Both "Momma Lou's Reel" by Gene Hubert and "Kimmswick Fix" by
Marilee
Standifer (hope I spelled that right) have that transition. Both are easy
and fun dances. I usually call "turn in place to new neighbors; circle
left..." I think the description of the hands sounds interesting.
Thanks
Dale
On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Dave Colestock
<contradancerdave(a)yahoo.com>wrote;wrote:
Jack,
Do you know which dance Bob called that had that transition? I would be
interested in getting that dance to see just what the moves are, and to add
to my repetoire. Thanks,
Dave Colestock
New Cumberland, PA
(near Harrisburg)
www.davecolestock.com
--- On Sun, 3/7/10, Laur <lcpgr(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Laur <lcpgr(a)yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Circle R -> New N Circle L
To: jamitch3(a)mindspring.com, "Caller's discussion list" <
callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Date: Sunday, March 7, 2010, 6:50 PM
Traveler's Welcome Jim Kitch
Gypsy 1 1/2 w (first) Ngh Then join hands in a short line - "ocean wave"
with the NEXT ngh, women in center
Balance the wave
Turn half by R, men turn half by L (Fast!)
Balance and Swg Partners
Circle L 3/4 and pass thru (back (!) Up/Down)
Swing original Ngh
R & L thru across
Left hand star
pg 20 To Live is to dance
Will send teaching tips in a minute
~~
~ I like long walks, especially when they are taken by people who annoy
me.~
~ Noel Coward~
~~
--- On Sun, 3/7/10, Jack Mitchell <jamitch3(a)mindspring.com> wrote:
From: Jack Mitchell <jamitch3(a)mindspring.com>
Subject: [Callers] Circle R -> New N Circle L
To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Date: Sunday, March 7, 2010, 6:11 PM
So...I was at a dance yesterday evening and Bob Dalsemer was calling. We
did a dance with a circle R, new N circle L progression, and Bob used a way
to teach it that was elegantly simple and effective, and that I had never
heard anyone else use.
After the circle R 1x, you're on the side with your neighbor, with your
partner across the set from you. Instruction was that you now have one hand
with your neighbor. Take that hand and give it to your partner. Face new
N. Circle L.
It took what (while still a really fun progression) can be a very
"disconnected" progression and reintroduced a connection to your partner
that took you through the progression, and also helped keep folks oriented
by turning with your partner while actually keeping (one or the other) hand
with them the whole time. Suspect that posts like this are the answer to
the "You know you're a caller geek when...." (you get excited about a
teaching tip in a dance). ;-)
On another note from the same dance....does anyone have Traveler's Welcome
by Jim Kitch? We did it last night, and I really enjoyed it, but I didn't
get a chance to stop to write it down until after the dance.
Jack
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