Dancers need to behave as follows at the ends:
(a) When out at end with partner, after your swing,  line up so the woman can 
eventually chain back in on the left diagonal.
(b) When out at the end with a non-partner (which occurs after the diagonal 
chain), face back into the set with the man on the right and woman on the left 
(which opposite to the more usual practice)..

Sufficiently experienced dancers, or the less experienced in the presence of a 
more experienced dancer,  will, without injury to their dance psyche, either  
figure all this out and/or work/muddle through it.
This dance will always have some temporarily confused, but quickly recovering, 
dancers at the ends. ***Don't worry about it.***   The only way to teach/warn 
the dancers about the end effects is to announce  (a) and (b) as stated above, 
although it will probably not help as much as you are hoping for.
If the crowd's collective experience is such that the confusion might propagate 
more than three or four couples from the ends, omit  the dance  from the 
evening's program.
 
Michael Fuerst      802 N Broadway      Urbana IL 61801       217-239-5844
Links to photos of many of my drawings and paintings are at 
www.ArtComesFuerst.com


________________________________
 From: Rickey Holt <[email protected]>
To: 'Caller's discussion list' <[email protected]> 
Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2012 6:54 PM
Subject: [Callers] Have you called Double Boomerang by Gene Hubert?
 
Hi,
If you have called Gene Hubert's wonderful dance "Double Boomerang", I have
2 questions for you about end effects.  The dance is below.
When the ladies chain on the left diagonal there are ladies at each end who
cannot do that as there is no one there.  That's fine. I am used to that.
My questions are not about that.
They are:
    (1) When a couple reaches an end ( I have only been able to watch
the top), where do they wait and for how long.  
.    The woman needs to get into position for the ladies chain on the
diagonal, which I think means that she needs to cross over as she waits for
that.  The man also needs to cross over and stand next to her at that point.

.    When however the second pass through is done (in B1), both the man
and the woman who are waiting out at that point need to be in position to
balance and swing with their partners (B2), which I think means that they
need to be in different lines from each other. 
.    Finally, as it is a Becket, at the end of the partner swing you and
your partner need to be together on the same side but - which side and how
do you get there.

(2) How do you teach all of this.

Really good dancers seem to understand where they need to be and get there,
but even experienced dancers have been having trouble with this and it has
thrown them.
Do you know the dance?
Can you help?
Thanks,
Rickey Holt, Fremont, NH

Here is the dance if you have forgotten it:
DOUBLE BOOMERANG, Gene Hubert (Becket)
A1    Gents Allemande Left (1 1/2)
    Neighbor Swing
A2    ON THE LEFT DIAGONAL, Ladies chain
    Long Lines Forward and Back
B1    Pass through straight across the set and turn alone.
    Circle Left all of the way around
    Up and down the set pass through 
B2     Partner Balance and Swing





_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers

Reply via email to