
This player will then try to tag the "it" before the "it" sits in the spot of the person who got "dropped" on. They will then select someone in the circle to "drop" the entire container on top of them. One player who is "it" goes around the circle with a container of water and "drips" a small amount on each person's head. "Drip, Drip, Drop" is another version played by children mostly in warmer climates. The picker can make the game trickier, by calling various colors or adjectives that might sound like "gray duck", such as saying "Duck, duck, green duck, gross duck, grape duck, GRAY DUCK!" In some regions and variations, the caller may change the direction in which they run. The only difference is that the picker calls "gray duck!" (instead of "goose!") to signal which player must chase the picker. "Duck, Duck, Gray Duck" is a variation of the game played in some parts of Minnesota. The daisy picker goes around the outside, saying "Daisy in the dell, I don't pick you … I do pick you." Duck, Duck, Gray Duck The custom of dropping or sending a glove as a signal of a challenge may have been succeeded by the handkerchief in this game." Daisy in the Dell Ī variation described in the 1919 book, Entertaining Made Easy by Emily Rose Burt, has children standing in a circle, joining hands. Gomme suggests that " 'Kiss in the Ring' is probably a relic of the earliest form of marriage by choice or selection. She also connects it to similar games such as French Jackie and Cat after Mouse. Gomme describes Drop Handkerchief as a variant in which there is no kissing. Gomme describes various regional variations: In Shropshire, the two players run in opposite directions and compete to be first to reach the starting point around London, the chase weaves in and out under the clasped hands of the other people in the ring. The original picker then takes the chaser's place in the ring and the chaser becomes the picker for the next round. Once the chaser catches the picker, the chaser is entitled to lead the picker into the centre of the ring and claim a kiss. The picker then runs around the outside of the circle pursued by the chaser. In this version of the game, as described by the British folklorist Alice Gomme in 1894, the picker touches the shoulder of each person in the ring with a handkerchief saying "not you", "not you", until the picker reaches the desired chaser, places the handkerchief on the person's shoulder, and says "but you". Variations Kiss in the Ring or Drop Handkerchief

If the chaser (goose) tags the chasee (it), the chaser (goose) may return to their previous spot and the original chasee (it) restarts the process. If the chasee (it) succeeds, the chaser (goose) becomes the chasee and the process begins again. The chaser (goose) then stands and tries to tag the chasee (it), while the chasee tries to return to and sit where the chaser had been sitting before. 2.1 Kiss in the Ring or Drop HandkerchiefĪ group of players sits in a circle, facing inward, while another player, who is "it", walks around tapping or pointing to each player in turn, calling each a " duck" until finally calling one a " goose", which designates the chosen player as the chaser.
