Here's an easy little one-step variation taken from Albert Newman's Dances of to-day, (Philadelphia, 1914). The Picket Fence is loosely related to the grapevine in that it sends the dancers sideways along the line of dance though with much more back-and-forth travel in the process. Newman's diagram for it is shown at left; click to enlarge.
The Picket Fence is actually taken from a section on Turkey Trot, so Newman had it performed with trotting steps, but the plain walking step of the normal one-step works just as well.
Newman's description:
"...four trots directly to the left rear oblique, then the same number of steps forward left oblique; in this forward movement have the lady to the right side in Yale position. This backward and forward movement is in V formation, or zigzag, which is repeated several times and which is to represent, in design, the top of a picket fence, hence its name."
Well, that's straightforward enough! The dancers begin in standard closed hold, facing each other. The gentleman backs diagonally toward the center of the room, beginning with his left foot. The lady moves forward, starting on her right foot. After four steps, they individually turn one-quarter counter-clockwise and take four steps toward the wall on the new diagonal, the lady backing, starting with her right foot, and the gentleman moving forward on his left. This moves them slowly along the line of dance. To repeat the variation, they individually turn one quarter clockwise and again move toward the center of the room.
The only element of note is that in the second half (toward the wall), the dancers are in Yale position, right side to right side, as shown and described here. The shift of position does not require any particular effort; the relative positions of the dancers makes it happen automatically. If the entire sequence is repeated, the dancers will shift back to facing quite naturally.
At the end of the Picket Fence, however many times it has been repeated (or not), the dancers are situated perfectly to go into a Pomander Walk, to quarter-turn clockwise and back the gentleman more-or-less along the line of dance, or (with a quarter-turn the other way) to transition into a basic one-step backing the lady in Yale position and eventually transitioning smoothly into a Yale grapevine. If one were feeling radical, or needed to be more toward the center of the room, one might even stop at the halfway point and switch a basic one-step or other variation (there are many others) there instead.
Edited 12/8/22 to add:
The Picket Fence in waltz time was used in the Newman Hesitation Boston, described here, under the name "Stroll". At one step per measure is a lovely move in hesitation waltz as well as one-step or turkey trot.
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