The alarm goes off at 5:30 last Saturday morning and I’m
happy - this is one of my favourite weekends of the year: Wil throws a brilliant
get-together at his place in Venlo on this Sunday each year (pandemic
permitting) and I get to spend a weekend with my mates puzzling without having
to do any of the organising myself!
I get to the airport a bit early as there’s a lot of
building work in the terminal and there have been some horror stories of
massive queues for security… but I find myself getting sent through the
priority lane (for no good reason) and I manage to bypass even the little queue
there was… of course my bag gets pulled for checking because I’ve brought Phils
latest little brass wonder to puzzle on over the weekend. It gets a swabbing
and another run through the x-ray machine before I’m allowed to hit Starbucks
for a very leisurely coffee and croissant accompanied by some Nikoli puzzles to
get the brain going – I’m not sure it works.
The flight is uneventful and after a bit of a detour through
immigration I grab a train leaving within minutes of getting onto the platform.
I send up the bat signal to let Louis know which train I’m on and he finds me
in the usual spot… at this stage I should probably comment on the massive crowds
all wearing orange for King’s Day – I look severely under-dressed without any
orange clothing whatsoever – it’s easy to spot the tourist!
I check in and ditch the baggage and we head to Louis’ place
where Steve and Ali are in full-on puzzle mode – resplendent in their orange
t-shirts… I feel even more unpatriotic! Louis puts on a massive spread for
lunch before we settle into some communal puzzling.
I’d taken along a bunch of copies of Rik Bouwer’s KubusMix,
courtesy of George Bell’s STLs (Thanks George!) as well as a couple of 3D
printed Wayne Daniels Four Piece Tetrahedrons, once again courtesy of George’s
STLs. The boys didn’t take long to assemble them and I reckon everyone gets a
kick the first time they realise what those six strange-looking pieces in two
colours might just make…
Ali had a go at my copy of Phil’s Spinning Tumblers v2 and
made relatively short work of it – so I now know that I have #4. I have a
quick squizz at the innards before Ali very carefully puts it back in the bag
ready to open… although he needn’t have bothered – by the time I get through
Schiphol security they’ve had it out and fiddled with it and when I get home I
found it’s all locked up again… serves me right for trying to be cute!
Minima’s Domino and Twig are also a hit at the table, but
nobody manages to find a solution for Delta Force that Tye chucked into my last
order (“so that the box wouldn’t be empty!”)…
I have a fiddle with a few of Ali’s Craig Lawton 9-Layer
Puzzles – they really are nicely made from nine laser-cut layers of wood and
acrylic. I manage to solve one of them properly, another opens with a bit of
luck but the others remain well and truly locked up… maybe next time…
Louis orders in a pile of pizzas for dinner before we head
out to an escape room… in Belgium. With everyone wearing orange all day and
most of the locals visiting either a music festival or a street-market somewhere,
all of the local escape rooms are closed, so Louis has found one for us half an
hour away in Belgium, as you do…
The escape room turns out to be a bank heist and the gang
throw themselves into it as though this was their day job. We play dress-up –
Louis looked particularly fetching in that red coat, break into a couple of
safes, crack several passwords, abuse an ATM and defeat a Mission Impossible
style laser-field to grab the gold… we did spend a while trying to get through
the laser-field “properly”, i.e. Louis tried to climb over and around the beams
but that wasn’t particularly successful, so in the end Steve just barrelled through
it and grabbed the gate before it had a chance to lock itself. After our successful
escape we had quite a long debrief in the car on the way back to Louis’ with
Steve comparing his dash for the gate to the grace of a gazelle, while others
preferred comparisons to silverbacks and rhinoceroses.
A few more hours puzzling back at Louis’ before he dropped
us back at the hotel somewhere around midnight… I crash and get up in time to
join Ali and Steve for breakfast… it’s a long breakfast with plenty of chat,
including discussion of the relative merits of gazelles and rhinoceroses. Louis
collects us and we head off to Venlo. (No rhinos spotted en route.)
Wil greets us like long-lost friends and he’s soon plying us
with coffee and tarts (of the local fruity variety). Folks start arriving from all
over the countryside and soon there’s a pretty decent throng of puzzlers
filling up the house and the garden – complete with a new roof extension
covering half the garden – that pays for itself later in the day when the
heavens opened briefly and we were able to shelter outside without overrunning
the living room.
I spread around the remaining copies of KubusMix and
encourage folks to have a play and help themselves to a copy and I manage to
get rid of all them, just so I don’t need to cart them all home again, you
understand. Only a few folks manage to get the colouring wrong and incur a
little abuse as a result.
At lunchtime there are some really scrumptious pizzas and we
get to meet Wil’s daughter… later there’s more of the usual spread of sandwiches
and sweet treats and plenty of coffee and coke to go around.
At some point Steve and I gravitate upstairs to trawl
through the many crates just in case there’s some treasure in there. Steve
gamely unpacks a crate at a time for us to rake through until he realises his mistake
and finds himself trapped behind a wall of puzzles and to-be-puzzles – although
in fairness to Wil, sometimes it’s not easy to work out the difference between
the two – everything is a puzzle for Wil… some of them just aren’t quite
finished yet.
I have a great time catching up with old friends, passing on
some English chocolates and exchanging some foldy stuff for a couple of old
Rockys and a Petit Four I’m missing.
Everyone has to spend a while playing with Oskar’s latest
creations (it’s da law!) and I find myself really enjoying his latest Zigu-variant
so I purchase a copy of Zigu-Hook as it’s really fun to fiddle with. He has all
manner of new bolts and gears and toys and it’s easy to spend an hour or two
just fiddling.
Sometime after five, Wil rounds everyone up and we pile into
cars off to his favourite Chinese Restaurant that's just in the throes of
reopening properly after the pandemic. We must have about 16 people and they
manage to deal with the challenge of feeding a bunch of hungry puzzlers who are
dead-set on puzzling most of the way through their dinner… the food is as good
as it ever was.
More puzzling and chatter back at Wil’s place after dinner
before Louis drops us back at the hotel and I mange to crash at about 1am… I’m
not built for late nights anymore!
The monkeys join me for breakfast bright and early next
morning even though their flight is only late that afternoon. We chat about the
fun we’ve had, puzzles we’ve unexpectedly chanced upon and solved and the
relative merits of various sorts of wild animals, oddly. (rhino > gazelle)
I grab the train to Schiphol and kill a few hours with my Nikoli
booklet again. Aside from a bit of a wait getting onboard the aircraft due to a
delay in getting some inbound passengers off it, my travel home is pretty uneventful… even
if I have to leave the sunshine behind at Schiphol.
Thanks Wil for hosting us all and Louis for taking care of
us the whole weekend – that was a really brilliant weekend.