by Barry Leiba
First, note that the name has three parts. Not coincidentally, so does the call. And besides that, the parts' names are appropriate to the definitions (well, at least the first two are). The call was written on the way to a C2 weekend, so the definition uses C2 terms, but it can easily be explained in Plus terms as well. The call starts in any general line (including waves), and here's the definition:
The diagram shows the positions after each part. Note that each part is separate and can be done
separately, allowing combinations such as ¾ TAG THE LINE AND BOOGIE, BOOT AND EXTEND and (at C1) BOOT, SCOOT, AND RAMBLE. If you like the call, maybe we can get Todd to teach it to the Plus dancers the next time he calls at club night.
While the basic call and some of the combinations provide good material for Plus, some variations will give plenty of challenge to a C2 floor. For instance, starting in waves SWITCH TO A DIAMOND AND BOOGIE will test whether you can really do the REVERSE SINGLE ROTATE ¼ correctly to end in a ¼ line formation (OK, so the body flow isn't so great for two of the dancers -- start in an hourglass and try CUT THE DIAMOND AND BOOGIE instead). On the other hand, I personally think that BOOGIE CHAIN THRU, cute though it may sound, is a bit much (5/4 turn the for very centers) and is too easy, to boot!
We can also vary it by making things left-handed -- LEFT BOOT would have the new centers do a LEFT TOUCH, making a left-handed wave in the middle, and LEFT BOOGIE would have the ends do a SINGLE ROTATE ¼ (not reverse, so they'd put left shoulders in). So how about LEFT BOOT
AND CHAIN REACTION to give the Advanced dancers practice at left-handed CHAIN REACTION?
And finally, we can use the call in a get-out. From the starting position in the diagram, let's BOOT, SCOOT, AND RIGHT-AND-LEFT GRAND!