I understand an older figure was referred to as the Lizard's Walk (no reliable 
source for that).  Could this very different version be something like 
Buzzard's Walk or something like that?

We have a tradition in STLouis to dance Wizard's walk every NYE.  The original 
caller who established the tradition is no longer with us -but we keep doing it.

I might try this alternative this year.  I like parts of it but not sure it the 
B1 fits the music as well.  The original has that as a build up for the B2.  
Chain and circle may not have the same dynamic.

Same may be true for the A2 - I think the square thru fits the music so well - 
or I may just be used to it.

Worth a try.

Mac McKeever




On Saturday, October 25, 2025 at 06:25:49 PM CDT, Andrew Stout via Contra 
Callers <[email protected]> wrote: 





Hi Callers,

I have a gig on Oct 30, so naturally I'm plumbing the archives for 
Halloween-themed choices. There have been several threads on this, I'm not 
trying to start another one, I have two more specific questions:

1. Anyone got tips for teaching the Wizard's Walk figure? I've danced it 
(although not recently); I've never called it. (I'm interested in all tips, but 
FWIW I'm expecting a relatively experienced semi-monthly local crowd.)

2. The specific W'sW descendant I'm planning to use is Cis Hinkle's The WItches 
Way, which has the Wizard's Walk figure in A1. It seems to me that to better 
fit the original Wizard's Walk tune the dance should be "rotated" thus:

A1: (4,4) balance the ring (with Nbr1s); Petronella turn 1 place to R (no claps)
    (8) Partner swing
A2: (4,4) balance the ring; Petronella turn 1 place to R (no claps)
    (8) Neighbor1 swing
B1: (8) Robins chain (to Ptr)
    (6) circle RIGHT 3/4
    (2) Ones arch, twos dive [to meet next Nbrs)
B2: (16) Wizard's Walk:
    | (4) Nbr 2 mirror pass through along (ones split twos)
    | (4) Nbr 3 mirror pass through along (twos split ones)
    | (4) backing up Nbr 3 mirror pass through along (ones split twos)
    | (4) backing up Nbr 2 mirror pass through along (twos split ones)

Has anyone done that? Do y'all agree? (The original dance has the W.W. figure 
in B2.) I don't know if such a variant deserves its own name, but if so it 
seems like it should be called "Wayward Witches".

Cheers,
--Andrew Stout

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