I’m not sure “circulate” is a common enough move in contra that you have to worry about
using the call differently, though it is becoming more common. And correspondingly, I’d
say “partial circulate” will hardly be helpful at all. I think you could say “circulate to
a wave” the first couple of times, and then “circulate t’wave” as needed. (Teach it, of
course, with more words than that, and tell them you’re going to call it “circulate to a
wave.” Maybe point out during teaching that if you’re facing in you go to the wave, if
you’re facing out you turn and stay on the outside—that way you don’t have to call
“circulate to a ladies’ wave”/“circulate to a gents’ wave.")
Read Weaver
Jamaica Plain, MA
http://lcfd.org
On May 17, 2018, at 2:09 PM, Jack Mitchell via Callers
<callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
What would you call a circulate like this? Would it be a partial circulate? Or, in the
interest of not adding any more terminology, since only half of the people are going to
end up in a wave after each one, would it be better to just say "ladies take 4 steps
forward to a long wave of ladies, gents face in", etc?
A1 Balance Wave
Circulate (Gents Loop, ladies take 4 steps forward) to a long wave of ladies
Balance Wave of Ladies
Circulate (ladies walk forward and face in, gents take 4 steps forward) to a
long wave of gents
A2 Balance Wave of Gents
Gents step forward – N Sw
--
Jack Mitchell
Durham, NC