If I had delayed my previous post by one week, I would have been able to end the post on a higher note (see Getting to grips with Horton's 4).
After not quite getting a quarter of Horton's 4 in the days immediately following our successful tower bell peal, we managed it a week later, after everyone did a bit more homework with Abel:
Scottish Association
Glasgow
1 Albany Quadrant
Monday, 15 December 2014
1280 Spliced Surprise Major (4m)
544 Bristol, 320 London, 256 Belfast, 160 Glasgow
Composed by Matthew Durham
1–2 Angela H Deakin
3–4 Tina R Stoecklin
5–6 Jonathan S Frye
7–8 Simon J Gay (C)
150th quarter in the house.
With best wishes to Bill and Helen Brotherton as they leave Scotland for Lincolnshire.
As this was our last meeting before the holidays, we were pretty pleased to end on a high note.
It left us with some dilemma as to what our next goal should be. Should we:
- Finish the Horton's-4 project with the peal?
- Move onwards with our 23-spliced project?
Both of these require more practice ringing with the tenors split, which we need. Alternately, we could work on more developmental goals such as:
- More Royal ringing with Marcus.
- Getting more confident on different pairs of bells (especially moving off the trebles).
- Developing more confidence in conducting (and not leaving it all to Simon).
All of these are worthy things to do, and would greatly enhance the success rate at our Scottish handbell days or the upcoming Handbells at Hogmanay weekend in Tulloch. They are, in some ways, much less fun. They are a lot less glamorous. They are exactly the kind of developmental skills we stress when running the tower practice, where we tend to be conservative method-wise.
So, we opted for the more fun route. So in the new year, we will do some split-tenors practice, and make an early attempt at a peal of Horton's 4. Then we are tackling Simon's plan for getting to 23-spliced.
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Horton's Four