The last time I visited James
Dalgety, he was having a bit of a clear-out and had put aside a bunch of
puzzles in some plastic crates for swap or sale, including a special crate of
interesting items to be offered on a future puzzle auction – those were well
beyond my financial reach on the day! (I hadn’t ever seen a new-in-box Panex Gold Puzzle before … didn’t think they still existed …)
After I’d done a sweep of the
duplicate books shelf and picked up some interesting titles and half of a set
of Cubism For Fun magazines*, I turned my attention to the swaps boxes and
picked through a veritable treasure trove. I seemed to keep stumbling across
things I recognised as being rather special, from my puzzle-reading and it would
have been very easy to spend a whole lot more.
I picked up three rather interesting
little puzzles that afternoon.
Peppermint Twist was John Ergatoudis’ IPP17 Exchange Puzzle.
Reminiscent of a twisted sugar cane, this is a sweet little puzzle. (Sorry, I’ll
behave.) It consists of four twisted steel strands that fit together to make a
stable, neat structure … as long as the pieces are in the right place.
Starting from the solved
position, it soon becomes totally clear that the only way to get these pieces
apart is to slide one of them out the end by twisting it out of the bundle, and
once the first one is out, sliding the next one out is easier, and soon enough
you’ll have four twisted bits of metal that all look rather similar.
Reassembly isn’t totally straight-forward
as there are a number of ways of putting three strands together that look
pretty good only to find that the last one won’t engage… and there are some
almost-solutions that leave the last piece so tight that you may well damage
something in the process of trying to slot it back in … but when you find just
the right combination, the last piece slides in ever-so-gently, just like it
was meant to.
A fun puzzle to fiddle
absent-mindedly with…
I first spotted a copy of the Perplexity puzzle on Rob Stegmann’s mammoth web-site and thought it looked neat, so when I found a copy in the
swaps-bin I put it on one side.
According to Edward Hordern’s Sliding
Piece Puzzles book (acquired from James on an earlier visit) these puzzles were the
subject of a 1900 patent and have been produced in several forms over the
years. Rob’s collection includes several
variations on the theme in his section on Sliding Block Puzzles.
The one I got is a pretty tidy
example of the main variant that was first produced in 1919 – I’m not sure exactly
when this copy dates back to – but it’s almost certainly just become the oldest
puzzle in my little collection, by a very long way!
The letters slide up and down
the main track, with a couple of branch lines permitting a bit of storage and
shuffling space and the aim of the puzzle is to spell out PERPLEXITY along the
main track – first backwards, then forwards.
My first thoughts were that it
wasn’t tremendously difficult as a puzzle because there’s a fair amount of
space on the sidelines and there are a couple of pairs of letters that are
interchangeable – however I’d totally missed a couple of subtleties about the
buttons and totally failed to understand why sometimes there seemed to be a lot
more space to work with than other times ... and I only discovered those after
reading Edward Hordern’s notes on this little puzzle...
It’s a cute little historical
artefact that’s survived many years so far – I’ll try and keep it going for a
bit longer…
[Jerry wrote about his copy over here if you're interested in some more thoughts...]
My third interesting little find
in the swap-boxes was a copy of Allan Boardman’s IPP13 exchange puzzle – a Circular Tangram. At about two inches
across it’s a dinky little puzzle, as you might expect from the chap whose
burrs are usually measured in single-digit millimetres across. It’s a maple
tray with a set of tangram pieces resting in it –and when I first had a look at
the pieces I assumed they were some sort of thin acrylic sheet – they’re only
about 1.64 mm thick and are black as night.
I was somewhat embarrassed when a
bit more research on t’internet informed me that the pieces were in fact finely
cut ebony – wow – of course I then added to the embarrassment by admitting this
to one or two more experienced puzzlers who had a good laugh at the fact that I
could have thought mister Boardman would have used acrylic – I mean, really!
<Blush>
* … and since then I’ve been in
touch with Rik van Grol at the Nederlandse Kubus Club and managed to purchase
copies of all of the other Cubism For Fun back issues that I was missing, so I now also have a
complete set of (the English editions of) those magazines as well – plenty
reading lies ahead.
Whoa! A full set of CFF, that's quite a find (or purchase)!!
ReplyDeleteI wonder how that Peppermint Twist was made? It would seem the bending would have to be done very precisely to reproduce the puzzle. You can't just twist four pieces randomly and come up with anything good.
ReplyDeleteHmm I wonder if someone who knows the answer to that might wander by at some point...?
DeleteAllard, thanks for the review and photos of the peppermint twist. I have been struggling with this one for a while. Mine is still stuck!
ReplyDeleteWhere did you get one? I’ve been looking for ages!
DeleteWil sells them... Google him.
Delete