A shower is a juggling pattern for 2 or more objects, most commonly balls or bean bags. Balls are thrown high from hand A to hand B (siteswap 5), and low from hand B to hand A (siteswap 1). The circular motion of the balls is commonly represented in cartoons as the archtypical juggling pattern, somewhat at odds with reality, where the cascade is more common. By constantly reversing the direction, the box pattern can be formed.
There are two different types of shower : synchronous shower, where both hands throw their ball at the same time and asynchronous shower.
The easiest shower is the two-ball shower, although some jugglers may consider that it is not juggling at all. If given two balls and told to juggle, the average person is likely to throw one in the air, pass across the other, and catch the first in the other hand. Performed continuously, this is a two-ball shower.
A three-ball shower is significantly more difficult for a beginner than a three-ball cascade, due to the height, speed, and asymmetry of the two throws. However, once mastered it is easy to perfom for long periods, or to combine with other tricks.
Four- and five-ball showers are possible and frequently mastered by jugglers at an intermediate or advanced level. Showers with more props are rarely achieved by anyone other than professionals or seriously committed individuals.
According to the Bogleg database of unofficial juggling records, the record with 6 balls is 280 catches by Benjamin Thomas, and with 7 and 8 the records are 80 and 32 catches respectively, both held by Bruce Sarafian.
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"Shower (juggling)".
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