The Friday evening banquet was a slightly more formal affair
than the Founder’s Reception the night before ... instead of milling around and
chatting to one another with buffet tables around the corners of the room, we
now had a couple of tables of Renegades and their partners. We were a bit late
in getting in, so we ended up at a couple of tables next to the door – which
ended up working out quite well when they announced the buffet tables outside
were ready for us – we were near the front of what ended up being a really long
queue for the grub.
We had a great bunch of folks at our table – we wound up
sitting next to Kellian and Brian and had a great time getting to know them and hearing
about the dancing scenes in various cities as Kellian and Lesley swapped
stories about their dance endeavours.
The organising committee had left some puzzles scattered
around the tables and I ended up spending a lot longer than I should have
solving Markus Goetz’ Rhombus Flexing puzzle – in spite of having done it at
home a while back!
Lennart Green performed some amazing close-up magic with the
help of a couple of huge video screens on each side of the stage. Wil was
telling me a bit about Lennart Green a couple of days later – it turns out he’s
totally self-taught so all of his sleights are unique and aren’t what you’re
expecting, making him very much a magician’s magician. Some of his work was
absolutely incredible (in both senses of the word!) and I really enjoyed his
show.
Unfortunately the magician who followed him wasn’t quite in the same
league (technically or presentationally), but afterwards Peter’s mini bar key
came out again as Kellian & Gill hadn’t seen it yet (and he was much better than the
last bloke on stage). Having totally fooled her with the magical roaming chain,
Kellian asked if she could inspect the key chain and without missing a beat
Peter pointed out she was a married lady and that wouldn’t be proper! Superb!
After the formal entertainment was over, folks began milling
around and a couple of tables of magic appeared – Todd Reis brought out his
bananas again and Lennart Green sat down with a more intimate setting – about
forty people crowded around a single table craning for a good view of the action
– he didn’t disappoint!
At one point I wandered over to a table piled with twisty
puzzles where a bunch of the twisty cognoscenti were deep in discussion – only
to have my way barred by Rox telling me I couldn’t hang out here as I “wasn’t
twisty enough!” – before dragging me over to show me something interesting on
the table! While I was there James came over to demonstrate something that
Oskar had showed him earlier: a cube where the opposite sides are connected by
a gear train – except that depending on where in their phase the gear train is
positioned, the effect on the opposite side is different ... e.g. moving the top
layer half a twist moves the bottom layer a half a twist – so far so good –
moving the top layer another half a twist moves the bottom layer a quarter
twist – HANG ON! The next half twist inspired a full twist on the opposite
side... now before you ask, no I hadn’t been drinking – that freaked me out
more than a little!
After a while I wandered back down to the puzzle room where
the hard core puzzlers remained. I had a serious attempt at Mike Toulouzas’
Vault and managed to solve it – it is a serious piece of art – a beautifully
crafted wooden puzzle box that looks and behaves like the real thing it’s
imitating. At first I was a bit confused when I’d discovered more tools than I
thought I had a use for, until I tried closing the box ... turns out they
weren’t red herrings after all and closing the box is a seriously non-trivial
exercise! Superb work Mike – I love it.
I managed to solve the Double G puzzle – I really hope that
someone picks up the rights to produce these, it’s a great puzzle. It looks
really simple but those little tabs manage to find all sorts of ways to block
everything that you’re trying to do... a masterpiece of simple, subtle design.
I had a play around with Jane Kostick’s Double Duals and
enjoyed playing with this one as much as all her other puzzles – if not a
little more. This one comes disassembled with very little clue to the eventual
shape and once you’ve worked out which sets of pieces work together you can
assemble one set and then add the other set – although it doesn’t matter which
order you do it in ... hence the name – either set of pieces can be on the
inside or on the outside ... she’s pretty clever with her geometry is Jane.
While I was playing away with a variety of things Robert
Yarger was thoroughly investigating Jerry McFarland’s BurrBlock – he spent ages
playing with it and examining all the bits as it came apart, and then the next
day he and Jerry had a long chat about it .... he seemed pretty impressed and
definitely seemed to be enjoying the challenge that night.
Chinny sidled up to me at some point and asked if I had one
of his wobbly tops yet. When I said I didn’t he promptly gave me the last one he
had, and when I offered to pay for it he refused any offers of cash and
insisted that I buy a lathe and make three wobbly tops and give them away. Now
anyone who’s seen these little marvels (mine’s about two inches tall) and
understands the mechanics of using a lathe, will know that Chinny is both a
master lathe-crafter and a little nuts! Having seen some clips of off-centred lathe-work
with a chunk of wood spinning around trying to throw itself across the room at
the craftsman, I’m pretty sure I won’t be trying that any time soon! Yet here’s
Chinny giving me a beautifully made wobbly top, complete with decorative
chattering and his trademark whistle in the top...
When we asked him about his off-centre lathe-work he replied
“It doesn’t terrify me any more!” – I’m not sure I should believe him!
He hauled out a bunch of other little treasures that he
carried around, including introducing me to La Boomba! Looking like a classic
cherry bomb, this one is turned from coloured pencils and once opened it begins
to tick loudly before letting off an explosion, all the while a
menacing-looking Lego mini-fig glares at you ... that’s the sort of thing to
expect from Chinny – he’s an absolute scream and it was wonderful to get to
spend some time with him that night. Cheers mate!
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