Category Archives: Girl games
To turn double dutch evenhandedly…
To turn double dutch evenhandedly is essential. There is no rhythm without it. The rope should be clothes line with heavy wires in it not the cheap lightweight kind. Tie the two ends parrallel in a knot so that the line now doubled in half. Person A grasps the knotted end in one hand and the halfway end (knotting optional) in the other hand and rolls them up around her fists. Person B steps inside the rope and backs up with the doubled rope around her waist until the rope is taut. B must be perfectly centered. B then grasps the double rope emerging from her waist sides with each hand in order to turn. The length is adjusted by the number of rolls around the fists. Beginners start to turn by alternating their hands up and down. Eventually, the turners will be moving their hands in circles that move inward from the top. The tops of the ropes should alternately hit their apex at the same height and hit the pavement in a steady rhythm. The test for double handedness is to look upside down at the turner in question. As previously mentioned, foot patting, singing and hip swinging go a long way. More advanced techniques include “hot-pepper” very fast turning and turning in the reverse from the top outward. Turning TOO slow is a crime and makes it impossible to jump. To get into the rope, stand with your strong side next to a turner. When her closest hand goes up, leap with both feet onto the spot where the ropes hit the ground and start jogging in place. Moving your hands in and out helps get the feel for entering the rope. “Footsies” is jumping with both feet on the ground simultaneously. Feet can also criss cross while doing footsies. “Jack-be-nimble” is bounding up in the air as if jumping single. Turning around 180 degrees involves hopping on the same foot twice while turning. Bending down and touching the ground while jumping is another advanced technique. There are master techniques like doing cartwheels and stuff into the rope, but let’s stick to basics. Keep your heels, knees and hands close into your body center. As you develop speed, economy of motion becomes such that the feet barely come up 2″ from the ground when the rope passes under and the body and head become almost still. The best way to count after all the songs have run out and the champs are still jammin is “ten,twen,thir, fort, fift, sixt, sevnt, eight, nint, 1-ten, twen, thir……2-ten……3-ten” and so on… ‘sixt seven eight nine” are syncopated with the six and the eight being eighth notes and the seven and nine being dotted quarter notes. (Help on the music notation) That is the West Philly style from the 60’s and 70’s. Enjoy!
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This is so funny…but I’m…
This is so funny…but I’m from Canada and what you refer to as “Fortune Teller”, we refer to as “Cootie Catchers”. I’m almost 40 and we played with them as kids and now my 2 daughters and their friends use them. They operate the same way as your fortune tellers and we also used a method by which you choose colours and numbers to arrive at your “fortune”. We write silly fortunes in them about boys, about having stinky feet, etc, etc. I have no idea where the name Cootie Catchers originated.
I too want the “how to’s”…
I too want the “how to’s” on Chinese Jump Rope, thus leading me here to this web site. I just tried playing with my 10 and 7 year old daughters – the cardboard the rope came on had very basic jumps but can remember it being more involved as a child, I believe Catriona from G.B. is the closest on the moves only too hard to understand what she wrote – only remember that the last move was landing on both elastics as Catriona stated. Hopefully one of us ole timers will remember – more Gingseng . . . . P.S. However, I did impress my girls with my jumps
Lettuce! The missing word…
I remember making them with…
I remember making them with loose-leaf paper. So there were some extra steps to make the paper square. We would even go as far as to tear off the part of the loose-leaf with the holes first. But that complicated things and made it harder to get a nice square piece as an end product. And yes, we wasted lots of paper as well. 🙂 Lay the loose-leaf paper lengthwise. Take the right-bottom corner and bring it up to the top edge of the paper. Crease the paper well. Now you’re left with a small rectangular piece that you can now crease and tear off. Scissors, ha! Who needed scissors?! You’ll now be left with a peice of paper folded into a right triangle. The 90 degree angle should be to the left. Unfold. Now fold the bottom left corner up to the top right. Crease well. Unfold. You should now have a square piece of paper with creases in the form of an X. Fold all four corners to the center of the X. Turn the paper over so that the smooth, unfolded side is up. Fold all four corners of this “smooth” side toward the center. This is when I would pull out my pen and start writing. If you followed the above step precisely, you should have a square piece of paper with four triangular flaps. Each flap is “split” down the middle. Not literally split, thus the quotes, but the previous folding leaves the triangle “split” into two smaller triangles. You’ll see it when you do it. 🙂 Each smaller triangle gets it’s own number…1-8. Then lift up each flap, draw a line down the middle of it and write your fortunes within the two smaller triangles. Close up all the flaps and turn the paper over. Now the square flaps should be facing you. On each flap, write a color name. Red, Yellow, Blue, and Green. Crease the paper again, half and then half again, following the lay of the square flaps and so that the triangular flaps are on the inside, square flaps on the outside. (This part is hard to verbalize but when you do it I think you’ll see what I mean). Now you’ve got your Paper Fortune Teller! I don’t remember a rhyme… all I remember is being asked to choose a color. The color chosen would be spelled out, each letter prompting the opening and closing of the Fortune Teller. When it stopped, you’d see the numbers inside. This is how we did it: “Pick a color.” “Yellow.” “Y-E-L-L-O-W” “Pick a number.” “3” “1, 2, 3” “Pick another number” “7” Then you’d open up the flap that had the #7 written on it and read it’s corresponding fortune. I don’t know about anyone else, but the more we used the Fortune Teller the more times we would ask, or be asked, to pick a number. That would help keep it fresh a little bit longer. 🙂 But it would inevitably go stale and you’d have to make another one. If you had enough foresight to do it in pencil, then all you’d have to do is erase the old fortunes and write new ones. But those 4 color pens were more fun. 🙂 And girls being girls, you always have to include some kind of mention of how many children you would have when you grew up. It was almost an unwritten rule of Paper Fortune Teller making. 🙂