940 574
 
http://www.contrafusion.co.uk for Contra Dancing in Kent
 ------------------------------
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 End of Callers Digest, Vol 76, Issue 13
 ***************************************