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Juggling 3 Clubs Site Swaps: Part 1

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Summary: In three-club juggling, site swaps use numbers to describe juggling patterns. Do site swaps for three-club juggling with tips from a juggler in this free video on hobbies.

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By Isaac Shivers
eHow Presenter

Isaac Shivers is a student in the Boston area who grew up in central Iowa, where he learned to juggle. He's been juggling for about three years. Isaac has been affiliated with the Des...read more

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Video Transcript

"In this video we're going to start talking about club site-swap patterns. If you remember from the ball videos on site-swap, site-swap is a notation for juggling heights. It lets you think about how patterns should work. Now some of the common four ball patterns, of course they work with clubs but again you have to add that dimension of spin. So if you're juggling a normal three throw with clubs, it's like this. It's a single spin that crosses your body. Other throws will do different things. A four throw which will be just the same as if you're juggling two in one hand will be a double spin that stays on one side of your body, goes back to the same hand. So again, that's a three, that's a four. A five throw will be about triple height usually, and it will cross your body. So five throw will be high and crossing your body. One, which is a zip or a hand off, will again just be a hand off between the two hands. So if we think about this, if we think about a four, four, one, pattern. What will happen is it will be a straight throw, a straight throw, and a hand off. It's going to look like this, four, four, one. That's a very common club, site-swap. A lot of people use it if you do it continuously, it's a very visual effect, breaks the pattern up in a good way. A very common thing to do with a one is zip it behind your back, four, four, one, like that. It's a good visual trick, people like how it look. And that's four, four, one, with beginning club side-swaps."

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