Salsa
Túnel
The tunnel. The whole circle raises arms to make a passage and the follows travel through it to new partners.
What This Move Is
Túnel = "tunnel." A rueda group figure: on the call, the couples raise their joined hands to form a continuous arched tunnel around the circle, and the follows (or the called dancers) duck and travel through the arches to arrive at a new partner. Because every couple builds and passes through the same structure at once, timing and even arm height across the whole wheel are what make it work. Exact club choreography may vary — verify against your teacher's version.
Key Points
- Lead: Raise the arch high and hold it steady while the follow passes, then move into your own travel on the caller's count — the tunnel only stays open if everyone keeps their arms up together.
- Follow: Duck slightly, travel through the arches at a steady pace, and arrive square to the new lead without stalling inside the tunnel.
- Timing: A tiempo around the circle; the arches go up on one phrase and the travel-through resolves on the next 8-count so the whole wheel changes partners in sync.
- Common mistake: Uneven arm height or one couple dropping the arch early, which collapses the tunnel and jams the travelling follows.
Style Notes
A classic multi-couple rueda call and a crowd-pleaser — it reads beautifully from outside the circle. Needs an even, well-spaced wheel and a clear caller; it is a group figure, not a couple move.
A video walkthrough for this move is on the way.
- Musical use
- Travelling
- Level
- Advanced
- Type
- Rueda
- Frame
- Open
- Style
- Cuban
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