Dear Chip,
A similar dance was written by me, for very much the same reason. I wrote it in 1991. Independently, David Smukler wrote the same dance a few years later. Here it is for you:
Corner Triplet
by Linda Leslie     Proper

A1 (The lady will be on the left of her partner) Actives down the center
     Turn alone, return, Cast off with same role neighbor #2
A2  Contra corners
B1  Actives Balance & Swing
B2 (Face up) Separate and go through the sides (easier version)
     Or
      Ones up the center to the top, separate, go down the outside
      Lines of three forward & back

Linda


On Jan 26, 2013, at 3:19 PM, Chip Hedler wrote:

Hi, all--

I don't have the lore or the archives to answer Tom or Michael, but here's another spur-of-the-moment composition that seems very likely to have been created earlier and elsewhere. I had just run out of suitable triplets and
I wanted to teach country corners so in desperation I tried this:

Triplet, all proper

A1: #1 couple balance, cross over, go below #2, half-figure eight up
through #2 to end proper between #2 and #3.

A2: #1 turn country corners with the usual suspects.

B1: #1 gypsy and swing, end facing up.

B2: #1 cast around #2 to go down the outside to bottom while #2 and #3 move
up; lines of three go forward and back.

Seemed to work very well for a mixed-age group of beginners (maybe because the #1s are so much busier than everyone else?)--if it's a known sequence I'd like to give credit where credit is due. Also interested in any close
resemblances that people like.

Chip Hedler
============

On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 12:00 PM, callers-requ...@sharedweight.net <
callers-requ...@sharedweight.net> wrote:-


Message: 1
Date: Sat, 26 Jan 2013 11:06:54 -0500
From: Tom Hinds <twhi...@earthlink.net>
To: call...@sharedweight.net
Subject: [Callers] is this dance new?
Message-ID: <334ae5ea-1f5d-47c0-bb2f-69f240b17...@earthlink.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; delsp=yes; format=flowed

I just wrote a dance and wanted to know if it's unique.  I'm pretty
sure the A1 is borrowed from another dance.


D-imp
A1      Circle left.  Mad Robin (face partner and do-si-do neighbor).

A2      Hey, women pass left shoulders

B1      Women pass left shoulders and swing partner

B2      Ladies chain, forward and back.


Tom
============

Message: 3

Date: Sat, 26 Jan 2013 08:38:39 -0800 (PST)
From: Michael Fuerst <mjerryfue...@yahoo.com>
To: Caller's discussion list <call...@sharedweight.net>
Subject: Re: [Callers] is this dance new?
Message-ID:
       <1359218319.44607.yahoomail...@web122202.mail.ne1.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

How many dances do people know of that were independently written by
persons?
I know of two such pairs.

(1) Jim Kitch and Al Olson independently wrote the following sequence:
Improper
A1 Alm left N 1 1/2 and swing a 2nd (new) neighbor
A2 Alm left a 3rd N once, pass right shoulders with the one you swung, and
swing your original N



The two dances had the same B1 (I don't remember if it's W alm L 1 1/2 and
partners swing or Circle Left 3/4 and partners swing).

But the two dances differ only in the B2.
Al Olson's version is called "The Empty Crack." I do not recall the name
of Jim's version



(2) Mark Richardson from Bloomington IN and someone (in California I
think) independently wrote the same dance. I do not recall the name or
sequence of either.

Michael Fuerst

802 N Broadway

  Urbana IL 61801
  217-239-5844



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