Do you have video of the whole thing put together? Are there other variations? Does it matter if one couple does a very different version than the majority who learned it together from the same teacher?
@@BootScootin I was curious about if it is some kind of poor etiquette for some couples to be doing the stationary/quarter turn style (whatever that would be called) in the center of the floor while everyone else is doing the circling style which you are teaching us here. Also was trying to understand how the other kind works if there are other styles, because there is a quarter turn involved before it repeats…so I was curious if you knew whether that kind always rotates the same quarter turn direction at the same time even with variations built in. Sorry if that’s hard to follow but IDK how else to ask my questions haha sorry! Thank you for all the teaching!
@@jessielanka Good questions. I am not familiar with a quarter turn version, unfortunately. If there is enough space on the dance floor that couples in the middle are not impeding the progression of the couples around the outside, than I think that is fine. I've seen couples doing swing in the middle simultaneously as well. :)
Don’t line dances have multiple walls? Some cowboy cha cha tutorials go in a circle while others stay in place but change walls. Just wondering if I missed something here.
I've always known this partner line dance to go counter clockwise around the dance floor. Some may do it differently, but that is how I've always seen it. Hope that helps.
@@seejessicacode There may be other versions, but this is the one I've seen most prevalently. We filmed it this way to make it easy to learn from behind...and in the demo, we danced it that way (sort of straight ahead) for the same reason. Hope it helps.
Thanks for Cowboy Cha Cha!
Any time!
Great video. Nice and easy to follow. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it! A classic dance for sure. Thanks so much for watching the channel. :)
Very clear and easy to follow, thx!
You're so welcome! Thanks for subscribing to the channel. :)
Do you have video of the whole thing put together? Are there other variations? Does it matter if one couple does a very different version than the majority who learned it together from the same teacher?
Yes, it's under the DEMO. There may be other variations...wouldn't surprise me. Does it matter??....to whom?
@@BootScootin I was curious about if it is some kind of poor etiquette for some couples to be doing the stationary/quarter turn style (whatever that would be called) in the center of the floor while everyone else is doing the circling style which you are teaching us here.
Also was trying to understand how the other kind works if there are other styles, because there is a quarter turn involved before it repeats…so I was curious if you knew whether that kind always rotates the same quarter turn direction at the same time even with variations built in. Sorry if that’s hard to follow but IDK how else to ask my questions haha sorry!
Thank you for all the teaching!
@@jessielanka Good questions. I am not familiar with a quarter turn version, unfortunately. If there is enough space on the dance floor that couples in the middle are not impeding the progression of the couples around the outside, than I think that is fine. I've seen couples doing swing in the middle simultaneously as well. :)
Don’t line dances have multiple walls? Some cowboy cha cha tutorials go in a circle while others stay in place but change walls. Just wondering if I missed something here.
I've always known this partner line dance to go counter clockwise around the dance floor. Some may do it differently, but that is how I've always seen it. Hope that helps.
@@BootScootin Yes it does! I was so confused when I compared this video to others. It makes more sense now :)
@@seejessicacode There may be other versions, but this is the one I've seen most prevalently. We filmed it this way to make it easy to learn from behind...and in the demo, we danced it that way (sort of straight ahead) for the same reason. Hope it helps.