i saw your tags on the friend age gap thing and i have to ask. what does ‘bell ringing’ mean (other than what it says on the tin) ?
-Pokemon trainer battle music- You've triggered my Special Interest...
SO I am a change ringer. This is a very old traditional craft/skill connected to the Anglican church. Basically, we have a bell tower, and 8 bells hung in a C major scale (in our case there are 8, but do you have some towers w like 14 bells!! Our nearest tower that I also visit sometimes and rang my first quarter peal on has 10). The highest bell is the treble, the lowest is the tenor. The bells are too large and swing too slowly to make traditional tuneful melodies, so instead we ring methods, which move each bell by one space at a time in a certain order until it comes back to rounds (highest-lowest in order), and tend to sound more mechanical, albeit still nice to listen to. We ring every Sunday before church services, as well as for weddings, funerals, holidays, special occasions, etc. Not all towers are connected to a church, like the one up in Chicago is connected to the university, but most are, due to the origins of the tradition.
The "sheet music", which we ring without (LOTS of memorization and/or tricks to remember your circle of work AKA how you move around the method) is called a blue line:
Each line in the method is called a change, hence, change ringing. You can see in this example of a method called plain bob doubles that the 1 bell (treble) is doing something called hunting, which is just going from first place to fifth place and then back, over and over. But, the other bells are doing something slightly differently, including dodging (the zig-zags) and making places (staying in the same position instead of moving). However, all bells (aside from the treble in this case) will eventually make the same moves at different times. You can also imagine this like a circle or a line dance. The extra single and bob on the side are something the conductor can call out to spice up the method as you ring.
There are two pulls, a handstroke and a backstroke. The handstroke has you pull on a colorful section called the sallie, and the backstroke is when the bell is all the way around and you pull the tail end of the rope.
You should be able to see the hand and back strokes, as well as the position of the bell. The bell is balanced upside-down, and the rope goes around the wheel. The tug pulls the wheel and allows the bell to swing via gravity, all the way back up and around. We call returning the bell to the balance "standing" the bell. At the beginning of rehearsal/ringing, we "ring the bells up", by gradually putting more and more energy into the bell until it sits upside-down. At the end, we ring them down, which is exactly the opposite, of taking energy out until it's resting safely mouth down.
It's got a bit of a learning curve, but it's also one of those skills/hobbies where your only limitation is yourself and how much you want to learn, if ykwim. Like, you can be a very effective bellringer, even if you never learn a method and only ever tenor behind (which is like the typewriter ding reset at the end of a change, not moving places) OR you can be one of the insane people who know 1000 methods and can correct *other people* on their position while still actively ringing your own bell, and everywhere in between. I literally cannot recommend trying it out enough, or just visiting a local belltower as a curious onlooker (ringers LOVE demonstrating). You do NOT need to have any musical background to ring. If you're in North America, you can check out the North American Guild of Change Ringers (NAGCR) website for locations. I am a member, I feel so badass telling folks I am in an actual for real guild in 2026 lol.
I will leave off with this great documentary that I encourage you to watch if the infodump didn't scare you away: