This one was a little
hectic… we’d just had a hut put in the garden for Gill to use as a new
craft-space (yes, it’s called Jabba) at the start of the week and we
were in the process of moving her in there and
getting my study to move downstairs to make room for a new puzzle cave
(Part 2) – when Friday arrived and I found myself at the airport
collecting Louis and Wil off a KLM flight, Stefan off a Lufthansa flight
and Rob off a train, before taking them all back
to the chaos of chez Walker.
Gill and I had managed
to clear enough out of the dining room so that we could actually feed
our guests, but I coerced the younger visitors into helping me dismantle
my desk unit and carry it down the stairs
– actually I applied the screwdriver, they did all the lugging. With
three quarters of the desk bits downstairs in their new home, Louis
wandered up and asked for a tape measure – BAD SIGN – turns out my
ceilings downstairs are 10cm lower than they are upstairs.
Problem was there was less than 10cm clearance between the top of my
desk unit and the ceiling upstairs… some bad language may have leaked
out – we stopped for some dinner and then the lads – rather
good-naturedly - carried everything back upstairs and we reassembled
the desk… how’s that for a great start to a puzzling weekend?!
After all that
excitement we treated ourselves to a rummage through Wil’s suitcases –
just the puzzles, not his travelling gear. Most of us managed to acquire
a couple of goodies that we didn’t already have and
some puzzling ensued. I crashed somewhere around midnight and left them
all still puzzling furiously… I think they all went to sleep at some
point.
Next morning we loaded
up on croissants and pain au chocolat before heading down to the hall
where we found Angela and Peter had already set out their stall with
books and puzzles for sale. We got the tables
and drinks set out before most of the gang descended.
Tim set out several
table’s worth of vintage collectible puzzles – all for sale at the
blow-out price of £3 each. I picked up a few little bits as did several
others over the course of the morning… even Wil managed
to find a few things that interested him.
Angela knows my
fondness for Martin Gardner first editions and she’d set aside a bunch
of them for me – that part of the collection is growing slowly and I
must make sure I spend the time reading them all…
Wil laid out his wares
and there was a steady stream of folks raking through the crates and
picking out new treasures. Ali seemed quite chuffed to find a copy of
one of Jon Keegan’s puzzles lying there waiting
patiently for a new owner.
I’d taken a pile of
notched sticks along in the hopes that someone would assemble it into
something less chaotic for me… I’d bought the sticks from Ethel back in
February when we’d decided it was probably a copy
of Cutler’s Square Rod Dodecaplex (SRD)… but one pile of notched sticks
looks just like another to me. In the intervening month I got James to
send me a copy of the solution for said assembly and I tried
unsuccessfully to assemble it –having convinced myself
that the notches weren’t quite what I needed for the assembly. I had
another go at it when Chris came round one evening – unfortunately the
two of us reached the same conclusion and I ended up asking James for a
solution to another puzzle in the belief that
I had a better chance of constructing that one with those sticks.
(Cutler’s Spider’s Web in case you’re interested.)
When that solution arrived it was clear I was mistaken so I resolved to get someone at MPP to build it for me… Louis, Steve and Chris began to assemble it and it was progressing reasonably slowly when I headed over to the station to collect Ed… and when I arrived back at the hall with Ed in tow, the lads were putting the finishing touches to the assembly, and I was well impressed. They seemed immensely chuffed with themselves – possibly more chuffed than they should have been and I discovered the reason for that when I went in search of my camera to document the success for the blog… at which point the giggling directed me to the assembly, which had my camera neatly secured inside it… so the camera-phone came out for the obligatory shot instead. (They’re a great bunch and actually extracted my camera and reassembled the whole thing for me…)
When that solution arrived it was clear I was mistaken so I resolved to get someone at MPP to build it for me… Louis, Steve and Chris began to assemble it and it was progressing reasonably slowly when I headed over to the station to collect Ed… and when I arrived back at the hall with Ed in tow, the lads were putting the finishing touches to the assembly, and I was well impressed. They seemed immensely chuffed with themselves – possibly more chuffed than they should have been and I discovered the reason for that when I went in search of my camera to document the success for the blog… at which point the giggling directed me to the assembly, which had my camera neatly secured inside it… so the camera-phone came out for the obligatory shot instead. (They’re a great bunch and actually extracted my camera and reassembled the whole thing for me…)
On the same sort of
lines, Kevin brought along a bag full of Happiness (Cubes), in pieces
since the last MPP – and Ali sat down resolutely at a table on his own
and worked through assembling every single one
of them, pronouncing them cracking puzzles when he’d finished.
Kevin had also brought
along a large number of TICs which Rich duly worked his way through
disassembling and leaving them in piles of pieces on the table
while moving on to the next one… before eventually
retracing his steps and reassembling the whole lot once more, in spite
of the fact that someone MAY just have swapped some pieces between the
piles.
Ed worked his way
through all of the secret opening boxes available in the morning before
pausing for a large kebab (hopefully his girlfriend doesn’t read this
blog!). After said kebab he was in the mood for
a challenge and stumbled across (figuratively!) the recently assembled
SRD – felt all around it and announced that he was scared by it… but he
really wanted to take a piece out… so he did. And another. And so on
until the last 5 pieces fell on the table in
a disorderly pile.
At this point Steve and a few of the guys decided that a teaching moment was upon them, and they duly talked Ed through the piece identification and the assembly - getting him to physically insert every single piece… which says quite a lot about (a) Ed’s spatial awareness and (b) Steve’s ability to describe objects and pieces in 3-space.
All of which leaves me as having failed to assemble a puzzle that my blind puzzling mate has done successfully.
At this point Steve and a few of the guys decided that a teaching moment was upon them, and they duly talked Ed through the piece identification and the assembly - getting him to physically insert every single piece… which says quite a lot about (a) Ed’s spatial awareness and (b) Steve’s ability to describe objects and pieces in 3-space.
All of which leaves me as having failed to assemble a puzzle that my blind puzzling mate has done successfully.
Shane was in top form
as usual – at one point he was having a bit of a rant about one of his
neighbours when Ali and I both simultaneously asked him to tell us what he
really thought – dissolving everyone within earshot
into tears of laughter.
He did have more success on a particular Chinese padlock that Wil had found which has two keys and a shackle that could lock in two directions… releasing the alternate key each time… we’d all assumed that it was only possible to release one key at a time, but Shane managed to find a way to release both – without resorting to the rather well-equipped Locksmith’s workshop in his van.
He did have more success on a particular Chinese padlock that Wil had found which has two keys and a shackle that could lock in two directions… releasing the alternate key each time… we’d all assumed that it was only possible to release one key at a time, but Shane managed to find a way to release both – without resorting to the rather well-equipped Locksmith’s workshop in his van.
Sometime after 5pm packed up and headed up the road to
chez Walker for yet more puzzling over a gigantic fish supper
sponsored by Ali. Thanks mate!
After the dishes had been cleared away, there was a throng of merry puzzlers around the dining room table trying to solve Wil’s increasingly challenging matchstick puzzles. He’d been challenging all comers with a fiendish matchstick equation all day, with successful puzzlers being gifted a copy of a very interesting symmetry puzzle from Vladimir – and solving that one was really FUN! (Even I managed to solve that one and I’m thoroughly rubbish at symmetry puzzles!)
When Wil ran out of matchstick puzzles Steve ran out to the car and brought in what appears to be an old Japanese / Chinese book of matchstick puzzles that subsequently created huge amusement as they tried to work out what the challenges were and then how to actually solve them – that little book and a box or two of matches literally kept them amused for hours.
After the dishes had been cleared away, there was a throng of merry puzzlers around the dining room table trying to solve Wil’s increasingly challenging matchstick puzzles. He’d been challenging all comers with a fiendish matchstick equation all day, with successful puzzlers being gifted a copy of a very interesting symmetry puzzle from Vladimir – and solving that one was really FUN! (Even I managed to solve that one and I’m thoroughly rubbish at symmetry puzzles!)
When Wil ran out of matchstick puzzles Steve ran out to the car and brought in what appears to be an old Japanese / Chinese book of matchstick puzzles that subsequently created huge amusement as they tried to work out what the challenges were and then how to actually solve them – that little book and a box or two of matches literally kept them amused for hours.
I crashed somewhere
around midnight again, but have it on good authority that some of my
guests were puzzling until just before the clocks went forward –
particularly brave given that two of them had a mid-morning
flight home…
Sunday disappeared into
a haze of successive trips to the airport depositing various puzzlers
for their flights home before I was let loose in Jabba to construct a
couple of butterfly tables and some chairs for
Gill… boy, did I sleep well that night!
Hello Allard,
ReplyDeleteHere's a link you might find useful... soon:
https://www.mots-croises.ch/Listes/chiffres_romains.htm
Lionelus
Merci(us)!
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