Ringing, 9 February 2026

We had 4 people today, Andrew, Jane, Maggie, and Randy. Since three of us have been working on Single Canterbury Pleasure Bob (minor), we thought we would try SCPB Major tonight. Andrew took a look at it, and said, “Oh, this is just Plain Bob with Kent Places.” So we rang it. Maggie on the trebles, Jane on 3/4, Andrew on 5/6, and Randy on the tenors.

Amazingly, we rang a plain course on the first try! We were all very impressed with Andrew, who had never rung this before, and with ourselves, who had only ever rung Minor for this method. And so, Andrew suggested we ring a simple touch of this method. Jane did not want to ring any bells that were affected by a Bob, and so she and Andrew switched bells, and Jane called the touch (three Bobs at home).

The first time we crashed fairly early – before any Bobs had been called. Not sure what happened, but we just started over. The second attempt saw us crash right after the Bob. Even though we knew what we were supposed to do, actually doing it is a different story. (Hey, long fourths can be tricky to think through!) So, because we ring handbells (and so we can), we started midway through the lead before the first Bob. We got through the Bob this time, but then crashed again before the end. I don’t recall where we started that third time, but we were able to ring to the end of the method after that. So, perhaps with a little cheat, we rang a simple touch of Single Canterbury Pleasure Bob Major.

This took most of our hour, and so we finished with a speed run of Plain Bob Major, with Maggie on the trebles, Jane on 3/4, Andrew on 5/6, and Randy on the tenors. We rang larger bells for this, and stood up for the duration. Sadly, we crashed in the second lead, but started over and rang the entire thing very quickly. It sounds glorious on those larger bells!

We are discussing the possibility of doing a “tower tour” in April or May, where we bring our bells to various locations in the city and ring for a while. Then move to another location and ring some more. Being near the beach results in some nice ringing, and we may attract some new ringers if we are very lucky. This is just in the preliminary stages at this time. But we have done this in the past (many years ago), and had a blast doing it. More later.

Ringing, 9 February 2026

Ringing, 26 January 2026

It has been a while since we have had much news. But tonight we did something different, and I thought I would record it here.

We were three tonight, Jane, Maggie, Randy. Jane decided that we should try something different, and found an interesting method called Single Canterbury Pleasure Bob. It is essentially Plain Bob, but with Kent places. Maggie rang the trebles, Jane was on 3/4, and Randy rang the tenors.

The first time through, we crashed on the very first change. Maggie and Randy weren’t expecting the Kent Places at that first change, and were confused about what Jane had done! She explained it to us, so we gave it another go.

The second time through, we crashed on the first lead end. We have been ringing Kent some (though it has been a while), and so you would think that we understood Kent Places at lead ends. But this one tripped us up. We decided to go step by step for few changes, and got to a point that we could comfortably and reliably ring the first two leads. (We were ringing Minor, so there are only 5 leads.) After a couple more attempts, we decided to take a break.

After 5 minutes or so of chatting, we gave it another try. And this time, with some bobbles, and stepping on each other’s bells once or thrice, we were able to get through the entire method. We rang it a couple more times, getting more and more confident with each attempt. The challenge was successful!

Jane suggested we ring a short touch of SCP B, but as it was getting late we decided instead to ring a short touch of Bob Minor, as fast as we could ring. And even though we occasionally stepped on each other’s bells, we were able to ring a 180 touch of Bob Minor. At that point we called it a night, and went home happy!

Ringing, 26 January 2026