I haven't actually had a chance to road test this (and my thanks, by the  
way, to Bob Isaacs, who was his usual gracious and helpful self when I asked 
him  to look at it before I posted it). James is correct that the opposite 
sex  person one passes in stepping into the wave is the same person both 
times. If  I'm L1, my current neighbor -- M2 -- passes me by the right shoulder 
and is  facing the same direction as I face in the first wave.  After the 
swing, M2  is still across from me (with his shadow on his right). He passes 
me again by  the right shoulder and is facing the same direction in the 
second wave as  well.  (So it's a little like the progression up and down the 
line in  Flapjack Express -- you travel away from your partner in parallel with 
your  current opposite sex neighbor, come back in parallel with that 
neighbor, and  each of you finds your respective partner for a swing.)  I do 
think 
(from a  safety standpoint) that it's a good idea to keep the couples out 
of the center  of the set during the short swing -- we've all had the 
experience of the  joined-hands-swing-bonk, I assume -- and my "make the ladies 
come to you"  instruction really had that purpose in mind.

If anybody else calls this, I would love to know how it went. I wrote  it 
as a smooth "cool down" dance after something particularly vigorous --  hence 
the name. I think reels would suit, with an absolutely identical and  
slightly bouncy A1 and 2, and a very smooth B1-2? It would have a very  
different 
feel with jigs, I think, but I hope to try it both ways.

April Blum

In a message dated 2/22/2013 12:00:46 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Today's  Topics:

1. Re: Does this dance already exist? (Michael  Barraclough)
2. Re: Does this dance already exist? (James  Saxe)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message:  1
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2013 12:42:41 -0500
From: Michael Barraclough  <[email protected]>
To: Caller's discussion list  <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Does this dance  already exist?
Message-ID:  <1361468561.2881.9.camel@The-Beast>
Content-Type: text/plain;  charset="UTF-8"

I called this in Baltimore last night (? world  premier).

It is a good dance but it is ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL to ensure  that the men
do not move from where they are in the swings in A1/A2.   I taught it
emphasizing this and called it thus.  However, as I  reduced my calling,
so the men started moving.  The result is that the  positions move and
couples don't know who the opposite couple is with  ultimate chaos as odd
couples get left out in the middle of the  dance.  I stopped the dance,
re-emphasized the need for the men to  stay put and we were just fine
when they heeded the advice!

Michael  Barraclough
www.michaelbarraclough.com

On Mon, 2013-02-18 at 17:10  -0500, [email protected] wrote:
> Wrote this one on my way back from  calling Norfolk.
>  
> Slow  M'Ocean  Becket
>  
> A1  Pass thru to an  Ocean Wave (Ps are facing in opposite directions).  
> Balance  forward and back. Swing your SHADOW (who is facing you in the 
next   
> wave). (Gents, make the ladies come to you.) End facing across.  
> A2  Pass thru to an Ocean Wave. Balance F/B -- swing your  Partner, who 
is  
> facing you in the next wave. End facing your  original Ns. 
> B1 Ladies  chain to your N.  Ladies allemande  R 1.5 (continue to hold Rt 
hands)
> B2 Ladies pick up your partner,  star promenade across with a  butterfly 
> whirl (to the lady's  side).  Promenade across (to gent's side),  with 
ladies 
>  passing RIGHT shoulders, and curl RIGHT to face the next neighbor,  
ready  to 
> pass the Ocean. 
>  
> I can't think of another  dance that starts this way -- anybody?  
>  
> April  Blum
> _______________________________________________
> Callers  mailing list
> [email protected]
>  http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
-----------------------------
Message:  2
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2013 18:23:30 -0800
From: James Saxe  <[email protected]>
To: Caller's discussion list  <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Does this dance  already exist?
Message-ID:  <[email protected]>
Content-Type:  text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed; delsp=yes

I've never  called "Slow M'Ocean", but from diagramming it on paper it 
seems to me that  the A1/A2 should work perfectly well (and leave dancers back 
in their original  starting positions at the end of A2) if men and women 
advance EQUALLY to get  into the swings.  In this case, the "Pass thru to an 
Ocean Wave" actions  in A2 will have everyone passing the same opposite-sex 
neighbor as in A1 (but  the same-sex neighbors will be different for both men 
and women).  In  Michael's interpretation, if I understand it correctly, the 
Ocean Waves have  the same pairs of men in A2 as in A1.  I suspect very s
trongly that my  interpretation is the one the author (April Blum) intended, 
but I invite her  to speak for herself on the matter.

The progression in B2 where couples  pass by W's R shoulder and loop R 
(relative to out-facing direction, i.e.,  clockwise around a big oval) is 
rather 
unusual and is the part that I'd expect  to give the most difficulty.
--Jim______________________________________________
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End  of Callers Digest, Vol 102, Issue  17
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