Generally their arms are shorter - so it works better if they make the smaller 
circle. 

I tried it with the gents in the center and found that awkward
By the way, our web site - www.chldgrove.org has a photo of us doing this dance 
in the home page banner at the wonderful Missouri Botanical Garden with me 
standing in the center calling.  The fountain is usually on when we danced 
there - but they had it turned off that evening.

Mac McKeever


      From: jandnbloom <jandnbl...@gmail.com>
 To: Mac Mckeever <mac...@ymail.com>; Frederick Park <freder...@apalache.com>; 
"Callers@lists.sharedweight.net" <Callers@lists.sharedweight.net> 
 Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 2:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [Callers] New Dance to Share
   
I'm curious - what is it about having the ladies in the center that makes it 
work better?Jacob

Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device

-------- Original message --------From: Mac Mckeever via Callers 
Date:06/10/2017 1:48 PM (GMT-05:00) To: Frederick Park 
,Callers@lists.sharedweight.net Subject: Re: [Callers] New Dance to Share 
Since you mentioned circle mixers - one of my current favorites is a very easy 
one that has been around for a while - but I only discovered it a couple years 
ago.  I messed with it a little to make it work for all experience levels.

The Wheel by Gene Huber - random circle mixer

Start in a circle with Ladies facing partner with their backs to center - 
holding 2 hands with partner (I think the original had the gents in the center 
- but I found it works better this way)

A1 - Into the center - all drop hands with partner take hands with the persons 
on both sides of you - so you have a circle of gents facing in and a circle of 
ladies facing out
walk back out so both circles are near their full size - there is lots of time 
to get everything done in this part.

A2 - everyone circle left (this makes the circles turn in opposite directions
B1 - everyone balance and swing (or do-si-do and swing depending on the 
experience level) who ever is in front of them at the time - lost and found is 
in the center.
B2 Prominade with current partner - ladies on outside - roll ladies to the 
inside to get ready for A1
Mac McKeever


      From: Frederick Park via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net>
 To: Callers@lists.sharedweight.net 
 Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 10:54 AM
 Subject: Re: [Callers] New Dance to Share
  
Dear Folks,
This little opening for discussion of unusual dances that are not contra or 
square is delightful. Thank you all.
"Le Brandy" and the “Weevil" are both new to me and have great potential I 
think. 
Erik, I don’t have your “double becket" dance - will you send it my way?
The other dances are well known to me and I wish to offer a teaching element 
I’ve used successfully in the Pat Shaw dance, K + E.
Once sets are established, 1s on the outside facing in, 2s standing back to 
back in the center facing outside couples, the primary dance move that makes it 
all work out is the partner relationship.I ask all to practice once or twice 
“Change Hands” with Partners. Obviously, those in the center, the 1s, when 
changing the direction they face at any time places their own Partner on one 
side and then the other.Simply suggesting that the call is “Change Hands” when 
practicing the move makes it unique and clear and simple, all at once!Having 
the sense of “double beckett” is not so very intuitive for dancers simply 
because this dance is a one-of-a-kind dance. I can “see” it but I wouldn’t 
mention it to dancers.The 1s need to “bond”. As well those far across on the 
opposite side of the set, the 2s, need to “bond” or recognize they are a 
unit…which is all the more useful once any couples reach the end of the set.To 
that end I ask the dancers to change places with couple they are initially 
facing (each 1 changes places with their original 2) and the “Change Hands” 
introduces them to their other half for any who are in the center four.
The only thing that pushes this dance into the realm of “intermediate to 
advanced” is the final 8 bars of the dance, the progression.Those on the 
outside are swinging their Partners and could and should “move up the hall” 
every so slightly.Meanwhile the center four have just met again (the “magic” 
includes meeting their Partners!) and are with their “other half”, the 2s! The 
1s then “Circle Down - three quarters ‘round - and Change Hands”. This call 
indicates the movement of Circle Left 3/4 WHILE moving down the hall ever so 
slightly (to end with “Trade Hands in the Center”, face out and meet a new 
Couple 2 to begin again . . .
I’ve found that the movement of Circle and move is akin the square dance chorus 
figure of four dancers moving in a circle Left while dancing in Promenade 
direction around the “other couple”.So introducing such a chorus in a square 
dance one or two dances earlier allows the whole dance hall to be a bit 
familiar with the similar pattern used in K+E!
Lastly, may I recommend that any of you may also find interest in Pat Shaw’s 
“The American Husband”! It’s a sicillian circle for groups of three, very 
unusual progression and includes a Shetland Hey (for three) with each couple 
dancing as a single unit in a hey for three pattern! Let me know if you can’t 
find it and I’ll post it here.
More dances? Yes, please! (especially circle mixers and sicillian circles)  : )

––––––––––––––––––––
Frederick Park3377 Halls Chapel Road
Burnsville, NC 28714
828.335.5630
freder...@apalache.com
––––––––––––––––––––


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