Witches reel


The Witches Reel is a traditional Ceilidh dance from Scotland.
Thought to be over 200 years old, it fell largely out of fashion and became almost forgotten in the 20th Century. However, a new wave of uptempo ceilidh bands have begun bringing back the dances.
Bands of this type now treat the Witches Reel as a dance to involve the whole room all at once, danced as one line of gentlemen and one line of ladies, rather than as a dance to be performed in sets of any particular size.
The dance lends itself to this "group gathering" approach, with the whole room involved. This is because the dance will finish with all of the guests joined in an "n" shaped wheel, which then wheels round and round as all the dancers fit through an arch provided by the first two ladies in line.
Leading modern ceilidh bands have found this dance to be perfect for all ages and perfect for first time ceilidh goers to learn, as it is not complex.
The dance starts with a line of gentlemen facing a line of ladies.
The first couple join hands and - to wild applause - they proceed down the middle of the dance to the far end of the room, then they come all the way back down the middle of the room to where they began.
The first lady then casts off behind the girls line, the first boy casts off down the back of the boys' line. All dancers follow their leader.
The top couple form an arch at the top of the room, with all couples passing underneath the arch.
Then all the boys, side by side, link arms. All the girls link arms, side by side. The top couple reach across to hold each other's hand to complete the "n" shape.
The first two girls in line form an arch and the top boy then leads all of the "n" shaped dance through this arch
When back in line, the first two boys return the compliment, forming an arch, and the first lady now leads the "n" shaped dance through this arch to finish the dance.