Along the same lines as "go where you're needed", I often tell dancers at some 
point during the evening, sometimes even at a "beginners' workshop", "If you 
don't know what you're doing and someone comes towards you and looks like they 
DO know what they're doing (pardon changing person with the pronouns),.. GO 
WITH THAT". It brings a smile and dancers seem to remember it. This, of course, 
is apropos when not specifically talking about end effects.

bill (in Maine about to head out to 8 days at Maine Fiddle camp - woo woo!)
________________________________
From: K P via Contra Callers <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2023 1:45 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [Callers] Re: Help with end effects for five dances

Hi Em,

Beneficial Tradition is great fun, but I'd suggest is best left for a crowd 
that has successfully dealt with end effects with minimal guidance. I'm not 
sure the end effects are, in any event, much more difficult than navigating the 
B2 crosses(?). That, to my mind, is a question of familiarity with unusual 
orientations, which comes from contra experience and/or an a priori natural 
spatial awareness and a firm sense of right and left!‹

ADPD, as I recall, is pretty easy and, as you say, needs the warning -- as with 
any multi-progression, or extra-minor set daliance, dance -- that you need to 
be aware at the ends and, at its simplest, go where you're needed!

Often forgotten, as well, is to provide guidance to the non "out" dancers to 
self-recover when the "out" dancer is not there when/where needed!  :)

Bonne chance!
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