We went a long way in solving that problem here in St Louis, MO, by
holding a series of "Honking Parties," where each caller was given 3
minutes to teach a dance (okay, maybe another 3 to teach a favorite move,
or a pet peeve move). If they went over the 3 minutes, anyone in the room
could walk over to our lovely taxi horn, which beautiful to look at but
horrible to hear, and honk the caller, who then had to stop calling and
start the dance, with no more teaching.
At first, people were sure they couldn't manage it, but we just said "teach
simpler dances." Everyone, thankfully, thought the honking was funny rather
than offensive, and once people got used to the idea, they found they could
call even more complicated dances efficiently, and we hardly ever suffered
those interminable 20-minute walkthroughs we so often had.
That which is measured, improves.
Martha
E
On Mon, Jan 2, 2017 at 7:32 AM, Chris J Brady chrisjbrady(a)yahoo.com
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
That is - callers who talk too much .... in explaining
how a dance goes.
--
We should consider every day lost
on which we have not danced at least once. ~ Nietszche