Contributing

What key is Unskinny Bop in?

What key is Unskinny Bop in?

Unskinny Bop is written in the key of C♯.

What is poison in golf?

It’s called Poison. Each person in your group, in turn, uses his driver to chip a ball from one tee marker to the other. Once you’ve hit it, you chip back to the other tee marker, and once you’ve hit that one your ball becomes poison and you can eliminate other players by hitting their ball with yours.

What are the rules of poison?

Children form a ring clasping their hands around a much smaller “poison” circle drawn on the floor or ground. The player are trying to push or pull each other to step into the “poison”. As soon as some players touch the “poison” circle, the other shouts “Poisoned!” and run for safety.

What is poison in basketball?

Poison is a fun basketball game that requires all players to be on their toes–not just the person with the ball. If your shot goes in, rebound the ball on exactly one bounce and then shoot again from the spot where you rebounded the ball. Rebound the ball again on one bounce if your second shot goes in the basket.

Is there poison in croquet?

A player receives an extra stroke for passing through a second story of a wicket. As each player reaches the starting post after clearing all wickets, he is “poison” and must declare his status to all players. A non-poison player can eliminate a poison player by sending the latter through a wicket.

Can you go through a wicket backwards?

You can’t hit the ball backwards through a wicket. When you get through the seventh wicket, you have to hit the turn-around stake. Continue back down the field, hitting your ball through the correct wicket in the correct direction. To end the game, you must hit the final stake.

What are the basic rules of croquet?

Each player takes a croquet mallet and must only use the striking end, not the side, when moving their ball through the croquet wickets. Hitting the croquet balls with a croquet mallet, you move through the course, scoring points for each croquet wicket and stake made in the correct order.