[Bell Historians] Re: half-pull ringing
ted.steele at ImoVOQ7hvhJp2j7ef8Pjy3q-aLRww_bNjxRF9Ou8S2prvc4sytsh9sEvl-Ii1Dl_uz6u8sdn-TIIC70apS4e.yahoo.invalid
ted.steele at ImoVOQ7hvhJp2j7ef8Pjy3q-aLRww_bNjxRF9Ou8S2prvc4sytsh9sEvl-Ii1Dl_uz6u8sdn-TIIC70apS4e.yahoo.invalid
Wed Nov 21 15:22:26 GMT 2007
---- Richard Offen <richard.offen at eQwkaRrrgmoMtW-8Ivaddf3S_5PEn0rJN_4trgbDrocpoI3SfRpXc3j-7w5rpzDvn3WSc03QD6Af9kRqBthU0w.yahoo.invalid> wrote:
> No, because the bells in 4ths and 5ths dodge.
>
> R
>
No' original message says "and of course double up for everything in 5ths.".
Ted
"John Cummins" <murbah at ...>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > I can remember ringing Double Stedman Doubles many years ago where
> > every single place was rung twice and every double place was rung four
> > times. Half turns were whole pulls and whole turns comprised four
> > blows at lead, two blows in seconds place and then another four blows
> > at lead. In hunting in and out every place was a whole pull and of
> > course double up for everything in 5ths. John Cummins
> > >
> >
> > That's called Orpheus Doubles and is rung quite regularly in the UK -
> > I've even rung a quarter peal of it!
> >
> > R
>
> Unless I'm missing something is this not just a roundabout way of saying
> it's rung in whole pulls?
>
> Ted
>
More information about the Bell-historians
mailing list