Every once in a while, you run across an enticing puzzle while surfing the internet. Ok, maybe a little more often than every once in a while. Maybe once a week – that I don’t run into an enticing puzzle.
This is the story of one particular puzzle called Hitch designed by Émil Áskerli. I spied this one on the Pelikan Puzzles website and alas dear readers, it is no longer available. It was a lovely looking puzzle in an interesting compact form. I’m sure that you can tell from my choices of filament that the version made by Pelikan used Purpleheart and Zebrano.
Having printed it myself, I obviously solved it as an assembly puzzle. The pieces didn’t look that complicated and they were obviously divided by color into 2 sets of 4 pieces. The tan pieces are identical and the purple pieces are 2 pairs of pieces that are mirror images of each other.
I expected the solution to be easy and I was moving along just fine when I developed a hitch in my gitty up. I couldn’t see the magic. I say magic because even when I accomplished it, I didn’t see the magic, it just happened - magically of course. I find that as I get older, it becomes more difficult to see further down the path and I just hope that any unnoticed gaping holes in front of my feet lead to the destination.
Early on in the solving process, I figured out where all the pieces HAD to go, which is always a bittersweet moment because it is usually followed by a long tortuous period of time that is terminated with the realization that the pieces don’t really go that way.
It’s not that difficult to get 7 pieces where they need to go, but getting that last piece in eluded me for a long time. Being noticeably more afflicted by nearsightedness as I age, I kept changing the orientation of the pieces, trying to get a configuration that could be morphed into an assembly that would accept that last piece. And of course that last piece was not the piece that I expected.
After some time, I gave up trying to figure out how it would happen and just decided to move forward without expectations and low and behold, the path opened up and swallowed that last piece. Whereupon, I quickly closed it up and claimed victory.
It may be small but Hitch has nice moves and solving it is very satisfying. Or would have been satisfying if I were able to project hypothetical movements better, or recurse multiple solution path branches faster, or maybe just simply curse better with more gusto. Then again, maybe the pieces that I printed were just a little too tight. Yeah that ‘s it. The pieces were malformed, not my brain. That’s the story that I’ll be sticking to!
Hitch is a great puzzle. Just make sure you get a good copy!
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