Whew, If I had to cancel all the gigs I had that had sticky, or otherwise less 
than optimum dance floors, I'd lose half my work! Outdoor gigs on the grass 
(often sloping or uneven or with holes) or on weddings on rented "dance 
floors", indoor school (or other) gigs on super sticky polyurethane gym floors 
sometimes wood on cement, church hall or other "local venue" dances on 
linoleum/concrete floors, or indoor-outdoor carpet, etc etc etc.. In these 
cases, (and I do so many of them I don't even think about it much any more,) I 
just have to adjust the dancing to the venue. true, these dances are mostly 
family/community type affairs, so they don't last that long, run at a slower 
pace and the choreography isn't that difficult!
 
I agree that it's best not to "mess with someone's floor" certainly not without 
permission!! They are often very proprietorial about their floors, especially 
schools! The sad thing is a lot of venues think a "shiny floor" is the best 
floor.. the finish the heck out of them with shiny stuff (polyurethane 
normally) and this is almost always sticky when it's humid. It also comes off 
when danced on and covers everything with white power (nice having it stuck in 
your nose too!).. But unless we OWN the venues, and that is happening in some 
places, (Guiding Star Grange, Capitol City Grange for two) all we can do is try 
to educate the venue owners. This is a long process for sure..
 
Blah blah, what am I saying here?? I guess I am saying, "it ain't that easy" 
and there isn't one solution that fits all the possible situations. My way of 
dealing as a dancer is to "take it easy" (less twirls and flourishes maybe) or 
in extreme cases (and this is bad for sure) to stay away.. and as a programmer, 
more forgiving choreography..
 
Finally, there has been a lot written about finish on dance floors, I'm sure 
someone will point us all to the correct archive again. Stan Fowler did a lot 
of work on this for Glen Echo and it's written down somewhere.. Others have 
done work at the above mentioned venues. BUT this doesn't help us at a one 
night stand or at a venue where everything else might be just fine (acoustics, 
stage, parking, rent) but where the owners have their own idea about the 
floor.. I will be interested to see what more people have to say about this!
 
bill
 
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 20 Jul 2015 15:28:49 -0400
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Callers] sticky floors
From: [email protected]

I don't think you should *ever* “put up with” a super-sticky floor.  It damages 
dancers' knees and ankles.  If the floor is too sticky to dance on, and the 
venue isn't allowing any options for fixing it, cancel the dance.
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 3:21 PM, Lindsey Dono via Callers 
<[email protected]> wrote:
Thoughts from the organizational perspective:
Be very, very careful about adding anything to any floor you don't own! A 
number of dances have lost their venues over issues such as this. Question: is 
this floor chronically sticky, or newly so? My generic plan of action would go 
something along these lines:
1. Put up with the sticky floor for the one evening (question for all: What are 
good dances for a slow floor? I'm assuming heys and whole-set promenades would 
work better than Petronella/Rory O'More figures). If you're at the hall early 
enough, you can try mopping particularly awful spots with JUST water. Unless 
you own the hall or have checked in with the owners in advance, probably best 
to avoid adding anything to the floor.
2. Immediately contact the owner/rental coordinator for your hall, and let them 
know about the sticky floor. Try to find out why the floor is not danceable 
(spills, new finish, humidity...) and find a short-term solution (mopping, 
adding a tiny bit of dance floor powdered wax, etc). One time, our hall was 
used the night prior for a party, and sugary drinks had been spilled 
everywhere! This wasn't the norm and the owners were apologetic. They put a lot 
of effort into cleaning up, and there haven't been issues since.
3. Make long-term plans for a danceable floor. A local grange coordinated with 
the contra community on the best way to refinish the floor. We faced a rather 
pungent month of dancing, but afterwards, the floor was excellent.
4. If the hall is unable or unwilling to work with you regarding the sticky 
floor, probably best to start looking for a new venue. This certainly isn't a 
pretty scenario, but the lousy floor will drive down attendance, and adding 
anything to the floor without permission will certainly put you in trouble with 
the owners.
Lindsey
        From: Perry Shafran via Callers <[email protected]>
 To: Jack Mitchell <[email protected]>; Mary Collins 
<[email protected]>; "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]> 
 Sent: Monday, July 20, 2015 11:55 AM
 Subject: Re: [Callers] sticky floors
   
I was trying to figure out which was the right one - one is good to make it 
less sticky and the other makes it more gummy and a lot worse.  Could have 
sworn it was cornmeal.  I'm not the one who usually does it but I think that 
the people who run our dance use the right thing.  Perry  

      From: Jack Mitchell <[email protected]> To: Perry Shafran 
<[email protected]>; Mary Collins <[email protected]>; 
[email protected]  Sent: Monday, July 20, 2015 2:52 PM Subject: 
Re: [Callers] sticky floors   Not cornmeal - corn starch.  Cornmeal would 
likely scratch the floor!Sent from Outlook
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 11:43 AM -0700, "Perry Shafran via Callers" 
<[email protected]> wrote:








Generally cornmeal is used to make the floor less sticky.  But be forewarned - 
don't use too much of it or else you'll have a new problem of the floor being 
too slippery.  Also try to distribute it evenly so you don't have any sticky 
spots remaining.  Perry        From: Mary Collins via Callers 
<[email protected]> To: [email protected]  Sent: 
Monday, July 20, 2015 2:36 PM Subject: [Callers] sticky floors   Has anyone 
experienced issues with their wooden dance floors becoming sticky during humid 
weather?  If so, what if anything has been done to alleviate the 
problem?thanks. Mary C. - Buffalo-- “Life is not about waiting for the storms 
to pass ... it's about learning to dance in the rain!” ~ Unknown
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