
Peter greeted me like a long-lost puzzler and made sure I
had something to drink before allowing me through to see the rest of the gang.
Strijbos had set up shop in the conservatory and had a lovely display of
aluminium puzzles ranging from his dovetails right up to an Angel Box, along
with the usual Constantin array and piles of cricket boxes.

Several of the others had brought along crate-loads of spare
puzzles they were keen to trade or sell and I ended up spending a while raking
through all of them during the course of the day. I picked out a copy of the
Hazelgrove box as I didn’t have one yet and Duncan had somehow ended up with a
spare unopened copy in his “£10 or more” box. Steve gave me a copy of his 3D
printed version of Coffin’s HO HO puzzle, resplendent in Stewart’s original
yellow, red and blue colour scheme – thanks Steve!

Frans was showing off an interesting corporate gift that his
architecture firm had produced depicting a new building they’d been the lead architects
on in Rotterdam. Part Kumiki puzzle, part burr, it has the rather distinctive shape
of the building and comes with a neat little stand to keep everything together…
it turned out he had a couple of spare copies so I helpfully relieved him of
one of them.

The afternoon’s more formal activities kicked off with his three picks and a
short magic show by Laurie Brokenshire that kept us thoroughly entertained (if
not also well-mystified) and then we each took turns to present our three best
puzzle finds of the year.
Peter began with his three in order of weight, starting
with a small antique Chinese trick lock. He demonstrated the opening mechanism
using the oddly-shaped thin, flat “key” and then absent-mindedly threaded the “key”
onto the shackle and locked it … and then realised the error of his ways in
about a second: with the key locked in that way, there’s no way to open the
lock again.
Shock.
Horror.
And a little embarrassment.
And a photograph.
[Don’t
worry, he fashioned a new key a day or two later and it’s back in play again …
so he won’t have to settle on another best find of the year!] His next two
finds were somewhat larger, and decidedly heavier – an antique writing slope
with multiple hidden compartments and a copy of Berrocal’s Goliath.
I was up next and (in order of weight in deference to our
host!) nominated Derek’s Helical Burr, Rob’s Borg Box (I know it’s old, but I
only managed to acquire one in 2013!) and Wil’s Angel Box.

Ali and Duncan both presented the Bucolic Cube from this year’s Design Competition and
several folks had a bash at them during the course of the afternoon – at one
stage John Davenport was puzzling away furiously, oblivious to the fact that
Frans was sitting next to him with the solved puzzle in his hands.


After the talk, plenty more raking through crates of
puzzles, playing with some of Peter’s incredible collection and just plain
catching up with folks we hadn’t seen for a while ensued before things wound
down and we headed our separate ways (and there weren’t any idiots clogging up
the motorway on the way home!).
Another wonderful EPP – Thanks Peter for a grand day’s
puzzling!
![]() |
The Motley Crew |
A great write up of a fun day. The only additional comment I'd like to add was that your Conjuring Conundrum puzzle received more nominations from those attending than any other puzzle.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations to both you and Louis for a fantastic design and for making one of my choices easy!
Cheers for that Steve!
DeleteModesty forbade mentioning the other thing... although it probably shouldn't as Louis did the good bits (and I did the other bit... :-) )
It's such a shame I live so far away! I never get to go to these!
ReplyDeleteMaybe some day!
Kevin
Puzzlemad
Its all relative Kevin. I would love to go too but I do live far away!
ReplyDelete