Seeding more regional ringing courses is in the strategy, but it was a bit concerning to learn that it was the entry level options on the NW course that were most over subscribed, the level that should be being catered for by local branches and associations. The course had tried to pitch itself a little higher up the learning curve.
fixing my problem wouldn't fix the much larger problem — John de Overa
Once the number of experienced and willing ringers drops below a critical threshold, no amount of "organising" can dig you out of the hole. — John de Overa
I think what you are seeing with your sim practices is the ever widening chasm between "ground floor" ringers and the "surprisers". It's a huge step from PB5 to Camb6/8, not helped by the piss-poor nature of PB as a teaching method compounded by the "by rote" way it is taught. Learning how to learn and how to ring "proper" methods pretty much means starting over for most people, which after endless PB, few have the stomach for. PB nearly finished my ringing career and I had to learn Camb6 (and now 8) unassisted on a tower sim - and it's going to be a challenge to get a chance to ring it "for real" on 8 — John de Overa
"we" could only ring Plain Bob, Kent, Double Norwich, and maybe Cambridge 8.
"we" could only ring Plain Bob, Kent, Double Norwich, and maybe Cambridge 8.
"Only". Your starting point is way beyond many of the bands round here. — John de Overa
↪Jason Carter do you mean a simulator practice? Or do you just mean an ordinary practice with bells tied and electronic sound? I assume the latter but the terminology is confusing. — John Harrison
If you would like to join in the conversation, please register for an account.
You will only be able to post and/or comment once you have confirmed your email address and been approved by an Admin.