• Phil Burton
    1
    Hi there,

    I currently have two learners, both of whom I’m facing a particular challenge with and I’m wondering if anyone has some ideas of how to overcome these challenges.

    Firstly, we have a middle aged lady who has been ringing around 2 years. She’s got to the point where she can plain hunt on 5, on the treble to a poor standard, and struggles even more with plain bob doubles. The issues she experiences are around getting up in to 5ths place, she tends to get to 4ths, then drops her bell and never makes it to 5ths. When she does make it to 5ths, she struggles to change the speed of the bell to hunt back down to lead. She’s kind of plateaued now - does anyone have any ideas of how to move her forward?

    We’ve tried various things - taking a few steps back, practicing dodging to encourage better bell control etc.

    Secondly, we have a teenage boy who’s been ringing just under a year - he’s not plateaued like my first example above, and is making good progress with plain hunting and covering. His problem is to do with his handling - he doesn’t throw his hand strikes down far enough. His arms get to a 90 degree position, then they both stop. This causes his backstrokes to drop. Having chatted to him about it, he says he’s a little worried that his hands won’t “make it in time” on to the tail end. We’ve tried a few things with him - such as ringing solo using just one hand at a time on the sally etc.

    I’ve no doubt he’ll cure himself of this in due course, but I’m wondering if anyone has any ideas or tips on how to overcome style issues like this?

    For context - our bells are light, and short draft, very easy to ring, so our learners do tend to develop style issues because they can “get away” with it, so to speak.

    Thanks in advance
  • Lucy Chandhial
    113
    For the first it sounds like the ringer is struggling to understand how to control ringing to the balance each time, and therefore how to be able to choose to wait before the next stroke.
    Possibly some time alone to try to ring slower and slower and slower (but with control) might be useful for really feeling where the balance is.
    It might also help to go through the mechanics again, a refresher on what the bell is doing and therefore how you can influence it can be useful once someone is able to ring but needs to fine tune.

    For the second the most obvious exercise seems to be the hands down and look the tail end is right here for your hand to fall on, wrists together actions because then there is no reason to worry and it should become clear that it is actually easier and takes less time, because your hand arrives at the tail end at the bottom of the hand stroke (no ‘catching’ required).
    It might help to demonstrate this yourself (and I’ll bet ART has a video for it) and to get him to try it while you hold the tail end or hover near the tail end so that there’s no pressure. It’s also one which can be practiced with a down bell, simply practicing the movement with no swing in the bell, to make it feel normal to bring the hands all the way down.

    Hopefully some of this helps but bellringing.org will have more exercises and videos which might also help.
  • David Smith
    16
    Failure to get right up to the back in plain hunting or in method ringing is a very common fault. Certainly better bell control is required, plus listening skills to identify that the bell is too close to the bell it is following because it is getting up to only about 4 and a half instead of right up to fifth place in doubles.

    One point to note about this 'not getting up enough' progression that goes 1, 2, 3, 4, 4.5, 4.5, 4, 3, 2, 1 is that the change of speed between hunting up and down is spread over more blows. The change in position during this faulty process goes +1, +1, +1, +1, +0.5, 0, -0.5, -1, -1, -1, -1 (instead of the required ... +1, +1, 0, -1, -1... at the top for accurate striking). The faulty version therefore requires much less effort, as it consists of a larger number of small changes rather than the greater change of pace that is needed when changing direction accurately. The faulty process involves less effort and less anticipation, so can easily result from poor bell control.

    I would suggest Kaleidoscope and similar exercise, starting with long places. Stand in front of the student as they ring perhaps 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 3... The aim is that they move directly from 3rd to 4th position, and then stay in 4th (rather than not going far enough at the change and not really getting up to 4th until the second blow there). Once the student has the idea of what to do, insist on really accurate striking. Ensure (by warning them in advance verbally or by gesture) to anticipate, so for example making a stronger pull on the fourth blow in 3rd place so as to be able to let the bell float up, giving the required extra delay to that it comes down accurately in 4th place. Only when they can consistently do this with long places, move on to just two blows in each place, and then revisit plain hunting.

    You'll probably need to repeat the process when the student starts method ringing with dodges, as they will likely do 'lazy dodges' not getting up or down far enough at the dodge.
  • John Harrison
    480
    place making is a useful exercise but not really a transition to hunting. There isn’t time in one blow to change to ringing at a different speed. It is a single step rather than switching to going up or down hill.
    Failure to get right to the back is made worse in Doubles because you arrive at backstroke, which with most ringers tends to revert to rounds speed.
    Many ringers who ring by following ropes don’t consciously change speed, they merely make a number of enforced steps, the aggregate effect of which is an approximate speed change, but one that is always a bit behind the curve, and fails as soon as they fail to see the next rope to follow. That might be what happens at the back.
    A very good exercise if you have access to a simulator is to get them to ring rounds at normal speed (say 3h peal speed) and then ring rounds at 3h30 speed and at 2h30 speed, which correspond to hunting up and down on 6. If you simulator has visuals turn them off because you want them to feel what ringing at different speeds is like, without the distraction of jumping to follow ropes.
  • Samuel Nankervis
    23
    Plain Hunt - One tip I try, is to get new learners when hunting up to say, 2nds place, 3rds place, etc, whilst waiting for each bell.
    Hunting back down, say, 5ths, 4ths, 3rds, etc, to help enphasis this is quicker.
  • John Harrison
    480
    if the problem really is not knowing how far they have gone that might help but sadly in many cases the problem is execution. Saying the name of a place doesn’t help them to know where it is and how far from it their bell is, nor the action they need to get it their. The counting goes on in one part of their brain, separate from the rest which carries on doing the same unsuccessful actions as before.
  • John de Overa
    541
    Many ringers who ring by following ropes don’t consciously change speed, they merely make a number of enforced steps, the aggregate effect of which is an approximate speed change, but one that is always a bit behind the curve, and fails as soon as they fail to see the next rope to follow. That might be what happens at the back.John Harrison

    When I started ringing the band struggled to get past back rounds in Plain Hunt. The reason was that the ringers with the worst bell control would only ring the front bells, and they could only ring at two speeds, slow and slower. The rest of the band were completely dependent on bell numbers, so once the front bells got to the back they just festered there with the rest of the band desperately trying to hold up over them. The concepts of in, rounds & out speeds, let alone "at the front" or "at the back" were all a mystery. It can be difficult for experienced ringers to fully appreciate the almost complete lack of situational awareness that afflicts some ringers, they can only ring by bell number and then only if all the bells they are over are in the right place.

    Saying the name of a place doesn’t help them to know where it is and how far from it their bell is, nor the action they need to get it their. The counting goes on in one part of their brain, separate from the rest which carries on doing the same unsuccessful actions as before.John Harrison

    This is very true. I can think of the case of one ringer who would insist they were counting places and were therefore in the right place when there was a fire-up. What they were actually doing was counting pulls, pulls that were divorced from the speed the rest of the band were ringing at.

    I think a large part of these problems are due to the way ringing is taught, with insufficient emphasis on rhythm and listening. That creates dependence on other people being in the right place visually, whereas what's really needed are the skills to be in the right place in time, independent of others.

    A simulator exercise I use is to get people to ring with the moving ringers and highlight ringer turned on, and when they have rung a couple of steady leads, I turn the screen off and tell them to keep going. I don't tell them in advance because they invariably say they won't be able to do it, whereas they almost invariably can. The goal is to show them that they *do* have rhythm and listening skills, but they are being swamped by the emphasis on vision that dominates ringing teaching. A large part of being able to ring by rhythm is having the confidence to actually try it.

    We have had many discussions about ringing by vision versus listening/rhythm in our tower. Some of us can see the order of the bells all the time, I can't do that but I can ring Surprise Major on the simulator just by ear. I can't comprehend how they can see all the bells, they can't comprehend how I can ring without seeing them at all. I suspect the top-flight ringers can do both, the rest of us have to do the best we can by emphasising our natural strengths and working on our weaknesses. One of our learners is very sound-dominated and always been able to pick out their bell and could cover well from the start by "Just being the last bong". Another learner will "accurately" clash away forever, because they are ringing just by vision and can't hear their bell. We've adapted out teaching specifically to them, some teaching I've seen seems to be adapted to the proclivities of the teacher rather than she student.

    But the common thing they all need to get sorted first is bell control, without that they don't have the skills to get the bell in the right place, even when they know it's not.
  • Peter Sotheran
    139
    I tend to agree with other comments - the younger ringer's problem goes right back to basics. When I see that a learner is not pulling right through at backstroke, I will rest the first two fingers of one of of my hands on top of his hand and gently apply pressure to continue the downward movement until the backstroke is completed and his hands are down by his lap.

    I also remind the learner that the bellrope does not come down at a constant speed but accelerates as the bell swings down towards bottom-dead-centre and slows as it swings up to the 'UP' or set position. We often describe the speed of the ringer's arm movement as 'pulling down at 30mph and then the hands rising up at 40mph to catch the sally'.

    It is also important to adjust the rope length so that the learner's arms are at a comfortable full-stretch when the bell is at backstroke. Hence they must straighten their arms at backstroke and cannot control the bell with elbows bent at 90º. Then when introducing the handstroke start by having them reach as high up the sally as they can with arms comfortably fully stretched, this is the 'target' position for catching the sally. If necessary use a rubber band or a loop of string to mark this 'target' position on the sally. Caveat - use this only briefly so that it doesn't lead to them always watching the sally rise and fall - a chronic bad habit that is difficult to break!

    Regarding the lady who struggles with plain hunting: a useful exercise might be to ring only two bells and have the learner following a competent ringer. The object is for your learner to keep in step with the other ringer. Ring 'rounds' on the two until the rhythm setttles, then have the other ringer ring 5 or 6* deliberately slow blows as if hunting up, followed by 5 or 6 quicker blows to represent hunting down. You can insert a few blows at 'standard' rounds speed between the hunting-up set and the hunting-down set if it helps. This should help to give the learner the confidence to adjust the speed of her ringing.
    (* Depending on whether you practice Doubles or Minor. Personally I prefer to always use 6 blows as the even number seems to make it easier for the learner to 'change gear'.)
  • Susan Hall
    17
    For the second, here's a fun exercise: Use the tower's empty sweet tubs - Put them upside down on the floor where each rope falls. Each ringer has to ensure that they pull far enough down at each stroke, and with enough of a chop (we find that 'chop' is a far more effective word than 'flick'), to make a drumming sound on the tub. It's fun and everyone can try it. (Depending on the size of the bells, two tubs stacked may be required, or only the tub lids).
  • Rosalind Martin
    37
    For the lady who can't hunt to 5ths place, the band could try "rounds and back rounds": (credit to St Pauls in the Jewlellery quarter for this exercise).
    Put confident ringers on the 1 and the 6.
    Explain "back rounds means you will look the other way", for the visual ringers.

    - start in rounds until they have settled down.
    - call back rounds with 2 blows warning.
    - the tenor (6) maintains their speed, the other follow in reverse order, continue until back rounds has settled down
    - call rounds with 2 blows warning
    - treble maintains speed, everyone else follows in rounds

    This exercise helps because it requires everyone to hold up. It is conceptually easy.
  • John Harrison
    480
    pulling down at 30mph and then the hands rising up at 40mph to catch the sally'.Peter Sotheran

    Regardless of the actual speeds that must be wrong. First the speed varies a lot, from zero to quite fast in under half a second, and second because the bell swings symmetrically, so the movement of the rope up and down is also symmetrical, at least during the relevant part, ie ignoring what happens during the lower parts of the stroke, where they differ, and also ignoring the fact that the handstoke rises very slightly more to give the open handstroke.
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