Re: [Paddlewise] How Yare is your Dipsy Doodle?

From: Matt Broze <mkayaks_at_oz.net>
Date: Wed, 28 Feb 2001 01:06:48 -0800
Dan Harrison wrote:
<snip>>>>>I remember a little drive-in near Detroit called the
"Dipsy-Doodle" back in the early 1950s.  An American slang dictionary has
documented it back to 1946 as referring to a dip in the road, particularly
with a roller-coaster-like quality.  I've heard it used to describe a
bobbing, weaving movement.  Regionally, the Northern Oriole is called a
"dipsy-doodle" due to its distinctive flight pattern.<<<<

My late dad told me about a powder skiing move that Dick Durrance taught him
sometime in the late 30's or early 40's that Dick had labeled the "Dipsy
Doodle". It consisted in alternating inside edges and lifting the other leg
while in a slight stem or snowplow position. I'd guess the source is older
than that but might have been a popular dance step about that time.

Matt Broze
http://www.marinerkayaks.com


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Received on Wed Feb 28 2001 - 01:04:17 PST

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