Just over a year ago Nigel and I flew across to The
Netherlands to attend the 2011 Dutch Cube Day in Eindhoven. Luckily our fellow
MPP-er Louis lives in Eindhoven and he took care of us while we were over there
... afterwards I blogged about it a bit and we talked about it to all and sundry
at subsequent MPPs ... and it seems that folks liked what they heard. This time
Nigel and I were joined for an early Saturday morning flight from Birmingham by
Chris, and Ali and Oli flew across to Amsterdam from Luton. We all met up with Louis
who’d caught the train from Eindhoven to Schipol and then the six of us made
our way across to The Hague, scene of this year’s DCD.
We all managed to check-in when we got there, although there
were a couple of fraught minutes until the hotel found Ali’s booking in the
name of Mr Alistair instead of the more orthodox use of his surname. When the
hotel restaurant opened at 11:30 we all piled in for some lunch as most of us
had been at the airport from 4:30 that morning. While we were happily munching
away Wil Strijbos pulled up in his red van and hopped out with Christiaan
Eggermont. They joined us for a bite to eat after they’d checked in and then
headed off to the venue to unpack Wil’s wares for the Sunday.
We walked round there after lunch and notionally
helped Wil unpack his crates in order to justify our presence. Bernhard
Schweitzer had obviously been there for a while already as most of his stuff
was already unpacked. It was great to see Bernhard again after a bit more than
a year at the previous DCD. I spotted Joop doing his rounds as one of the
organisers and reminding the prospective sellers that they were supposed to be
saving their trading for the next day – although I did notice a couple of my
mates coming out of there with little parcels or treasure in spite of Joop’s
best endeavours.
Rob's well-laid dining table |
Mid-afternoon we all headed off toward Rob Hegge’s place for
a bit of a puzzle party. We’d spoken about DCD in Washington and I’d mentioned there
would be a bunch of us MPP-ers coming over so he’d offered to organise a bit of
a get-together. We arrived with Wil and Christiaan in tow to Rob, Frans de
Vreugd and Simon Nightingale all furiously puzzling away, and a little while
later Rik van Grol and the rest of the gang arrived. (Only half of us could fit
in the red van so the others took a cab from the hotel.)
Rob had laid his dining room table with all of his IPP
puzzles and about half of us promptly sat down (after we’d said hello to
everyone, promise!) and began confusing ourselves. The rest scattered
themselves around his lounge peering into the many cabinets jam-packed with
puzzles. Rob was a great host keeping us plied with caffeine and fruit juice
and the odd round of snacks. He happily sought out some of the less well known
puzzles in his collection and hauled them out for folks to have a go on ...
Nigel for one was glad to be able to give one of Brian Young’s big Telephone Boxes a bit of a once over. Not sure
anyone opened the (Karakuri) Grand Piano though...
I spent a while trying my hand at Tan-Talizing and failed
miserably, only to see Louis solve it in a matter of minutes, take his
customary photo of the solved puzzle and then break it up while I tried not to
watch... although I have to say that he did a very good job of obscuring
anything useful in the process.
At one point Rob brought out his Roger Shaker and Ali had a
pretty good go at it, actually solving it! Locking it up again proved a bit
tougher and we had to drag Wil in to try and salvage the position... and even
though Wil was seen prancing around the room performing all manner of strange callisthenics, the puzzle remained resolutely open ... sorry Rob.
We had to drag ourselves away from Rob’s treasure trove to
meet Bernhard back at the hotel for some Italian and just managed to get back
in time to find him, and after dumping our gear, we all (11 of us!) set off
following Bernhard to an Italian joint he remembered from previous visits ...
after a couple of false starts and wrong turns we found it and they pushed a
few tables together for us. I knew the food was going
to be superb when Bernhard didn’t hesitate and ordered his standard Carpaccio
and a main course (read last year’s story if that doesn’t make sense!). Several
courses of superb food duly followed, liberally interspersed with some (apparently)
very fine wine ... with several puzzles floating around the table among the
courses. As always the banter was highly entertaining and when Louis noticed
that the wall tiles looked a bit like the panels on a puzzle box, he proceeded
to try and solve the wall! (And he was stone cold sober at the time, promise!)
It was an outstanding meal with fantastic company ... and if you’re ever in
Voorburg, you could do a lot worse than look up Fratelli's for a bite to eat!
(You’re on your own on the company though...)
Back at the hotel, we found ourselves drawn to the bar area
for yet more puzzling and I eventually stumbled up to my bed just before
midnight...
Next morning Louis and I headed back to the venue a little
after the opening time and the rest of the gang followed along at a more
leisurely pace having sussed out Wil and Bernhard’s tables the previous afternoon.
Anyone seen Vinco? |
This year DCD was held in Sint Maartenscollege in the school
hall, with tables set up for the speed-cubers down one side and puzzle tables
taking up pretty much the rest of the hall... and clearly a lot of new folks
had arrived between us leaving there on Saturday and getting back on Sunday –
there were stacks of new puzzle tables piled high with interesting puzzles,
optical illusions and games.
We signed in and each received a micro three-piece cube
puzzle courtesy of Richard Gain (the microcubologist)
and the organisers – a really nice touch!
Inside the room it was wonderful recognising puzzlers from
DCD last year and from Washington earlier this year – every one of them stopped
to say hi and ask how we’d been in the interim – good people...
Wil had brought a couple of things along for me, including a
Five Nails puzzle from Jan Sturm for my Shropshire puzzle mate Dale, and a
couple of Cola Bottles (#5 and #7B)
to add to my collection – but I’ll be writing about those in due course...
Jack Krijnen had a table selling some of his designs (you’re
not likely to come across Burrly Sane available for sale like that...) and had
a few placed out for folks to play around with ... including a very simple
looking 2D puzzle consisting of about 5 pieces and the object is to make the
classic outline of a house... WAY tougher than it looks and I’m still kicking
myself for not taking a copy...
Ceremonial handover |
My main reason to looking out for Jack was linked to our
meeting at DCD last year. Just before that he’d published a couple of pics on a forum of a tiny burr set
he’d crafted for himself, and in the interim he’d decided to make a few more
copies for sale, and I’d managed to get in early enough to secure a copy and I
was going to be picking it up at DCD ... it really deserves an entire post on it’s
own, and that’s what it’ll get – but for now I’ll just say that it is even
better in the flesh than it looks in the pics and it is an awesome piece of
woodwork! [Thanks Jack!]
We spent pretty much the whole day wandering between the
tables and noticing new things each time we went past a table ... the lunch
that the organisers laid on was great and the Midlands Mob spent a while
munching and talking puzzles with Simon and Frans while giving our legs a bit
of a break...
After lunch we had a couple of lectures – firstly from Frans
de Vreugd on his puzzle-hunting trip to Sri Lanka with Peter Hajek. Frans
entertained us with some great stories and interesting insights, all
illustrated with a terrific set of photos from the trip and a bunch of carved
objects all of which had secret compartments hidden inside them. As most of us
hadn’t been exposed to any puzzle boxes from Sri Lanka, it made for a really
interesting talk. He was followed by Edo Timmermans who gave an inspiring talk on
modelling mathematical constructions using simple little magnetic balls – the sort
we’ve all played around with at some point... except that his creations were on
an EPIC scale – take a look at his YouTube channel
and I guarantee that you’ll be thoroughly amazed at what can be done with these
simple little ‘toys’ in the right hands.
Fidgety Rabbits (the white things they're holding!) |
After that I spent a while chatting with Goetz Schwandtner who’d brought along a couple of really fascinating derivatives of the standard Chinese
rings ... the first was a copy of the Fidgety Rabbits puzzle from this year’s
Design Competition – it’s a binary implementation with 7 sliders, each of which
can be in one of two states... then he brought out a special version by the
same creator (Namick Salakhov) which had a ternary implementation, with just 6 sliders! He passed it around and
everyone had a fiddle around with it and we all went a little way into the
sequence and then allowed discretion to take over and reversed back to the
start position... the binary one was opened a few times but nobody really tried
to go all the way through the ternary example. Goetz spent a while talking us
through the design which is rather ingenious as it will generalise to any
higher order implementation desired – clever design that! [There’s a much
better pic of the two next to each other on Goetz’ web page.]
One of the other things Goetz had brought along was a Lego (genius!)
implementation of a Bob Hearn design
that had never been made before – even though it theoretically only has three
rings, the number of moves involved was simply astronomical! In fact Goetz hadn’t
even determined the number of moves required to fully solve it – jolly creative
that Goetz bloke! :-)
The Dutch Cube Day really is a tremendous opportunity to
meet some amazing puzzlers, manufacturers, sellers and designers...
Where else
could you get one of Oskar’s designs autographed by the man himself (yip, I
did!), or where could you tell Robrecht Louage how much you enjoyed 4 Steps
Visible Lock, or chat to Vinco, or talk to Marcel Gillen about his old puzzles
and his more recent designs, play with some really exotic twisty puzzles and
rake through crate after crate after crate of wonderful goodies from Wil
Strijbos. It’s a wonderful opportunity for all of the above, and you get to
make some excellent new friends ... all for the princely sum of ten Euros for
the day! You cannot beat that for puzzling value for money! If you haven’t
already joined NKC, drop Rik a line and sign up and then
join us in Holland next year ... if you love puzzles you won’t regret it!
Obligatory loot shot. |
The Shaker has been unsolved :-)
ReplyDeleteNot sure how I did it though...
Hi Rob. Well done? Shall we send Ali around again? :-)
DeleteHi Allard. Wouldn't that 5-piece 2-D house the same as the one sold by Arteludes ( Maison en 5 pièces ) ?
ReplyDeleteI think it probably is that one Guillaume! Thanks - Now I know where to find one... (It's weird, I look at Arteludes regularly and hadn't twigged that was the same puzzle - thanks!) - allard
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