Body & Soul1 min ago
Listener 4066
54 Answers
A very happy Christmas - where are you all? This was an exciting grid fill with lots of alcohol and Christmas goodies and I am delighted, though reeling and rather bemused, about what we are required to do now!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Ruthrobin. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A belated Happy Christmas to all. Agree with everyone's comments - a very easy grid fill. I struggled to remember the only model I knew, as coulldn't find any useful websites that didn't give me a headache (surplus to requirements at this time of year) - wish I had seen your very helpful link, Mysterons.
However, nobody seems to have commented on emcee's point about the form of the submission. I made a copy of the grid, larger to make to work easier, but if you do it with the real thing you have to cut off the address panel, so I suppose that the panel does have to flap about (sorry) in the envelope, with the model separately. What is the consensus?
Amazing coincidence with last week's - might have been more difficult if 4065 had not yet appeared.
Thanks Jago for a delightful and appropriate puzzle.
However, nobody seems to have commented on emcee's point about the form of the submission. I made a copy of the grid, larger to make to work easier, but if you do it with the real thing you have to cut off the address panel, so I suppose that the panel does have to flap about (sorry) in the envelope, with the model separately. What is the consensus?
Amazing coincidence with last week's - might have been more difficult if 4065 had not yet appeared.
Thanks Jago for a delightful and appropriate puzzle.
An anonymous solver is reported in Magpie 85 as saying, “I believe that the ‘final bits’ should be the icing on
the cake, not the start of the cooking process”: a view with which I have much sympathy. With the usual admission that I couldn't do half as well myself: the grid-filling in this puzzle bordered on the puerile, and (although I have the final construction with the required highlighting - so I speak from a position of some strength) it seems to me that the final construction process is insufficiently specified.
I do feel that the fact that John Green is faced with the even more time-consuming task than usual of having to audit the final grid construction, deconstruct it and audit the deconstructed grid deserves acknowledgement and the thanks of those of us who submit.
Incidentally, and with respect, midazolam, I didn't claim that I hadn't given anything away: I said that I didn't believe that my post gave anything away to anyone who hadn't already filled the grid and identified the instructions. Perhaps any post worth the name contributes something, it's a question of balance: I apologise to anyone who considers that my post overstepped their mark.
the cake, not the start of the cooking process”: a view with which I have much sympathy. With the usual admission that I couldn't do half as well myself: the grid-filling in this puzzle bordered on the puerile, and (although I have the final construction with the required highlighting - so I speak from a position of some strength) it seems to me that the final construction process is insufficiently specified.
I do feel that the fact that John Green is faced with the even more time-consuming task than usual of having to audit the final grid construction, deconstruct it and audit the deconstructed grid deserves acknowledgement and the thanks of those of us who submit.
Incidentally, and with respect, midazolam, I didn't claim that I hadn't given anything away: I said that I didn't believe that my post gave anything away to anyone who hadn't already filled the grid and identified the instructions. Perhaps any post worth the name contributes something, it's a question of balance: I apologise to anyone who considers that my post overstepped their mark.
Sad to say I really enjoyed this - maybe aided by the satisfaction of having completed all the puzzles this year - but actually liked the fiddly folding. It is possible with the original grid - at least it is if you print it off on decent paper from the website. Not stunning cluing I agree, but hey lads and ladies it does afford a little Xmas merriment.
Hello all.
This is only the second listener crossword that I have completed. (The first was the recent numerical puzzle). I am therefore pleased that the grid was easy.
Have done lots and lots of construction, but I feel I am missing something. The instructions in the clue seem OK until the last 2 words. Have the last word as a word but it cannot be viewed. Have no highlights but the instructions seem to suggest a specific clue but something doesn't feel right. Am I reading too much into it? Thanks
This is only the second listener crossword that I have completed. (The first was the recent numerical puzzle). I am therefore pleased that the grid was easy.
Have done lots and lots of construction, but I feel I am missing something. The instructions in the clue seem OK until the last 2 words. Have the last word as a word but it cannot be viewed. Have no highlights but the instructions seem to suggest a specific clue but something doesn't feel right. Am I reading too much into it? Thanks
Catstail, congratulations! We've been doing them for over a year and still encounter these problems about what is required at various stages. On this thread folk try not to give explicit answers that spoil the pleasure for others who want to have the pdm moment, but I'll attempt to say what we have done. When you have the construction (the nature of which has been made pretty obvious already in this thread), look all around (Key word) the last word of the instruction and you should find a word for 16ac - or something that resembles it (note the word 'resembles'). You are expected to highlight that word and send the thing (by air mail or whatever) to the given address.
Finally done it, but what a faff. The first effort had the head in the wrong place. Next time it was right, but the paper is so flimsy I think the grid will fall apart when they check it! Not sure it quite looks like it's supposed to, but hope that any half decent effort will be acceptable. Didn't see anything worth shading at first, cursed the setter relentlessly, then saw it! Thanks, Jago for a lesson in patience and the acquisition of a new skill!
Probably about thirty sent and correct, two or three sent with errors and the rest not completed or sent, either because I couldn't do them or because I had far too much help to be able to honestly submit (and yes, I know that was a split infinitive!). I do hope some of you manage all clear records!
I completely agree with kwyjibo when he describes it as the worst puzzle of the year.DLM clues are just about the most boring clues ever devised, and a puzzle wholly based on them has little interest for me, even if filling the grid is easy. A puzzle that takes 30-60 minutes to fill the grid, then hours of fiddling to end up with the final product has simply got the balance all wrong.
I find it particularly galling that I shall probably fail to submit the last puzzle of the year because I'm hopeless at Origami and so far have not produced anything like the required finished article. Having found various designs on the internet, only one seems appropriate, and that's so complicated I shan't even try. My only chance is to find someone who is rather adept at this sort of thing and let them try, but even then it seems hit or miss whether one starts correctly so that the key letters end up in the right place.
I find it particularly galling that I shall probably fail to submit the last puzzle of the year because I'm hopeless at Origami and so far have not produced anything like the required finished article. Having found various designs on the internet, only one seems appropriate, and that's so complicated I shan't even try. My only chance is to find someone who is rather adept at this sort of thing and let them try, but even then it seems hit or miss whether one starts correctly so that the key letters end up in the right place.