Teaching Blind Leads
Here are some notes on teaching blind leads:
- "Dame Dos" - This call is difficult for a blind person to get right because the circumference of the circle changes with each new couple and the distance between follows can be highly variable. The following solution and requires the blind lead to always be on the left of the caller:
- After a Dame Dos call, the caller walks toward the second upstream follow and on 5, while passing in front of the follow for the blind lead says "Toma" (after Thomas!). The word has two affects, the first is that all the leads do a walking counter-clockwise turn before picking up their new follow and the blind lead now knows where to aim for to pick up the second follow. This should work for Dame Tres, etc. Note: With a mike, the caller will have to mute it while doing the "Toma" call or the sound comes from all angles.
- The blind lead also needs to be told at the start of the Rueda how many couples are in the circle. This is required, because, through experience, the blind lead can figure out how sharply to make their arc while walking upstream. For large groups, the arc is flat as in the lead walks almost directly ahead and for small circles, the arc is sharper.
- Teachers of blind leads needs to be specific about which hand and which direction a lead needs to turn when describing moves.
- The fastest way to teach a blind lead is to have the caller become a follow and back lead, which through experience, works well.
- Another visual cue that blind leads need replacing, is whether they are sequencing the moves together at the appropriate speed, outside of listening to the beat. It has proven useful for the caller to call out each part of a move as they happen, for example, for each enchufla in an "Enchfula Complicado". The blind lead can then compare where they are, to where the rest of the group is, and compensate. Calling each part of a move also helps teach the blind lead that some moves, like the back-to-back dropping of the arms for Arco Iris, usually takes four or five counts instead of having the arms down by 3.