Gill and I spent the morning wandering around some of the
monuments in DC on our own, having navigated the Metro into the centre of town
(not an especially tough puzzle, to be fair) – we watched aircraft wheeling
into Reagan and banking across the Jefferson Memorial while tourists pedalled
boats on the river. Weaved our way between sprinklers dodging the spray through
the parking lot, thinking more than once that it might be rather pleasant to
wander into the spray for just a bit, then noticed a young girl doing exactly
that. A few minutes later a large white van drove past us and stopped at the
corner for two huge guys to get out and go and stand in the middle of the
spray, arms outstretched cooling down – perhaps it wasn’t just us tourists from
England who were feeling the heat that morning.
We sat on the lawn at the Washington memorial (in the
shade!) and took some pics before heading up toward the White House for yet
more touristy pics. From there we wandered across to a cafe for an iced coffee
and some a/c – not sure which one went down better! After a short wander
through the shops, we took the Metro back to Pentagon City where we found a
Johnny Rockets (long story, but we like the milkshakes and burgers) so decided
we’d have to come back there again...
Back at the hotel I got distracted by Pavel Curtis
introducing some of his word games to Bram Cohen and a small group of puzzlers
so I stopped and joined the puzzling – really enjoyed the multi-layer
combination of a physical puzzle and several layers of word-puzzles and some
serious lateral thinking – all of them gave some really good A-HA moments a few
times through the solution process. Not
sure how far we’d have got without Pavel’s expert gentle guidance from the
sidelines when we got stuck though.
During the afternoon I met the amazing force of nature called Stephen Chin (or more commonly Chinny or Chinnomoto) and Matt Dawson who gave me a lovely box of chocolates (the state’s finest!) as a thank you for connecting him to some folks back in the UK who were interested in getting hold of a copy of his exchange puzzle – heck that was easy – and I got a box of chocolates for my “trouble”. I met Derek and Michelle Bosch and got introduced to little Ann who was doing her impression of the best behaved toddler in the world at the time! I congratulated Derek on opening his Revomaze Gold during the past week and we chatted a bit about it as a puzzle, or not... and "recent developments".
During the afternoon I met the amazing force of nature called Stephen Chin (or more commonly Chinny or Chinnomoto) and Matt Dawson who gave me a lovely box of chocolates (the state’s finest!) as a thank you for connecting him to some folks back in the UK who were interested in getting hold of a copy of his exchange puzzle – heck that was easy – and I got a box of chocolates for my “trouble”. I met Derek and Michelle Bosch and got introduced to little Ann who was doing her impression of the best behaved toddler in the world at the time! I congratulated Derek on opening his Revomaze Gold during the past week and we chatted a bit about it as a puzzle, or not... and "recent developments".
I met Ken Irvine, another first-time IPP-er who was
generally around with his rucksack full of new designs – always happy to take
them out for folks to play with. They turned out to be a huge hit and I’m sure
that Ken got sick and tired of telling folks that he didn’t have any for sale,
he’d just brought one of each of his designs for folks to play with ...
although as I write this, Tom Lensch and Eric Fuller have already committed to
producing some of Ken’s designs and Bernhard Schweitzer has also been making
promising noises along the same lines, so hopefully they’ll be available in due
course – the designs I had a crack at were all excellent ... one of them has
all the feel and play of one of Mine’s cubes, except it doesn’t have the little
tricky bit to it ... making it more of an honest puzzle, but just as much fun
to play with!
The puzzle design room sucked me back in again and I had a
wonderful time playing with some of the designs, again. This time with a little
more success!
Peter Wiltshire’s Ferris’ Box is a truly excellent puzzle
box – it looks like a 3*3*3 cube inside a maple frame and none of the usual tricks
seems to do anything, but when things do start to move, boy are they
interesting! It was a really fun box to solve and a real treat to play with –
Peter’s crafting skills are superb and it’s not hard to see why it won the Jury
First Prize ... Peter made a limited number of them and most of them will be in
the Apothecary Chest project ... a few of which might be sold off once the
project is complete. I suspect he must have gotten sick and tired of the
repeated requests for one of his boxes because he’s subsequently decided to
make a further four copies, in different woods to set them apart from the first
limited edition run and sell them via one of the puzzle auctions ... keep an
eye out for that one, it’s a cracker!
I made absolutely no progress on the Packman puzzle (again!)
but did manage to solve Double Symmetry (the three orange triangle puzzle) which sort of
surprised me as I am usually rubbish at that sort of puzzle (making symmetrical
shapes from weird pieces). This puzzle gives you three odd triangles and asks
you to make a pair of symmetrical shapes...
At one point I found myself puzzling next to Brian Young so
introduced myself and we ended up chatting about life, the universe and puzzle
blogs.
Neither of us was convinced that his linking to my blog posts had
actually done much for his sales, but at least I was able to name a couple of
folks who’d bought an Opening Bat after seeing mine and hearing about it. While
we were talking about his Opening Bat he told me about one of his serious
collectors who’d sent him an email just after he’d received his copy saying “Is
that it?”. Brian suggested he reserve judgement until he’d at least tried
playing with it first, and several days later there was another email along
saying “Ah, now I understand...” – Brian wouldn’t say how long it subsequently
took him to get through all three locks properly. It was great chatting to Brian and really
felt that we came at life from a similar perspective – perhaps it’s a Southern-Hemisphere-approach-to-life-thing?
Eric Fuller and Robert Yarger whirled through the design
room and the registration desk in a bit of a flurry – one had mailed his gear
for the evening do along with his puzzles and the other had been delayed, and
they were sharing a room ... all ended well, with the two of them making the do
in the evening with plenty of time to spare ...more on which in the next post ...
You do realise Allard that at some point you're going to have to explain the photos of the Puzzle Box in the photos and the pictures of the Joker ...
ReplyDeleteBut until then I'll leave people guessing!
You are right about that Neil, I am eager to hear the story, but was told not to ask, so I won't !-)
DeleteThe oracle has noted your interest and will respond fully in due course ... woodchuck!
Delete