Thursday 27 July 2017

Stella’s Good Cents



I’ve been a big fan of Scott Peterson’s work for a long time, and whenever I spot one of his puzzles that I don’t already have available for sale somewhere, I generally try and acquire it…

Thus ‘twas that I recently managed to stumble across someone prepared to part with a copy of Stella’s Good Cents – one of Scott’s own designs.


Scott described it as a modification of a puzzle designed by Stewart Coffin and went on to comment that it remained unrealised for quite a while because he’d considered it too simple – and yet when he produced it, puzzlers seemed to like it…


A casual glance at it will have you convinced you’ve seen it before – albeit, this is a rather beautifully produced version where the pieces of what is rather obviously a simple diagonal burr have been made of laminated sections of wood – oddly some of the laminations don’t seem to line up with where you might be expecting them to go… and that’s a big clue. 


The edges are still wonderfully sharp as though they’ve just come straight off Scott’s saw and the obvious gentle tugging to release the diagonal burr bits does absolutely nothing… this ain’t no diagonal burr… not even a purdy one!


Puzzle a little more and there’s a wonderful secret to be discovered – guaranteed to put a smile on a puzzlist’s face and leave non-puzzlers wondering what the fuss is all about…


It’s a wonderful little example of one-puzzle-pretending-to-be-another, while-in-fact-being-something-else-you-know-quite-well-too! 


Great little bit of subterfuge, superbly implemented – and definitely not too simple to be interesting!!

Sunday 23 July 2017

Secret Box Box



No, that is not a typo… that is its name… and it is well-named. 

A couple of months ago I missed out on getting a copy of the similarly named Secret Book Box Box – a collaboration between Hideaki Kawashima and Ninomiya-san – that one looked for all the world like three intersecting books, with some lovely Ninomiya stiped Yosegi providing the illusion of the pages of the books… it was a beautiful object…

A little while later Kawashima-san offered a simpler version, the Secret Box Box (sans the book-motif) through the usual Karakuri shop pages… and while I was umming and ahhhing, I spotted a post on the interweb with a pic of an amused looking John Rausch playing with one of the originals – followed by several exhortations about just how brilliant this puzzle was – and suggestions that puzzlists will find it awesome – I ordered one immediately… after all if I didn’t like it, I could always give John a hard time if I happened to run into him in the next few weeks…

Short version: it arrived. John was spot on. Hard time not required. 

Slightly longer version: this box truly encapsulates all that is great about the Karakuri puzzles – it’s an interesting puzzle to start with: you can more or less guess what you’re going to do right from the get-go… and once you get started you’re instantly rewarded with a nice bit of progress… there’s a pause in the middle allowing a little bit of thought and then another flurry of activity, resulting in a radically different-looking beast with lots of open cavities… 

RESULT!? 

Maybe…

You see one thing that you should know about the Karakuri folks is that they sign their work, usually in the form of a stamped signature (or hanko) somewhere inside the box… and at this point you can’t help but notice that you haven’t seen Kawashima-san’s hanko yet… perhaps he just forgot to sign them? 

(Yeah, right! Produce a stunning puzzle with insane tolerances and massive complexity, then don't bother signing your name to it... sure, that could happen... N O T !!)

…that is a whole other puzzle, and what take this from being a fantastic puzzle to being a really brilliant stand-out – it is both clever and fun, and if you blinked you’d easily be tempted into stopping before the end, quite satisfied with what you had already discovered… but there is so much more…

Probably now my favourite Karakuri puzzle of the year… boy was John right! 

[Sorry, can't really show you any more pics without spoiling some elements...] 

Tuesday 11 July 2017

MPP XXvii



Over the last couple of years, I’ve developed into a bit of a rut: on the last Friday before Wimbledon, I take the day off work and meet Dick Hess at the station and then spend a couple of days getting puzzled by his riddles, maths and stats problems and squeezing in an MPP over the weekend… it’s a brilliant recipe for a fine weekend, let me tell you!

Pretty soon after Dick had arrived he was already taunting me with stats puzzles that I really should know the answers to, and all too often Dick would respond with a wonderfully tactful “Well, you know, 80% of people would answer that way, but…” and then a “Let me walk you through it…”. 

We puzzled a bit – Osho’s Flying Tetra II was a big hit with Dick - and riddled a lot – and Dick shared the occasional bit of humour in between anecdotes of puzzlers and puzzling… 

One of Dick’s habits is to bring along a little gift for everyone attending the puzzle parties he goes to… and this time he’d made up a copy of a seriously diabolical little disentanglement puzzle… not content with that, he’d also brought along a couple of copies of some “helpful” intermediate stages to ease you into the main challenge… and during the course of the afternoon he duly introduced me to the trivial baby brother, which didn’t take me too long to solve… so we progressed onto the middle brother – which I made a bit of a meal of, managing to find a number of things that almost worked, vindicating Dick’s design several times along the solve – and giving Dick no small measure of happiness, no doubt… when I finally got through the second one, he told me I was ready for the final challenge, but I dodged that one and got my copy of that along with everyone else the next morning… and probably just as well, because the real deal bore about as much resemblance to the introductory numbers as the Wright Flyer bore to Concorde! 

That evening we collected Louis from the airport and puzzled some more, until a couple of us crashed for the night leaving a Dutchman in the puzzle cave a puzzling. I had a great Friday.

Next morning, we loaded up the puzzles and biccies and went down to the village to set up the hall before everyone arrived – and we just about managed to get it all sorted before the puzzlers descended… 

Angela and Peter arrived pretty early on and proceeded to bring out several crates of books and puzzles… I started trawling through the books and found a number of wonderful volumes to add to my collection, including a first edition Sam Lloyd and a signed Martin Gardener first edition… very chuffed! 

James also arrived with several crates-full, as did Tim T who was holding a two-for-one sale on his vintage and highly collectible puzzles. Dale also had a crate or two for sale or swap so there were plenty of opportunities for the odd cheeky little purchase. 

I’d been keeping my eye open for a Spanish visitor from Vienna – I recognised David from our meeting in The Hague last year and it was great to welcome him to his first MPP… he’d duly brought puzzling keyrings and a puzzle joke for all comers – and chocolates and cake from Vienna for everyone! He will be warmly welcomed back if he chooses to trek back over the channel again in the future. 

Several people had a go at my copy of Intrism – Louis probably got the furthest on it, but the general consensus was that it looked stunning but it was a pretty unforgiving dexterity puzzle! (There’s a single entry-point, so you’re always going back to the very beginning if you fall off…) 

During the course of the morning Dick did his rounds giving everyone there a copy of his Devil’s Coil entanglement… a serious franken-puzzle of note with multiple levels of challenge. Let me refer you simply to the comments above, say that the puzzle is well-named, and let us leave it at that! (Thanks Dick!) He was also dishing out booklets of bridge problems and entertaining all comers with his usual riddles and maths puzzles…

Big Steve had been printing stuff again and kept a few of us amused for quite a while sorting bits between puzzles and then trying to assemble a copy of one of Derek’s newest designs called, I think, Sphere 90… which is a bit of a step up from Sphere 30 – an assembly of 30 pieces to form a ball. He’d produced a couple of sets of pieces and wanted to give me a set…

Now, Sphere 90 consists of two sorts of pieces with 90 bits all told… Steve pointed out the two types of pieces and we duly started sorting the colours and the shapes accordingly, only to find there were a few different pieces in there for good measure. So we separated those and pulled together a full Sphere 90 set with a few spare pieces (just in case – things are under a bit of tension during the assembly) … we then had a bit of a bash at assembling the Sphere… and I wasn’t doing particularly well and duly left Ali and Chris working on it… and a short while later they had duly assembled “my set” of pieces… which then immediately became “Steve’s set” and I was given the bags of bits we’d previously put on one side… all’s fair in puzzling and all that…

[Now, on a bit of a side note, I then spent several hours over the next few evenings trying to unsuccessfully assemble those bits into a nice Sphere… but stuff kept not quite working out right or even in one case I found myself running out of bits! Which is really weird given that I knew there were spares in there… and then I realised that there weren’t just two types of pieces in there – I’d picked up “Steve’s set” with all the extra pieces from Sphere 30 and I’d been trying to mash them all into a single ball – that no work! Paying more careful attention, and sorting the bits properly, I got a nice 90-piece ball assembled quite rapidly…pity about the first couple of evenings wasted! :-) Thanks Derek and Steve!!]

Jeremy had brought along a bunch of interesting burrs, including a copy of his own design perfectly resembling a Tardis! He had a copy of Yavuz’ mosaic assembly that several people had fun rearranging and then brought out his Mac with some software he’d put together to illustrate symmetric patterns that could be created using the blocks… very clever that man…

Somewhere around lunchtime we wandered up the road in search of pig buns, only to find that our favourite hog-roastery wasn’t doing pig buns that day so we had to settle for burgers or chicken wraps (some weird sort of chicken and salad thingy wrapped in an old pancake – don’t see the attraction!). I shouldn’t grumble, the burger was nice and the company exceptional!

Adin and Sophie arrived a little while later, much to James’ delight. Adin had asked James if he had any Sorrento boxes available for sale and James had duly brought along an entire crate full of them for Adin to choose among… history records that Adin left with more than one Sorrento Box and James’ load was considerably lightened. 

James had brought along his copy of Ned Kelly for us to try a group solve, having previously failed on one of our visits to deepest darkest Luppitt. We then passed Ned around from puzzler to puzzler, each doing one step in the solve (puzzle away, find something useful, do it and then pass it onto the next puzzler). Ali started us off quite rapidly and Oli duly found something to move before handing it to Louis… who obliged and gave it to Chris who puzzled for a goodly time before giving up and passing it to me where I luckily managed to find something interesting to move us on… sadly there we got stuck for quite a while, circulating dear Ned with his chest opened to the elements, baring his soul, but no more of his secrets… much later in the afternoon he was rather rapidly disassembled when someone gave a hint on the next thing worth investigating… and Ned succumbed to the MPP group solve. 

Somewhere in the middle of the afternoon I dropped Dick off at the station so that he could grab a train into London for the start of his Wimbledon pilgrimage.

Steve has been bringing a set of hex sticks and rods along for a few meetings now, each time goading Chris into trying to assemble it and each time Chris spends ages trying to win Steve’s approval (or just conquer the damn puzzle!) by assembling the thing – each time to no avail… and thus it came to pass that the Travelling Dutchman did sit down with the bits, derive what the shape must be, examined the pieces and determined an assembly strategy and verily he did assemble the thing, using only Big Steve’s to support its truculent pieces at one point in the process… he is a puzzle solving machine!

My all-time classic moment of the day was when we were talking to Steve about his wheel construction of straight, identical sticks under-quite-a-lot-of-tension. He and Ali had assembled it and from the sounds of it, getting the last bits in were an absolute nightmare… whereupon Louis says, wouldn’t it be easier to just slide this up here and loosen that, demonstrating that it all comes apart rather deftly with virtually no tension whatsoever… the look on Ali and Steve’s face was true Mastercard Magic moment stuff: priceless! 

When things began to slow down at the hall, we decided to decamp back to my place for the traditional fish supper and more puzzling…

We played “How many puzzlers can you fit in Puzzle Cave v2?” – Answer: “More!” and David played hunt-the-interesting-puzzle among all the other stuff in the cabinets.

I managed to line a few of the guys up with Dick’s “introduction” to his giveaway – which should probably more accurately be described as a misleadance rather than an introduction!

At one point later that evening there was a lot of “interest” when David was being goaded into trying Shane’s Viper… I videoed his rather hesitant initial attempts and then got the full-throated Spanish equivalent of something vaguely similar to, but possibly more colourful than “Gosh, that stung a little bit, I wonder what’s inside there?” – now if only there was some sort of means of sharing videos on this world wide web thingy…

The party broke up reasonably early which allowed us to see that David safely caught a train back into Brum for the night and get a decent night’s sleep… 

27 turns out to be another goodie!