Barb

This dance sounds really cool but I need it written out for me step by step to 
visualize it better.  Could you send me your version and how you teach the 
dance?  Would love to learn it and use it down the road at one of my gigs.  
Thanks so much.

Barbara Goldstein
Springfield, NJ



-----Original Message-----
From: barb kirchner <[email protected]>
To: callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Thu, Dec 8, 2011 10:10 pm
Subject: Re: [Callers] celtic hey



 call this fairly regularly and know a couple of others who also do 
ccasionally.  i haven't had much trouble teaching the celtic hey.  i find that 
f i tell them it's easy and they can do it, they usually will.

 have a different conceptual vision of it than described below.  everybody 
eeds to find their own vision so they can teach it well.   and of course, if 
ou have a chance to do it more often, it becomes easier for both caller and 
ancers.
 
> From: [email protected]
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Thu, 8 Dec 2011 20:21:37 -0600
 Subject: Re: [Callers] celtic hey
 
 Tropical Gentleman is sooo cool - but hard to teach.
 
 -----Original Message-----
 From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
n Behalf Of Chris Page
 Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2011 7:34 PM
 To: Caller's discussion list
 Subject: Re: [Callers] celtic hey
 
 On Thu, Dec 8, 2011 at 5:23 PM, Tom Hinds <[email protected]> wrote:
 > Could someone tell me what a celtic hey is?  Are there any  contras
 > containing a celtic hey?_______________________________________________
 
 
 There's maybe only two or three dances with this figure. Best known is
 one by Kathy Anderson -- I think it's "The Tropical Gentleman."
 
 Only one on the web I know of is the since-deprecated "Knit the Knot":
 
http://web.archive.org/web/20080226231928/http://www.richgoss.com/rgdancecomp.html
 
 Conceptual version of it is a hey on two axes, or two spin the tops
 without hands.
 
 In detail, starting in a wave of four, gypsy right half way on the
 side. Then centers gypsy left 3/4 while others orbit clockwise 1/4.
 Then in the middle all gypsy right half original person. New centers
 gypsy left 3/4 while new ends orbit clockwise 1/4. And that's how the
 contra dancer gets to the other side, in about twelve+ beats. (Less or
 more.)
 
 Sometimes the first gypsy is replaced by a pull by. I presume there's
 also a mirror image version of it.
 
 It's not a move I care for, personally. (Complexity-wise and
 space-wise.) But there are others who do.
 
 -Chris Page
 San Diego
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