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
 
 
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