Ringing, 26 February 2022

I missed writing last week. We did ring, but I don’t have much recollection of what exactly we did, and in order to not confuse things, I am just going to skip last week.

We had 4 today, so rang a lot of major. For the entire session, we had Randy on the trebles, Maggie on 3/4, Jane on 5/6, and Andrew on the tenors.

We started with St Clements College Bob, just to remind ourselves how to ring that. We rang a plain course, and while we bobbled slightly, we got through the entire method in the first go. Which felt like a result.

Next, Jane had Andrew call a short touch of Plain Bob, calling 4 bobs at “wrong, home, wrong, home”. We rang that on the first attempt as well, which (if my calculations are correct) is a 256 change method. Not quite a quarter peal! But we’re getting close. Jane is grooming Andrew to call his first quarter, and this was the next step.

The step after that was to attempt another touch. Jane suggested that Andrew call it again, this time calling bobs at “wrong, home, wrong, wrong, home, wrong, wrong, home, wrong”. We could NOT get this for some reason. I don’t think we made it to the second bob. And through no one’s fault – we all kept missing bells. You would think we had never rung before! I’m glad we didn’t have an audience.

To close the session, Jane introduced us to a new method she had just learned about, called “Original”. This is an odd method, in that bobs can be called anywhere, not just when the treble is on the front. We decided to allow each person to call a bob at their leisure, in order of Randy, Maggie, Jane, Andrew. Of course, we didn’t get very far the first time, but by the third or fourth attempt, we were making progress! We didn’t have anything in mind other than trying this, so there is no guarantee that what we rang was true. But it had the desired effect, and stretched our minds. Which was the whole point.

A fun afternoon!

Ringing, 26 February 2022

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.