When I was at Farm & Wilderness in the 1960s, we had several favorite squares - 
though we typically didn't work up to them until mid-summer, and I wouldn't use 
most of them at a one-nighter: (singing) Alabama Jubilee, Just Because, My 
Little Girl, (patter) Swing Like Thunder aka The Basket, Texas Star, Grapevine 
Twist.

One F&W favorite that I do use at one-nighters is the full version of Duck for 
the Oyster. It takes a bit of teaching, so I use it in the middle of the 
evening, after I've gained the group's confidence. Unlike many squares, it's 
totally gender-free. Active couple lead right and circle four halfway around, 
then "Duck for the oyster": Active couple ducks under, then changes their mind. 
"Dig for the clam": Hosting couple does the same. "Duck through the hole in the 
old tin can": Active couple ducks under, rolls back to back, raises their 
joined hands, pulls the hosting couple under, then the hosting couple unwinds. 
Hosting couple should keep their joined hands in front of their faces while 
being pulled through, rather than unwinding too soon. Simpler version (if lots 
of kids, therefore big height differences): Active couple ducks under, drops 
partner's hand while keeping neighbor's hand, goes around the outside, forcing 
hosting couple to turn under own arms, and re-forms the circle. In either 
version, end with active couple ducking through and going to next couple.

My all-time favorite ONS square, good for almost any group, is Kitchen Lancers 
(a rough-and-ready version of the fifth figure of the Lancers Quadrille):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oC1zlybRZzs
The main figure begins at 0:35. Note that the figure begins with the active 
couple promenading, so avoid ending any breaks with a promenade.
The dance is gender-free except for the single file bit, where I often call 
"Right hand people go round," then "Left hand people go."
At 1:08, with most ONS groups, instead of "Active couple through the middle, 
others follow, separate to lines, forward & back, swing partner to place," I 
usually call "Face your partner, back away, forward again and swing partner to 
place - all forward & back twice." The video is from Dare To Be Square 2011, 
where all the dancers were experienced, so I called a version closer to the 
original ballroom Lancers.

Tony Parkes
Billerica, Massachusetts, USA


From: Charles Abell via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, February 21, 2020 9:12 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Callers] Re: square dances for teens

Hey all, What are your favorite square dances for older teenagers in a 
one-night-stand setting? These could be Southern, New England, or other. 
Looking for a few new options...

Less interested in non-squares (circles, mixers, etc.), but if you have 
something you really like in one of those categories, feel free to share it.

Thanks!


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