Hmm. Not a fan of this way of calling heys—not really a fan of called heys at 
all. There’s too much going on at once: I have to figure out (e.g., with me a 
raven) in quick succession: now I’m being a raven, now I’m being a neighbor, 
now I’m not a lark so I guess I don’t do anything, now I’m being a partner, now 
I’m being a raven...

I’ve concluded that a quicker version of what I do in a beginners’ workshop 
works fine as a demo on the dance floor: find 3 others who can hey, plus me. I 
walk and explain what I’m doing (ideally with quiet music behind me): “right in 
the middle, left on the end, right with no one, left on the end, right in the 
middle, left on the end, right with no one, and I’m home”: the rhythm of what 
I’m saying conveys the timing, “right with no one” is memorable for explaining 
how you can think of it as R-L-R-L-R-L-R, and “right with no one” explains the 
“big loop” timing. Have everyone do it, then demo it again, pointing out that 
the lark is a couple beats behind because they start by taking a couple beats 
to move over to the right while the raven moves in—but you really don’t need to 
have them repeat doing it. There’s also no need to re-demo a left-shoulder hey: 
people won’t even notice that it’s different from what they’ve already learned.

Read Weaver
Jamaica Plain, MA
http://lcfd.org

> On Feb 28, 2020, at 6:14 AM, Katherine Kitching via Contra Callers 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> hello - first time posting to this list so i'm sorry if I do it wrong (looked 
> in archives and couldn't see obvious answer)
> 
>  I am going to teach and call my first dance with a hey this Saturday.. (ie 
> tomorrow)
> 
> our group takes things slow so i'd like to cue every interaction for the 
> first few times, as our previous caller did.... I don't know how common this 
> is but our previous caller would actually say--
> 
>  ravens pass right
> neighbours pass left
> larks pass right
> partners left
> ravens pass right
> neighbours pass left
> larks pass right 
>  partner balance and swing
> 
> I'm wondering if someone can clarify for me about delivering the calls for 
> this hey....normally of course I deliver instructions so the last bit of 
> instruction ends on the beat prior to the figure starting.
> 
> But in the case of the Hey, if I remember correctly the caller actually 
> called out  the actions *as* they were happening.... 
> 
> Am I remembering correctly and if so is this the best approach?
> 
> In essence-- do I start by calling "ravens pass right" just before they do 
> it, or while they are doing it?
> 
> thanks muchly :)
> 
> Katherine Kitching in Hfx NS Canada 
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