After breakfast I find myself heading back upstairs in the
lift with Brian and Sue ... and Brian is singing (!) - about Christmas Day - so
I assume that he's just had way too much caffeine and ask Sue if that's what's
caused it, but Brian explains that today is the very best day in the year as
far as he's concerned - he's going to get stacks of new puzzles - he is the
excited kid on Christmas morning.
That sums up the Edward Hordern Puzzle Exchange rather neatly
for me: no matter how long you've been doing this, or whether or not it's how
you earn your living, the prospect of exchanging 60-odd puzzles with your
puzzling mates form around the world really is the best thing since sliced
bread! And worth singing about...
I drag a suitcase full of suitcases downstairs and set up
shop at my table toward the back of the room and hook up with Marc, my volunteer
sherpa (his description!) for the day - Marc ends up doing duty superbly as not only sherpa,
but exchange wrangler and chief photographer as well. He starts by asking
whether I want to hang around at the table and wait for others to wander past
or walk around and shortly after the official "Off!" we find
ourselves wandering rather than waiting...
After the first few exchanges they settle into a predictable
rhythm and the patter / schpiel settles down to a common story - probably
advisable...
Marc does an awesome job of running around taking photos and
being the fall-guy for my warnings about the puzzles being a test of wit and
not of strength, he's always there to take away exchange puzzles I've been
given and pass me a copy of mine to hand out in return. We get through most of
the 60-odd exchanges with Marc guiding
me to the folks we haven't swapped with yet (he's in charge of the checklist)
and with about a dozen or so to go we take a break for lunch and relax for a
few minutes.
One boxed lunch later (including some rather good
sandwiches!) we hit the last dozen or so and we're all done by about 1 o'clock.
I now have a large suitcase full of new puzzles and I've gotten rid of about 70
of my puzzles...RESULT!
I head up to the room for the obligatory swag shot before
heading back down for the Impossible Motion / Object Design lecture and the
Origami workshop that I've signed up for. The former is really interesting (I
particularly enjoyed the bit about how the desired illusion can be derived
mathematically from the actual object, and vice versa) and we each get a set of
templates to make up our own copies of the main impossible motion objects in
the lecture.
The second session taught me just how challenging serious
origami can be ... in spite of the number of times the leaders kept saying they
were showing us the really simple things... I managed the first two
constructions before failing miserably at the next one ... so I took some
homework away. Nick Baxter and Oskar have clearly either done this before or
have far better spatial awareness than I have - both succeeding well beyond my
limits!
After a quick shower we all headed back to the Banquet for
some (more) excellent food, magic and some rather unusual juggling ... before wandering
next door for some more work on the Design Competition entries... I loved Hexagonrings
and then spent a good deal of time proving to Marcel just how rubbish I am at
solving puzzles when he suggested I have a go at Bucolic Cubes - he gave up
watching me fail after a while and just after that I finally managed to solve
it - and that's the story I'm going to stick to! (It is a delightfully deceptively
difficult little puzzle.)
...as usual we puzzled on until the midnight curfew when we
were all thrown out of the room... and I headed off for some sleep before the
serious business of the puzzle party the next morning...
Some random pics from the Exchange... all of them taken by Marc
Pawliger - Thanks Marc!