OK, it’s kid-in-a-candy-store time AGAIN! Saturday is puzzle
party day – stacks of people from around the world all trying to sell you
wonderful puzzles… awful, isn’t it?! At least I’ve already bagged 90-odd
puzzles the day before in the exchange, so some of the pressure is off…
I join the queue and then help Steve carry a couple of
crates into the puzzle room fifteen minutes before it opens to the rest of us
rabble and somehow resist the urge to loiter around inside and see what’s on
offer – I re-join the throng outside and we’re all released into the room at
9am sharp. I have some money in the wallet and an empty rucksack – I’m ready!
I quickly join the crowd at Perry McDaniel’s table – this year
he’s ditched the bakery and turned chocolatier. When I get to the table the
crowd’s already three-deep so I wait my turn unable to see a thing – when I get
to the front I fork over some cash and ask for a set of this year’s toys
(including a cutaway display model because there was so much demand for the
single cutaway version that Perry had in DC along with the last petit four).
From there I head over to Mike Toulouzas as I suspect
(read: HOPE!) that he might have some copies of his design competition entries. I get
a copy of Cross Links and I’m delighted – I’ve seen it in the Competition room
but haven’t had a chance to play with it yet – this way I know I can enjoy it
at my leisure… and put it on the shelf next to the Gavel and a couple of other
bits of Toulouzas magic.
I pick up a copy of Mike’s earlier design called Doors and
Drawers from Bernhard and then begin exploring some of the other stands…
I notice a collector holding a Dodecahedron Ball while
chatting to Wil and I suspect rather strongly that he’s not going to let it go …
and he looks happy!
For the next 5 hours I wander around the room from table to
table finding little treasures like Dmitry’s Paperclip entanglement, a brass
Ball Puzzle by Charles Perry, a copy of Eric Fuller’s Spline Box, an exploding
brass ball and a copy of Meiko’s other transparent Secret Box – which despite
being transparent holds its secrets rather well!
I pick up an absolute bargain from Chinny toward the end of
the day when he refuses to let me pay the full price for one of his Exploding
Icosahedrons. I manage to pick up a couple of puzzles I’ve been meaning to get
from Jurg von Kanel too.
I spend a while at Pavel’s table and basically pick up a
copy of each of the puzzles I’ve been meaning to buy from his web-site for ages.
Peter Gal had a great selection of his book-puzzles including
a pile that I hadn’t seen before … and knowing that I was going to be on a
cruise later in the year, I picked up a fistful of them – great holiday
puzzles!
Simon Nightingale had a few of his earlier puzzles for sale
and I couldn’t resist picking up another of them, not just because all of the
proceeds of his puzzle sales go directly to charity.
This year I had a bunch of my exchange puzzles left for sale
and I managed to flog most of them in between doing all my own puzzle shopping…
At one point I chanced upon Angus Lavery and Allen Rolfs
chatting about impossible card-and-bill-folding designs in the hotel lobby and
I couldn’t resist the opportunity to join them and listen and learn for a
little while from these two masters of the art. I got to see some of their
latest amazing creations up close, including Angus’ rather impressive four-way
trapdoor card – WOW! And it was great to finally meet Angus in person after
swapping emails with him for a while…
After the puzzle party, we had another series of lectures. James
Dalgety entertained us with some wonderful “Whatsits” including a number of
strange-looking gadgets that no-one had managed to identify yet. Otis gave a
great talk on puzzling in China – focussed mainly on twisty puzzles (his
speciality) and introduced us to some familiar names and some not-so-familiar
faces from beyond the Great Wall. He talked quite frankly about the problem of
knock-offs but also about the great developments and the promise of the huge
new market in China.
Dick Hess gave a delightful talk on how studying colliding
masses might give us the digits of pi. He strung us all along beautifully
developing the arguments in a simplified world of no friction and no limits right
up until the end of his talk when he had to admit that the universe wasn’t big
enough to give us a useful number of digits and relativity made them horribly
inaccurate anyway.
Sol Golomb gave a talk on Tic Tac Toe in higher dimensions
and their optimal strategies and I’m afraid I have to admit that I didn’t quite
follow all of it… Tom Coutrofello bravely demonstrated some puzzle apps live on
his iPad, solving almost all of the levels he randomly selected to demo!
Finally the Grabarchuks demonstrated their puzzling app
Puzzlium and then took a range of rather interesting questions from the floor –
ranging from the rating system used for their puzzles to how they expected
their business model to operate.
Another quick change of clothes up in the room and we were
all back down in the ballroom for the Awards Dinner. Laurie provided the
entertainment with a great magic show to get things kicked off, culminating in
a huge production from a modest-sized box that had been pretty darn empty just
a few moments earlier.
Laurie got the whole hosting committee up on stage to thank
us and presented us each with a an engraved puzzle from Vinco and a large chocolate
bottle… now I just need to make sure I do my bit on the book properly!
I positioned myself up front to get some pics of Nick
running through the awards and presenting them to the winners and got caught by
surprise when Louis and my Conjuring Conundrum got a Top 10 votes award. I managed
to snap pics of all the other winners though!
Mike Toulouzas took the Puzzlers’ Award and I swear I saw a
tear in his eye when he collected his award – a hugely popular winner and a
wonderfully humble craftsman … Congratulations Mike! :-)
After we’d congratulated all the winners things wound down
as folks began to say goodbye to friends that they might not see for another
year.
Quite a few folks moved across to the lobby where Laurie
appeared with a life-sized cardboard cut-out of the Queen, who was duly
subjected to all manner of photographing / photo-bombing and generally high
jinks – she seemed to remain amused through it all.
On Sunday morning we packed up everything and started saying
goodbye to friends who were leaving: Peter and Lesley, and Louis headed out
first thing in the morning and after we’d seen them off properly, we packed up
the car and checked out of the hotel.
Gill headed off to spend the day with her sister and I
lurked in the lobby for the day, chatting and puzzling in between lunch at the
Three Magpies and then heading out for our tour of the Magic Circle. Laurie had
laid on a tour of the Magic Circle’s premises and a full magic show in their
impressive auditorium.
There were some wonderful cabinets full of memorabilia from some of the biggest names in the business – I had a great time looking over bits and pieces that I recognised from my time in magic … many, many years ago. It was absolutely brilliant hearing Laurie telling stories from his time in the navy when Dillis (sp?) the blindfolded duck was a firm favourite at sea.
There were some wonderful cabinets full of memorabilia from some of the biggest names in the business – I had a great time looking over bits and pieces that I recognised from my time in magic … many, many years ago. It was absolutely brilliant hearing Laurie telling stories from his time in the navy when Dillis (sp?) the blindfolded duck was a firm favourite at sea.
I had a lovely chat with Sue Young in the bus on the way
back to the hotel before yet more goodbyes ahead of our short
drive north-west to Barnt Green, back home to my own bed and a heavenly night’s
sleep, with plenty dreams of puzzling.
Gaaah! I've heard about the puzzle exchange before, but it has only just sunk in on reading this entry that in one day, you get a number of new puzzles approximately equal to the number of puzzles I own in total! It's rather galling. Good to read the report though, many thanks.
ReplyDeleteYeah, but in fairness you're also giving away as many puzzles as you have in your collection! :-). The numbers vary from year to year- last year there were only 60-odd of us in the exchange...
DeleteHa-ha, maybe I have the wrong end of the stick - I got the impression that you gave away lots of copies of the same puzzle of your own design, and received a roughly equal number of different ones in return
DeleteNope, you're spot-on, just pointing out the quo in the quid pro... And you get back almost as many as you dish out...:-)
DeleteIn strict numerical terms, you're right, but to me, that's hardly the spirit. Expense apart (I guess the effort required to design & build 100 copies is far from trivial), the main problem is finding the puzzles that aren't mass produced. Having said that, I'm watching Phil Tomlinson's auctions, but they'll be a bit keen for me I fear.
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