Frank and I almost share a birthday, and that’s a good
enough excuse for a puzzle party, every year. There’s some debate over when the
first Northern Puzzle Party was, since Frank and I didn’t know about the first
one – sure, we were both there, we just didn’t realise it was actually an NPP,
anyhoo – about a week ago we had another…
Some of the lads drove up on the Friday and had an early start
on the puzzling and some games – one of which saw Steve repeatedly chasing
Frank’s wife around the ground floor of the house waving something – don’t ask –
I have no idea.
Gill and I headed up on Saturday morning a bit earlier than
we usually do having taken the hounds to their weekend holiday home the night
before – glad we did that as the traffic was really nice and light – it was certainly
better than when Andrew and Dan headed up the road a couple of hours later!
As we arrived, we were handed a hot drink and a large
selection of cakes, to which we added a tub of Gill’s delicious honeycomb rocky
road. Mike and Tamsin had already arrived and the Monkeys plus Rich were
well-settled-in from the day before. There were one or two puzzles on the dining
room table and the kitchen island already… I probably didn’t need to bring a
crate of puzzles along.
I’d brought along a bunch of puzzles that I hadn’t solved
yet in the hopes that some kind soul would solve them for me, and that sort of
worked once or twice – folks would take the bait and then duly solve them in front
of me – usually without letting me see anything that might just resemble a
spoiler – and then scrambling them again… the one exception was Rich’s solve of
my copy of Climburr – he duly dismantled it and then “reassembled” it in a
configuration that has had me scratching my head for a week now – unable to
either take it apart or actually put it into the proper assembled position.
(That’s what mates are for, eh?!)
Several folks successfully solved my copy of Triple Product
and waved it in front of my snout snuggly inside its little acrylic box and I
still have no idea how to solve it…
Steve and I spent a while playing with a pre-production copy
of Oskar’s Screw Pack – seven interacting screws screw into a large nut-shaped
frame – we took turns at trying to build on one another’s’ logical deductions
and until we’d jointly solved it in theory, and then started putting it
together – at which point we realised there was another potential little issue –
so we co-solved that one too and then had it all neatly reassembled… however,
that wasn’t sufficient for our Steve – who then proceeded to find a lovely chaotic
“solution” with all the screws at different heights – the perfect “assembly” to
leave it in for those with OCD to worry to about.
Some time before lunch Andrew and Dan arrived having had a
bit of a nightmare journey up the M6. Frank called Lunch and duly rolled out several
trays of sandwiches and wraps – the Potts track-record of over-catering remains
sound.
Sometime after lunch I tried to interest some folks in attempting
my World Traveller Society Kickstarter adventure box… I’d had a little dabble
at it a week or so earlier and solved the first puzzle, only to hit a brick
wall of “This is tough, I’m going to need help – why don’t I take this along to
NPP and get some help from some real puzzle solvers?!” During the course of the
rest of the day several people did indeed pitch in and try to help – Tamsin did a
sterling job of opening up the first compartment in spite of me giving her a
duff steer on where to line up the answer on the first padlock. That provided a
veritable trove of intriguing looking artefacts and very little idea of where
to go next… so we tried a few avenues and generally came up blank on most of
them. After some serious head-scratching and not a lot of progress, we elected to
try some hints and ended up wandering down a long and winding road right into a rabbit hole… having traced
through all of the hints, and the actual answer – we found ourselves a bit lost
as to how the heck we were supposed to settle on that answer, so we tried
another puzzle – only to find ourselves in a similar position once more, and
then not getting much joy from following an extended trail of hints and
eventually the solution itself… so we decided it was clearly meant for far cleverer
puzzlers than us, and went back to playing with our other puzzles.
Dan had brought along his (half-sized) copy of Goh Pitt
Khiam’s Numlock with a super valuable Israeli Scheckel secured in place… and it
duly became the object of an arms race between Steve-the-destroyer-of all-things-orderly,
and Dan, who doesn’t have OCD but is seriously considering a long-term
relationship with it. They went back and forth many, many times over the course
of the afternoon with Steve disassembling and reassembling it with the numbers
in the wrong order, only for Dan to calmly open it up in about a third of the
time and reorder them properly… somehow neither of them thought it made sense to
concede and just leave it alone…
A couple of folks worked their way through Iwahara’s new
Quaternary Box and one or two managed to find the second compartment in Bars
Box III – so I know that one’s not broken – I’m just being more incompetent than
usual…
Frank had to step out at some point in the afternoon so we
played another fun round of hide the Kumiki – Steve had found another bunch of
old Kumiki puzzles in his collection that he thought Frank would like, so he
gave us each one to hide somewhere in Frank’s house… and then challenged Frank
to find them all. Frank really loves this game – in fact he’s still playing
last year’s round. [Editor’s note: in the week following NPP he found the Kumiki
pig that I’d hidden in his dining room last year. The man is on fire…]
At one point Ali announced that it was time for the
competition and produced a copy of his new NPP burr for everyone to solve – as a
competition… virtually everyone solved their copy before I finally managed to
work out just how I was being stupid and what might work a little better –
finally managing to assembly the little bugger – only for Ali to present me
with a giant sized version and ask me to repeat the process on the larger one…
Frank had just done exactly that and discovered he’d assemble them in mirrored forms…
it took me almost as long to assemble the second copy – not that sharpest brush
on the line… or something. ;-)
The girls had been out painting pottery and shopping up a
storm (and nomming cakey!) and when they returned we started prepping for
dinner (because we were all famished by that stage – NOT!) – once again it was
clear that there was going to be a huge spread, but before dinner, Frank
announced there’d be an awards ceremony based on some secret challenges he’d
given each one of us to do with Steve during the course of the day. This took
Steve a little by surprise and he hadn’t really noticed anything too weird – we
each got invited to tell Steve what we’d had to get him to do and in return for
our successful achievement of our challenges, Frank awarded each of us with a ceremonial
NPP Challenge medal… I had to get Steve to tell me his age and get him to
fist-bump me twice (not really my style, but he was very obliging during our
co-solve of Oskar’s Screw Pack), Gill had to get him to dance (Hokey Pokey
obviously!), someone had to get him to make an animal noise - worryingly he did
that entirely of his own accord, Mike had to get him to play rock, paper,
scissors and so on… we all had a lot of fun with it – and medals!
After dinner Frank divided us into two teams and we competed
in a head-to-head solve of an envelope escape… we came second…
There was a bunch more banter and solving and then it all
got a bit too much for some of us… Tamsin took a bit of a nap with Chiquitito
but her years of being an on-call doctor kicked in when Frank gently woke her
and she jumped up and was fully awake in about 3 microseconds…
Everyone headed off to their respective Airbnb’s and we
headed upstairs to bed.
Next morning Frank and Jo treated us to a massive breakfast
fit for a king (or three!) before we met up with the rest of the gang at
Lucardo in Rawtenstall for a couple of escape rooms. Claus for Concern turned
out to be a LOT more puzzly than we’d thought it would be - and Corruption was really
excellent – lots of surprising elements in the room that had us absolutely buzzing.
After we’d all finished there was the obligatory comparison
of finishing times across the room and bonus points – before a team photo
outside the rooms for posterity…
…after a few pretty torrid weeks in the office, that was an absolutely
brilliant couple of days with some of my favourite friends – Thank you Frank and Jo for
another awesome weekend!