But it is something I came acros often - learner struggles with something and no attempt is made to find out WHAT they are finding difficukt or WHY they are going wrong. — Sue Marsden
I am fortunate to be retired. Therefore I have time to give extra practises to my ringers. — Phillip George
I don't think anyone starts with a goal of being distinctly mediocre — John de Overa
the people who post here - it seems to me that they spend at least as much time thinking about ringing as they spend doing it — John de Overa
Nobody is going to learn to dodge properly with the standard 2 attempts at 2 leads of PBD a week. — John de Overa
Another thing I find from teachers/tower captains is the habit of allowing a ringer to try the bell. Answer - No! — Phillip George
He was told that the bell was too light for him. When he reported this to me I immediately told him that the bell was not too light, he was not ringing it correctly — Phillip George
I lived in fear for a long time because when it happened to me someone rushed over in what appeared to be a panic to grab the rope. — Judith Dennis
Therefore something as complex as ringing, without a lot of repetition, is difficult. The situation with the availability of rope time with good ringers in my opinion is the chief problem for beginners, but not a criticism. — Judith Dennis
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