Regarding designating a pair to chain, or do anything else:
If we introduced the concept of corner positions as ECD uses the term, for within the
hands four (as opposed to contra corners which extends beyond it), you could just say
--corners chain. Whoever happened to be there would chain, whether gent, lady, lark,
raven, what have you. "On the second corner chain" from becket, would mean the
ladies chain, but from improper, facing across, second corners chain would be gents,
chaining from the right. And we could equally call first corners chain from either of
those positions with the opposite result. Getting people used to corners would mean you
could call any two person move without designating a gendered role. Every pairing can be
named: partner, neighbor, shadow, 1's, 2's, either corner, in short waves-centers
or ends, in long waves in-facers and out-facers. People might need to be more precise
about fractional things. This is not necessarily bad.
If we do as Michael has, still keeping role names, we need to be careful how we describe
the courtesy turn. He said 'gents pull by left then courtesy turn (the one they
meet)'. Often courtesy turn is described thus, as something done to another. I like
using the word 'with' to make it the more mutual movement it is. It might need
to be emphasized that the crosser is the one who moves forward and the receiver the one
who backs up.
First stab,
Andrea
Sent from my external brain
On Mar 23, 2017, at 3:16 PM, Roger Diggle
diggle(a)contrawise.net [trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com>
wrote:
Designating who does what in the figure: "????? Chain" ...
This is a subject that probably deserves its own thread - so
I'll start it.
On 3/20/17 at 10:27 PM, trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com
(Michael Barraclough michael(a)michaelbarraclough.com
[trad-dance-callers]) wrote:
On Monday, March 20, 2017 9:46:43 PM MST Dale
wrote:
The move at the beginning of B2 is usually called a "men's
chain" -- at least here in Saint Louis. It's not a common
move, but it's not unheard of.
I deliberately didn't call it a "men's chain", which it of
course is :) because I see that term used ambiguously as to
whether the chainee starts on the left or on the right of the
chainer; which hands the chainees take to start the chain; and
also who backs up in the courtesy turn.
Michael Barraclough
www.michaelbarraclough.com