The Blue-Eyed Stranger and Idbury Hill
The Blue-Eyed Stranger
Also known as "Starve The Lad" or, when danced to a tune borrowed from Fieldtown, as "The Forester". This latter manifestation of the dance has not been performed for some time.
| A1, A2 | Once-To-Yourself. |
| A3, A4 | Foot-Up-And-Down. |
| B1 | Chorus: face across the set, long sidesteps left and right, half hey. Finish with the set reversed. |
| A5, A6 | Half Gyp. |
| B2 | Chorus: finish with the dancers back in their original positions. |
| A7, A8 | Whole Gyp. |
| B3 | Chorus, as in B1 |
| A9, A10 | Rounds. |
| B4 | Chorus, as in B2, finishing with four plain capers facing up. |
Idbury Hill
Devised by Andy Cheyne, based on the Bledington dance of the same name.
Idbury Hill is almost identical to The Blue-Eyed Stranger. The only difference is in the long sidesteps in the chorus. In Idbury Hill, the chorus starts with a long sidestep left, just as in The Blue-Eyed Stranger, but the long sidestep right finishes with a feet-together-jump.

