Feed the Monkey by the Two Brass Monkeys |
16 small bananas and a giant one |
All of this has meant that I have not had much puzzling time after the huge
effort put into the wonderful
Pelikan puzzles that I reviewed
last week (they are all still available now if you feel the urge to torture
yourselves). For this reason, I have returned to a puzzle that I solved
at the end of last year but did not get around to writing about. One reason to
write about it is because it has been sitting on my desk to remind me and I
really REALLY REALLY need to tidy up my
desk before I get murdered in my sleep:
Houston, I have a tidiness problem! |
TBM Brass shelf (plus a a few of my N-ary puzzles) I'm worried it might collapse |
TBM 3D printed stuff |
I received my copy shortly after it was released way back in March 2020 and
immediately set to. I had bought the male monkey but they also had an
identically challenging female version which has cute eyelashes. I removed the
long banana that had been in the monkey's mouth and shook the bloody thing
about to extract all of the small bananas as well. I was a little horrified to
see that there were 16 of them and they all needed to be placed through the mouth inside the case.
It quickly became clear that the cuboid interior could only take 3 of the bananas across and "up" and therefore 9 in a layer. It was only 2 layers deep so should be able to take 18 small bananas or 16 small ones and one double length large banana. Yay! Easy! It must just be a dexterity puzzle. Or so I thought.
I spent over 2 years thinking that my dexterity was crap! I really could not arrange all the pieces inside. I shook them, I rattled them, I rocked them and rolled them! These bananas would not all fit in the monkey! He was always full before I reached the final one. This lack of dexterity was really worrying for someone of my profession - I have to prove my dexterity almost every day at work with cannulae, arterial and central lines, nerve blocks and intubations. I usually think I am not bad with my hand-eye coordination skills but this monkey was not getting stuffed by me! Over that 2 years, I picked it up and put it down again dozens and dozens of times. It stayed on that desk next to me because I could not solve it.
Then my most heartbreaking moment - a certain blind puzzler (yes, he knows who he is and so does everyone else who goes to the MPPs) solved it whilst sitting opposite me and it only took him about 20 minutes. He solved it and couldn't even see it! Aaaargh! One thing that I did notice whilst desperately trying not to look at him playing with his monkey was that he was not doing any of the stuff that I had been trying. Hmmm. Maybe one of my major thoughts (my only major thought) was wrong?
I went back to it after that MPP last year and had another think© - What if I? OMG! I'm an eejit!
Finally! I can now put the damn thing away |
Don't forget to visit the Pelikan puzzle site as well - the puzzles from last week are still in stock.
I thoroughly enjoy your reviews of individual puzzles, but this one made me want more of the zoomed-out views of your entire collection. What fun to see the big picture!
ReplyDeleteIf I do ever manage to tidy up the clutter then it is my plan to take photos of the whole collection. My Flickr page has the last group shots from 4 or 5years ago.
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