Tetraboard |
I have been trying to broaden my puzzling a bit recently. There are obviously
some very big producers and sellers of puzzles and I buy a lot from them. This
means that my blog is rather top heavy with puzzles from Eric and Jakub and
the other manufacturers get seen less. I do try to branch out and try other
manufacturers and also try to go back to the more mass produced puzzles a bit
including getting back into twisty puzzles. Unfortunately, I seem to only have
a little bit of time during the week to play and often actually solving
something is a challenge in the time I have. My week this week was absolutely
horrendous with a lot of big operations being done and finishing late and a
fair bit of admin that I needed to do in my non-theatre time. The evenings
were spent on the skull.
I had bought a couple of new creations from
Stephan Baumegger
(he sells via his Facebook page,
PuzzleLeisure) way back in April and they had been idly fiddled with but had not really
been attempted properly since they arrived. I have been leaving my new
arrivals in the dining room for the last few months as a storage area to
ensure that I don't lose the new ones amongst all the stuff that is solved
and waiting to be put away (yes my study is a shithole again!) Mrs S looks
in the dining room periodically and when she has tidied away all of her
acquisitions then notices that mine are still there and then grumbles at me
with a violent "I might just burn them" look in her eyes. Gulp!
All in all, about 6 hours of puzzling and now I had the extra delight of
making my Burrtools file which is always part of the fun. I was definitely
going to need it for the reassembly.
Fountain |
This, along with the wish to try some other craftsmen's stuff, made me
wander into my "accessory puzzle store" 😈😈😈 and pick up the
Tetraboard
and give it a try.
This puzzle is a new design from Stephan which he had originally designed
way back in 2013 with the help of the incredibly talented Stephane Chomine
and produced in very limited numbers at that time. At that time, my puzzle
budget had been quite a lot lower than in recent years and I had marvelled
at it but been either too frightened of the level (56 in total) or had not
been ready to spend more money. Stephan had decided to make a few more this
year and I couldn't resist the wonderful stepped look of it and the 2
contrasting woods (Wenge and Maple).
I picked it up on Saturday morning thinking that I would have enough time to
solve it that day. That was before I realised just how difficult it would be
and also that Mrs S would send me out into the garden to do some maintenance
work there whilst she cooked a Moroccan chilli for dinner (Yum). I managed
to spend an hour on it before I was banished and had found a few moves which
went nowhere and that was it. Four hours of gardening and a bout of sciatica
later, I was back inside feeling sorry for myself and started again. It is
quite hard to concentrate on a puzzle with lightning pains shooting down the
back of your thigh! But for my readers, I persevered! It took me another
hour to find a very well disguised move that would open out quite a lot more
movement in the puzzle. The puzzle is made from a cubic frame and 5 plate
burrs which are very tough to get oriented. I repeatedly found that if I put
the puzzle down for a bit then I couldn't easily work out the correct
orientation to start again. The way they interlock seriously constrains the
movement and every time I thought I was getting somewhere, I came to a halt
and could not seem to advance. Luckily returning to the beginning was always
a simple task.
I had explored all the paths I could find and was never able to get more
than 10 or 12 moves into the solution before I came to a dead end. I was
missing something. It is pretty difficult to see inside the puzzle and plan
possible moves so I was stuck. At the end of the day, I went to bed with an
unsolved puzzle, a headache and back pain! Damn I'm getting old and
useless!
This morning I bounded out of bed after my cat decided he was going to lick
my nose, face and the top of my head! He has a very rough tongue and bad
breath! Time to get up and feed him (which was what he wanted). A bit of
painful exercise on the rowing machine and I was ready to puzzle again.
Refreshedin body and mind and only a little residual sciatica left over. I
did what I had done multiple times on the previous day and immediately found
a new move. I have no idea how I missed it (it must have been very well
hidden) but I wasn't going to backtrack and lose the progress. A few minutes
later and the first board came out.
This was a cause for celebration but not complacency. There had been 18
moves required for the first piece and the next was going to need another
18. With the removal of the first board the puzzle was still 100% stable and
a few new moves were opened up as possibilities. None of them worked and I
was stumped again. The view inside was slightly better but not enough to
really help plan future moves. I was missing an idea. An hour later, I had
backtracked the remaining pieces almost to the beginning of the puzzle with
the one board left out. I quickly realised that another sequence had been
opened up from almost the beginning and a new short path was available which
allowed a second piece to be removed. Yay!
Now, with 2 boards removed, it was still very stable(just a little bit
wobbly) and I could properly see inside. Now I could easily mange the next
12 moves to remove the third piece and there after it was fairly trivial
(it did not collapse at any point which is quite refreshing for a burr
disassembly). Amazingly, I realised that one of the boards had not moved
at all during the disassembly of the first 3 pieces. I had tried on
numerous occasions to use it in my solution but it just was totally
trapped. Very clever puzzle design. I took my obligatory puzzle piece
photo:
Tetraboard pieces |
I love these challenges - it needs to be just the right level. I am not a
burr genius like
Goetz and when a first piece requires about 18-25 moves that is just
difficult enough for me. If you are interested in buying any beautifully
made burr and interlocking puzzles from Stephan then get in touch via his
FB page.
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