I have seen a few people using a modification of
"The Reunion" by Gene 
 Hubert as an introduction to the Hey.
 The original is:
 *The Reunion*-- Gene Hubert*Becket*
 *A1*Left Diagonal Ladies Chain
 Straight Across Ladies Chain
 *A2*Straight across Hey
 *B1*look for your partner in the next Hey -- P B&S
 *B2*Circle Left .75
 Pass Thru, Circle Right .75
 But if you make the A1 just a ladies chain over and back, then you can 
 then illustrate the Hey by pointing out that the ladies have just 
 walked the path of the next move.  At the same time, it's still an 
 interesting dance.  Note that the original is double progression, but 
 the modification is not.
 Jack
 On 2/19/2012 4:03 PM, Rickey Holt wrote:
  Hey all,
 Can you think of other dances that  meet all or most of the criteria 
 that
 have been listed in this thread, including Dan's, and that are generally
 good dances for beginners?
 Thanks for your suggestions,
 Rickey Holt,
 Fremont, NH
 -----Original Message-----
 From: callers-bounces(a)sharedweight.net
 [mailto:callers-bounces@sharedweight.net] On Behalf Of Dan Pearl
 Sent: Sunday, February 19, 2012 3:21 PM
 To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
 Subject: Re: [Callers] Heys for new dancers
 Yes, Flirtation Reel is a lovely dance, but there are a few things 
 about it
 which make it a bit less than ideal for dancers' first exposure to heys.
 First, the transition from the up-the-center to the hey provides no
 momentum/flow guidance about which shoulder to pass to start the 
 hey.  For
 the first hey dance, I'd prefer one with stronger flow at the moment of
 initiation.
 Second, the series of passes (NR, 2's L, Same sex R, 1's L, etc.) is not
 only different from most heys (which have same-sex in the center 
 [because
 they are equal dances]), but the series of passes seems to be a bit 
 harder
 to grasp in the same way that the differing roles of unequal dances 
 bumps up
 the complexity of the sequence a bit.
 For my money, a hey dance that satisfies my requirements is a 
 modified "Roll
 in the Hey". The original is:
 A1 circle left;  swing neighbour
 A2 circle left three quarters;  swing partner
 B1 long lines go forward and back; half ladies chain across
 B2 hey for four,  ladies pass right to start Lately, I have been 
 calling it
 A1 Dosido neighbor; swing neighbor.   This is much more forgiving 
 than the
 Hey/Circle (full) left combination.
 This dance features a Ladies Chain immediately before the hey, and the
 women's track is essentially the same as the hey. I use this 
 similarity when
 I walk through the dance.
 Dan
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net
 
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
 _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net
 
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
  _______________________________________________
 Callers mailing list
 Callers(a)sharedweight.net