Longer version – it was really fun and Kevin discovered he
had TWO hands – freakish or WHAT?!
Walker-length version: it was the weirdest start to an MPP
yet! I had no-one staying over so I drove down to the hall on my own – in itself
a strange feeling – and when I got there Angela and Peter had already laid out
their stall and Oli (who’d been dumped there by his young son and wife on their
way to Cadbury World) had pretty much set up all the tables already, saving me
a major job…
I got the tea and coffee sorted while Wee-Steve arrived, followed
shortly by Big-Steve, Ali and Michael – we have a quorum – the games can begin!
I unpacked some puzzles, grabbed a coffee and started raking through Angela’s
stash of books… I’d cleaned her out of signed Martin Gardner first editions
last time around, but still managed to add another first edition of his columns
to the collection… along with a Philosopher’s Stone / Omee the Orb.
A few first-timers joined us: John D had been threatening to
come along for most of last year but things always seemed to conspire against
him coming so it was great to have him join us. Richard S found us on FaceBook
and decided against his better judgement to go along and meet the strangers he’d
found on the internet… he seemed to have fun discovering lots of new puzzles,
getting hints on some puzzles that had been taunting him for a while and even
chatting magic and history with John D… funny how the two of them had to travel
more than an hour west to bump into one another when they’re actually from the same
town!
Big-Steve had brought along a million-or-so tongue depressors.
Oli had brought along a great new disentanglement puzzle he’d
found in Etsy – made of a modified spanner with some holes in it, it combined a
couple of traditional disentanglements to form a decent challenge in a
wonderfully robust format – nobody is every going to damage that thing, unless
of course they cut the nylon rope… must look that shop up.
Speaking of disentanglements, Kevin had brought along some
of his latest Chinese finds that were SO TOUGH we found it almost impossible to
engage in our normal game of “mess-up-the-disentanglement-because-Kevin-loves-to-solve-them-again”!
We did however manage to have a little fun with the square copy of Pieces of Eight
that he brought along, assembling it with just one of the spacer pieces on the
outside and a neat little gap between two adjacent pieces… who knew? A puzzler
with OCD who couldn’t leave it wrongly assembled … :-)
I tortured Ali with my Japanese wood joint burr again after
he didn’t assemble it for me at the last MPP… he tried for a few more hours (!)
during the course of the day, and the evening, but it sadly remained in five
too many pieces… he did solve a serious number of other puzzles in between, I
should add, lest he not agree to try and put it together for me again in the
future.
I managed to pick up a couple of old puzzles from Tim T and
even to arrange some long-distance puzzle shopping to secure a puzzle
for James that he didn’t have (!) even though he hadn’t been able to join us
for the day. (The process in case you’re interested involved taking pics of Tim’s
tables, emailing them to James and then spending a little while on the phone answering
questions about various things before he spotted one that he thought he didn’t
have, so a deal was struck. Now I just need to get it to him before he realises
he already has three of them! :-))
Kevin had brought along his copy of Carsten's Pirate's
Casket and several folks made approving noises while solving it at MPP... I
hadn't had a chance to solve it so Kevin kindly told me to take it home and
play with it and tell him what I thought... so I did. [It’s a very clever
puzzle! Some brilliant use of magnets in unusual configurations and a very nice
3D printed box… a few really nice, testing lock mechanisms with just enough
feedback to allow you to deduce what’s going on and what you need to do to
defeat them…LOVELY!]
Jamie had joined us after a long break from MPPs (guessing
he’s just about got over the trauma of the last one – that or working night
shifts plays havoc with attending -day-time- puzzle parties). He brought along
a huge number of locks and lock picks and ended up giving some budding burglars
(I’m KIDDING! He’s an anaesthetist!) lessons and chatting picks and picking with
Oli… pity Shane wasn’t there – suspect he’d have loved to join in with that.
(Damned lurgy, in case you’re wondering.)
Steve’s tongue depressors (I wasn’t just going to leave that
paragraph dangling there – just checking if you’re actually paying attention,
gentle reader) got assembled into various lengths of stick bombs… Cue Steve
sitting there for ages weaving sticks together and gently working his way down
a long line of tables until he’s had enough… cue videoing and plenty of laughs
as the beast is released, and then repeat the entire process again a little
while later… and then when we’re packing up, find as many places to hide the
damn sticks in others’ boxes because his better half has warned him not to
bring them home again – there’s a rumour that he bought an industrial quantity of
them for peanuts from his favourite internet sales-site. I found a couple of
hundred of them when I was unpacking my boxes the next morning…
Meme-of-the-day was Kevin earnestly describing an assembly
process holding up one hand and saying “I can’t do it I need another hand” – to
which Jamie remarks “Kevin, you’ve got TWO hands” – cue all manner of attempts
at humour: “OMG, there’s two of them! Imagine what this would mean for surgery!”
– “AARRGGHH where the hell did that come from??” while looking at TWO hands… we’re
a cruel bunch. He did join in the laughter and general silliness that followed so
it probably hasn’t scarred him for life!
At some point during the afternoon I pulled out one of the
Kosmos Escape Room games and asked if anyone wanted to play it…and soon enough
Big-Steve, Oli, Kevin and I were working our way through The Pharaoh’s Curse –
under the watchful eye for Louis, who’d already played the Dutch version back
at home with the family… turned out everyone enjoyed it and a couple of days
later I was getting slagged off on FaceBook by Oli for his having had to go out
and buy a copy of every single other game they make…
Frank had brought a Kumiki fish-elephant for Gill which he
duly presented to her back at our place after things had been suitably wound
up. Most folks ended up at chez Walker for the traditional fish supper where some
more puzzling, some chatting and a lot of fun rounded out a fantastic MPP.
Aaaaaaaargh!
ReplyDeleteJust aaaaaaaaaaaargh!
I knew I had 2 hands but they weren’t enough. I had to borrow Michael’s two hands as well!
Kevin
Puzzlemad