A couple of years ago Kagen Sound (nee Schaefer) announced an ambitious series of puzzle boxes starting with the Lotus Box. Each would be based on the geometry of his fabulous Lotus Tables and puzzlers would find clues to subsequent boxes along the way… it sounded like fun and the prototypes looked smashing so I signed up. As did, I suspect, another 99 other folks.
Over the course of the next two years Kagen would send out the occasional update and post some teasing pics showing bits and pieces of progress (generally piles and piles of gorgeous looking bits!) – until about a month ago when he announced that he was ready to start shipping his Lotus Boxes… I sent him some Paypal and pretty soon a rather large box arrived at Puzzling Times HQ – after the obligatory ransom demand had been paid, of course.
Opening that box was an absolute treat… inside there was a custom-made shipping box made out of MDF and some heavy cardboard tube… opening the lid of the shipping box revealed a very well wrapped Lotus Box… every bit as beautiful as Kagen’s pics had suggested.
As with all of Kagen’s boxes, the finish is thoroughly wonderful! This thing glistens in the light and feels gorgeous – and the eight(!) concentric rings all move smoothly between their individual end stops. It’s worth just playing around with those rings for a while before you start any serious puzzling – the patterns they create are stupendous – switching radically between patterns with a few small movements on some of the disks. This thing’s trippy!
So what’s it like as a puzzle then?
Short answer: terrific!
The slightly longer version: there are four drawers to be unlocked sequentially – each drawer’s locking mechanism relies on the puzzlist lining up those eight rings to form a pre-determined pattern… there’s a clue to the first pattern on the outside of the box and once that’s been properly created, the first drawer is unlocked… which gives a clue to the second pattern and so on…
I was able to create patterns one and two reasonably easily, but the third one eluded me for ages… and judging by the comments on my favourite puzzling forum, it’s caused similar levels of puzzlement in others too… it’s easy to get it almost right, then find that you can’t move one of the critical rings far enough to complete the pattern, so you shift things around a bit only to find another one blocked somewhere else – except, when you now unblock that one, the first one blocks up again… repeat.
I spent a while chasing my tail on that one before I finally found a way around it…
…and then there’s the small matter of finding the pattern for the final drawer… that’s a lovely little twist that might just keep you confused for a little while longer – it’s a lovely little touch… suckers you into a pattern and then break it when you need it the most!
I really enjoyed working my way through opening all four drawers after a particularly heavy day in the office, as a result I can confidently recommend the Lotus Box as a great antidote to the daily grind!
Tuesday, 31 May 2016
Friday, 20 May 2016
Wil’s King’s Day Puzzle Party 2016
A couple of weeks ago I got to enjoy a wonderfully indulgent
weekend away puzzling… Wil Strijbos has an annual open-house / puzzle party on
or around the Netherlands' King’s Day holiday. It’s an
opportunity for his friends from all around Europe to meet up, play with his
puzzles and perhaps even purchase one or two things from the man himself.
I’ve missed the last couple of them due to having other
things on those weekends, but this year I was determined to make it back so I
booked the weekend out ages in advance and as soon as Wil confirmed the date I
booked flights and a hotel so I had no excuse not to be there…
This year we managed to convince a couple of other MPP-ers
to traipse along as well: Steve and Shane flew into Eindhoven on the Saturday
morning and I joined them there in the afternoon via Schipol and the extremely
efficient Dutch train system. Louis met me at the train station (I managed to
find my way that far!) and we got me checked in at the local Holiday Inn where
Shane and Steve had also just checked in. Louis took us back to his place for
some gentle afternoon puzzling before Mieke filled us up with a delicious
dinner.
Things took a serious turn after dinner when we all marched
down the road to attempt a room escape at the Eindhoven Escape Hunt Experience
which had recently opened up just around the corner from the Coolens… pure
chance, eh?
Mieke and Laura joined the slightly more hardened puzzlers and we had a great time escaping from the Cosmology of Life room… I say escaping, and we did get out, with plenty time to spare, but we managed to do it without solving a few of the puzzles in the room – you see, we had Shane with us… and when Shane sees a combination lock, he sees it as a lock-picking challenge, so he motored through a whole bunch of them and we had a hard time keeping track of which combinations we’d used by the time we got to the end of the solve… and of course the final two locks were high quality locks that were a lot harder to pick so we actually had to solve those puzzles properly! [There was a fun version of Rush Hour where you needed to use a magnet to move the cars around…]
Mieke and Laura joined the slightly more hardened puzzlers and we had a great time escaping from the Cosmology of Life room… I say escaping, and we did get out, with plenty time to spare, but we managed to do it without solving a few of the puzzles in the room – you see, we had Shane with us… and when Shane sees a combination lock, he sees it as a lock-picking challenge, so he motored through a whole bunch of them and we had a hard time keeping track of which combinations we’d used by the time we got to the end of the solve… and of course the final two locks were high quality locks that were a lot harder to pick so we actually had to solve those puzzles properly! [There was a fun version of Rush Hour where you needed to use a magnet to move the cars around…]
A couple more hours puzzling at the Coolens before we
decamped back to the hotel to crash ahead of a full day on Sunday…
Louis collected us from the hotel and we headed
cross-country to Venlo where we surprised Wil as he was trying to finish his
breakfast – the English are keen, and early, it seems! Ushered in, he soon had
us coffeed up, relaxed and puzzling in his lounge… among a mythical collection
of fabulously rare puzzles… heaven.
And then the other puzzlers began arriving, and it was
wonderful catching up with old friends I hadn’t seen for a while, and meeting
people I’d only swapped emails with for the first time… I’d only been there half
an hour and already it was all worth it! Just brilliant!
Michel was one of the first to arrive and I found myself
sitting on the floor while a few of us played with his new copy of Jack
Krijnen’s modified version of Goh Pit Khiam’s Racktangle – with added
n-ary-ness… quite a treat.
Later on I had a chance to meet Jacques Haubrich who runs
some rather nice puzzle auctions from time to time… no prizes for guessing how
we know each other! After exchanging emails for ages it was great to meet
Jacques and chat puzzles for a while at Wil’s.
Oskar set up a large table-full of puzzles and experiments
out in the back garden under a lovely sunny sky and he had a solid progression
of puzzlers passing around the table fiddling and playing and taking a few
copies of his latest Hanayama puzzle off his hands…
As you might expect, there were a few prototypes of future
Strijbos originals lying around and occasionally getting played with – sadly I
was not allowed to buy any of them! (Yes, I tried!) There are some more cracking
puzzles to come from this man in the near future… watch this space.
As usual Wil laid on an incredible spread of local delights
for lunch – with a huge variety of wonderful tarts and cakes on offer pretty
much all through the day…
At one point Louis stumbled across a set of insanely challenging dexterity puzzles and promptly lined them all up and solved the lot
of them in short order…
Wil had an absolute hoot demonstrating his tricky sewing box
with randomly locking and unlocking drawers much to everyone’s amusement – even
trying unsuccessfully to GIVE it away a few times… before bringing out a lovely
Japanese puzzle chest that Rik and his kids spent a while working their way
through… it’s always nice seeing a couple of generations from the same family
working on a puzzle collaboratively!
I managed to bag a couple of large-scale simple disentanglements to add to my collection and one of my mates managed to score an arboreal herbivorous marsupial - he was mighty chuffed, let me tell you!
When all was said and done and most folks had left a bunch
of us decamped off to Wil’s favourite Chinese restaurant for a serious banquet
of a dinner… and then a few more hours puzzling back at Wil’s place before
Louis drove us all back to Eindhoven after a seriously long day’s puzzling… it
all made for a brilliant puzzling weekend – thanks Wil, and Louis!
Monday, 16 May 2016
Adin’s Amulet
A while back my puzzle-designing mate Adin popped around for
a visit and handed me a copy of something he’d designed and made himself… it
was a six-piece burr he’d called Amulet and it had me thoroughly confuzzled. He’s
fiddled around with a standard six-piece burr and added a few constraining
voxels around the middle and shorted one of the axes… adding those voxels makes
all the difference it turns out – without them there’d be 144 solutions, with
them the solution is unique… and quite tricky!
The first time I met this puzzle I got virtually nowhere
with it… so when Adin asked for some feedback, I told him I thought it was a
great puzzle and he should make a few, and sell me one!
Life intervened for a while and then a couple of months ago
he decided the time had come to make a few copies so he canvassed a few
puzzlers and pretty soon had takers for all he was about to make… luckily I
managed to join the queue in time and at the last MPP Adin arrived with a couple
of freshly finished Amulets for a few of us.
I’m pleased to say that this time I made a lot more progress
and I’m even more impressed with it now that I’ve had some quality puzzling time
with it!
Those little cubies on the sides really get in the way and
stop you from doing an awful lot of useful moves… forcing you to take the one
true path to the solution (I told you it was unique!).
This is one of those burrs that takes several moves to get
pieces in the right state before you can finally (after 10 moves) release the
first piece… and then it falls to bits in your hands! Right up until the last
moment everything hangs together beautifully – it doesn’t get all sloppy and
allow all manner of weird twists and turns – I really appreciate that in my
burrs!
Putting it all back together is a very serious challenge! ‘nuff
said?
Terrific burr from a multi-talented designer!
Tuesday, 10 May 2016
MPP XXii
MPP twenty-two turned out to be a reasonably low-key relaxed
event with about 10 hardened puzzlers appearing for a day’s banter and puzzling
with friends. Louis had made his customary trip across the channel and spent
the weekend with Gill and I, starting with some light puzzling on the Friday
evening… and yes, as usual I left a row of puzzles to be solved on the desk
when I hit the sack and the next morning most of them had been solved…
Fantastic service!
Louis and I managed to get to the hall before anyone else
this time and started getting it all set up and before long we had tables and
chairs set out and even some puzzlers to chat to.
Tim Turner had arrived with several crates of his Timeless
Treasures and once again I found myself raking through the neatly laid out
puzzles from yesteryear and selecting a few more lovely old Journet dexterity
puzzles to add to the little pile at home – for which I roundly blame Frank! He
should never have encouraged me to look at them in the first place – I know I’m
rubbish at dexterity puzzles and don’t really enjoy them, but there’s something
more than a little addictive about them… damn you, Frank! [For the record,
Louis solved pretty much every one the next morning before I took him off to
the airport to catch his flight home!]
I also found a lovely little ring maze on Tim’s table that
has caused me a little bit of inner turmoil – I collect puzzles to play with
them, so they don’t tend to stay in their wrapping very long… this little
puzzle however is probably more than 60 years old and is still apparently sealed
in its original packaging… so do I break the seal and play with it? And would that
be a crime?
Adin had brought along a few copies of his Amulet puzzle so
I eagerly thrust some money in his general direction and exchanged it for a
lovely puzzle… which will appear written up in these pages shortly!
Knowing that Chris really enjoys a challenge, Steve had
brought along a set of hexagonal doweled sticks that he claimed was a puzzle – without
any idea of the eventual shape, Chris sat down and began experimenting with
various constructions. He managed to find quite a few very-nearly solutions
that armed him with a pretty good understanding of mechanics – before he
reverse-engineered the solution and duly put it all together – particularly impressive
for me as at one point there were two rather complicated sub-assemblies getting
woven together before the final dowels were inserted to lock it all together…
he looked pretty pleased with himself after that… and rightly so!
Steve had also brought along a few Toyo Glass packing
puzzles that he’d recently acquired for a rather attractive price – several of
us had a go at Home Alone Husband – with Oli proving to be particularly adept
at that particular puzzle… I’m sure Jack has nothing to do with it!
I felt a bit bad that I ended up terrorising Dale for ages with
a copy of Saul’s Drop In – I think he quite liked it as after he’d convinced
himself it was impossible, he ended up tracing the pieces so that he could make
up a copy of his own…
I managed to entertain several people with Jane Kostick’s
lovely little triacontahedron box packing puzzle – it’s a simple little box
that you need to pack twelve oddly shaped (identical) blocks, and a cube into…
it kept quite a few people going for quite a while, and the grins when they
finally found the beautifully symmetric solution made the experience all
worthwhile.
My new copy of Easy Livin’ entertained a couple of people
who were brave enough to take it apart – in fairness, after the first couple of
moves it becomes very quickly apparent this ain’t no ordinary burr!
Steve have been printing up new designs he was playing with
and ended up giving me a copy of a 6-piece caged burr on a hexagonal grid… I
spent a while trying to extract the first piece and when he saw I was getting
nowhere, he took pity on me and sent it home with me… where it’s still safely
locked up, the subtle move required to progress still eluding me… when will I
learn?
Michael Dowle had brought along copies of another new
design, Symmetrize, that most people ended up having a go at… it consists of
four acrylic pieces with shapes made up of overlapping circles which you are
tasked with arranging into a shape that is rotationally symmetrical… I saw
Chris come up with a couple of solutions (which I think surprised Michael as he
thought there was a unique solution), as did Louis… and once again Mike
insisted that I take a copy home for my troubles… (unsolved!) – Thanks Mike!
I’ve glossed over lunch (standard Barnt Green fare: pig
buns!) and refreshments (lots and shed-loads of biscuits!) but you’re probably
more interested in the people and the puzzles anyway! So I’ll stop there…