Friday, June 29, 2012

Quick and dirty

Canoe orienteering protip:  stay in the boat

I've got a puzzle hunt coming up next weekend (sign up, folks!), and Potlatch this weekend, so my vast audience will have to be satisfied this week with a quick and dirty post.  Plus I'm exhausted from winning the Issaquah Street Scramble and DNF'ing the BEAST race at Union Bay (who thought getting out of their canoe would be a good idea during canoe orienteering?  This guy.)

The Past:  See what you've been missing



The Present:  If you lived here, you'd be home by now




I only quote the finest films

The Future: That is where you and I are going to spend the rest of our lives  

  • Long O - June 30, Salmon La Sac.  The mountains will keep the rain away, right?  Right?
  • ZLOGCAT - June 30, Cal Anderson Park.  Alleycat race.
  • Gorilla Challenge - June 30.  Amazing-Race + gorilla suits
  • 4th of July Cheshiahud Challenge - July 4.  Make your way around Green Lake, answer trivia questions for a chance to win Gold Bumbershoot passes.  Free.
  • First Thursday Adventure Run - July 5, Green Lake.
  • CitySolve Urban Race - July 7.  Another Amazing-Race
  • TRIOBA 24 Hour Adventure Race - July 7, Cougar, WA.  "There will be 15-25 miles of flat water paddling, 50-75 miles of biking, and 20-30 miles of trekking and trail running."  Be prepared, or just stay at home and rest up for...
  • Summer Puzzle Hunt 2012 - July 8, 1pm.  Put on by yours truly.
  • Road to the NACCC - July 14.  Alleycat (to fundraise for next year's North American Cycle Courier Championships), followed by a concert.
  • Evening Orienteering - Wednesday, July 18, Big Finn Hill Park, Kirkland.  With a big barbecue afterwards.
  • Pirate Treasure Hunt - Friday, July 20, 6pm.  Meadowbrook Community Center.  Family event, I imagine.
  • Amazing Kitchen Race - July 21, 11am.  Scavenger Hunt + cooking competition.  Paging Menu Hunters Anonymous.
  • Urban Bike Adventure - July 22.  Looks like a bike version of the Amazing Race.  Solve puzzles, bike to checkpoints, cash and other prizes.  I'd totally enter this except I have a prior commitment.
  • Tour de Watertower - July 22.  A punishing race to all of Seattle's high hills ('cause that's where the watertowers are, baby).  Since the towers and the starting/ending points are widely known, this race favors speed and endurance over route planning.
  • Choose Your Own Adventure - July 22, UW.   Orienteering on campus, with a get-together at the Big Time Brewery afterwards (in the early afternoon, which means the Big Time is all-ages).
  • Seattle Night and Day Challenge, July 28-29, show up around 2:30 at Road Runner Sports in Green Lake.  Basically a gigantic Street Scramble that covers most of Seattle and starts at 4pm, with options for 90 minutes, 3 hours, 7 hours, and 16 hours.  16 hours gets you a real 'night and day' experience.  I prefer the 7 hour option, which still gets you some night, but with less of the hangover after you pull an all-nighter.  If you clear the course (I almost did it once; forgot the Locks closed at 9pm, dammit), you'll go around 70-80 miles.
Geocache puzzle of the week:  Puzzler's Puzzle.  One puzzle too easy for you?  How about 31?  Solve (or at least partly solve) 30 puzzles so you can solve the underlying meta-puzzle.  This one took me about 15 days.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Divvying up the Spoils

Look at this blanket, filled with glamorous prizes

Everyone wants to have this problem:  you've just won a contest, and now you have to divide the prizes among your teammates.  If you won it all by yourself, no problem, but that's usually not the case.  And don't think you can put this off until you've got the prizes in hand.  In one contest I participated in in Germany, teams split up after arguing about how to split the prize before they were even close to finding it.

So it's best to have at least the outline of a plan beforehand.  My suggestions:

Say you're going to split it all evenly (or as evenly as possible) and work out the details later.

If you do manage to win a big enough prize (or a set of prizes) see if there's a way to use part of it to throw a party for everyone who participated and helped.  That way, even people who performed a minor role, such as lending you a piece of equipment or watching your kids while you went out searching late at night, can get a reward.

If the prizes are easy to divide, do so.  But if they're a diverse lot (like the collection of things above that I won from the Emerald City Search), don't bother trying to make things come out evenly in value.  Instead, ask everyone what they want most and try to get everyone at least one of the things on their list (it's better to get people to declare their wish list in public, so that if someone doesn't get their first choice, they know why).  If there are conflicts, order people at random rather than trying to figure out who 'deserves' it more. After everyone's got something they want, people take turns picking prizes from the pool like an NFL draft, until everything's picked or no one wants anything that's left.  If you manage to do this quickly, you can take the leftovers to the party and invite your guests to just take what they want.  Or you can donate the remainders to a charitable auction, or use them as prizes at your own puzzle hunt.

Charitable Canlis Card

One of these cards is not like the other

One of the Canlis cards I won back in 2010 poses an entirely different problem.  The card is good for a dinner for two people, annually, but I cannot use it myself.  Instead, I must give it away to a person who has displayed philanthropy (in some way) in the Seattle area.

There were 11 of us who participated in the final hunt that won the cards, and my first impulse was to rotate the power to choose the card's recipient among the members of my team.  But my wife suggested a better idea would be for us to do it together as a team.  So this week, for the second time, as many of the 11 that could got together at our house to have a drink, nosh, and discuss who should get the 'charitable Canlis card'.

Only 7 of the 11 could make it this year.  One person was out of town, but he wanted to participate, so we tried various technological solutions, eventually settling on a Google+ 'hangout' (which also allowed us to simultaneously see and edit a Google doc listing the people we were considering).  After we got the hangout set up, we decided we might as well invite the two members who had moved away last year as well.  One of them ended up joining us, making 9 in all.

I had decided we should pick the recipient by 'consensus', but there are a number of ways to do so.  I liked the Apache Project's consensus method the best, although I had to modify it for the case where we had to choose one of many possibilities.  Under the Apache model every voting member has 3 possible votes:  thumbs up, thumbs down, or no vote (abstain).  Thumbs up and no vote can be made without explanation (although you're welcome to explain if you like), but you can't vote thumbs down without a good explanation.  In most cases, a single thumbs down means a veto of whatever is being voted on, which works well in a consensus situation, since presumably anyone who gets a thumbs down will not be agreed on by everyone.  Conversely, everyone who doesn't get a thumbs down is at least acceptable to all the voters, so our only question was which of the people who got no negative votes is the 'best' candidate.

[Incidentally, most of the negative votes are by the person who suggested the candidate in the first place.  "I know I suggested X, but I'm not sure about them, so I'll come back next year and see if I can find someone else who does the same thing better."]

Last year, the answer was pretty easy, as one candidate had thumbs up from everyone, and no other candidate was even close.  This year, however, we had 3 candidates with 8 or 9 thumbs up, one with 5, and a few with 2 or 3.  So I made it up as I went along.  We dropped a few, had another round of voting, which narrowed it down to 2 finalists, and eventually selected Bonnie Miller, by the oh-so-definitive score of 5 votes to 4 (good thing we found person #9).  Bonnie has volunteered her time for years organizing and working on environmental projects in Seattle, most notably at Magnuson Park and with the Friends of the Burke Gilman Trail.


News and Events

The 9-5 Scavenger Hunt was magical

 

Ongoing


Upcoming 

  • Girls of Summer Alleycat, pt. 2 - June 23, I-5 Colonnade Park. Over $3000 in prizes.  Holy smoke.
  • Urban Dare - June 23. Amazing-Race style event. 
  • Issaquah Street Scramble - June 24. I will be there.
  • BEAST race #3 - June 28, UW Waterfront Activities Center.  I will also be here, as I love canoe orienteering.
  • Long O - June 30, Salmon La Sac.  Great spot to camp and orienteer.
  • ZLOGCAT - June 30, Cal Anderson Park.  Alleycat race, sponsored by a fixed gear bike blog.  Costs more than most alleycats ($15), but you get a T-shirt, and I'm guessing the prizes are better.
  • Gorilla Challenge - June 30.  Amazing-Race style event.  Bonus:  people running around in gorilla suits!
  • First Thursday Adventure Run - July 5, Green Lake.
  • CitySolve Urban Race - July 7.  Another Amazing-Race-esque race.
  • TRIOBA 24 Hour Adventure Race - July 7, Cougar, WA.  "There will be 15-25 miles of flat water paddling, 50-75 miles of biking, and 20-30 miles of trekking and trail running."  Be prepared, or just stay at home and rest up for...
  • Summer Puzzle Hunt 2012 - July 8, 1pm.  Put on by yours truly.
  • Evening Orienteering - Wednesday, July 18, Big Finn Hill Park, Kirkland.  With a big barbecue afterwards.
  • Pirate Treasure Hunt - Friday, July 20, 6pm.  Meadowbrook Community Center.  "Put on your eye patch and bandana and follow the clues in search for hidden treasure with the help from REAL pirates!  A backyard BBQ will follow.  Fun for the whole family."  Sounds like the Seafair pirates just might attend.
  • Urban Bike Adventure - July 22.  Looks like a bike version of the Amazing Race.  Solve puzzles, bike to checkpoints, cash and other prizes.  I'd totally enter this except I have a prior commitment.
  • Tour de Watertower - July 22.  A punishing race to all of Seattle's high hills ('cause that's where the watertowers are, baby).  Since the towers and the starting/ending points are widely known, this race favors speed and endurance over route planning.
  • Choose Your Own Adventure - July 22, UW.   Orienteering on campus, with a get-together at the Big Time Brewery afterwards (in the early afternoon, which means the Big Time is all-ages).
Here's a write-up on last weekend 9-5 all-night bicycle scavenger hunt, by a participant:  9 to 5 on my 925

Geocaching puzzle of the week:  Buta Sudoku  Sudoku with a twist.  I've solved the 4x4 version, but screwed up the 9x9 version twice.  I'll get you, egg!


Saturday, June 16, 2012

Canlis

Not looking a day over 52

Canlis is a fine dining restaurant in Seattle, just on the south side of the Aurora Bridge.  It's best known for excellent Northwest cuisine, impeccable service, a great view, and their Puzzle Hunt Contests.  As they say on Sesame Street, one of these things is not like the other.

Canlis is a family-owned restaurant, and it's the third generation of owners, Mark and Brian Canlis (grandsons of the founder), who have been driving the Puzzle Hunt Contests.  The great food, service, and view have been there since the beginning.  Or so I've been told; I had never been there until December 2010, when the restaurant was already almost 60 years old.  It's not coincidental that this corresponds to their first contest.

Contest #1 - Cheap Eats

Your key to cheaper fine dining

 

For the restaurant's 60th birthday, the Canlis brothers hid 50 facsimiles of the restaurant's 1950 menu around town, one at a time, usually one per day.  After hiding one, they would release a clue via Facebook or Twitter (for example, "Squash a beetle in your hand", referencing the Fremont Troll, who holds a VW bug in one of his hands).  If you found the menu, you could bring it into the restaurant for a dinner for two at the prices on the 1950s menu (so, for example, $6 for a lobster instead of $60).  In actuality, if you won you got to order off a 2010 version of the 1950 menu, as some dishes they weren't going to do, like 1950's extensive selection of pickled seafoods and shrimp cocktails (my son was actually disappointed about that).  Still, $5 steak and $6 lobster was quite a draw, and thousands of people tried to find the menus.

Some clues were harder than others, but in general they got harder as they went along.  Usually one of the brothers would be on hand to congratulate you when you found a menu.  Sometimes they would even give it to the first person who spotted them and asked for it, particularly if it had been some time since the clue had dropped and no other hunters were in sight.  The sole exception occurred late in the hunt, when they left one at the old Rainier Brewery overnight and tweeted the clue at around 4am.  Sometimes they would each have a menu and you had to find one of them, or they would give a clue that indicated two locations, such as the two ends of the Burke-Gilman Trail and one would be stationed at each spot.

How Church got from Here to There
As a rule, the clues were structured like poems (see below), although they also used simple ciphers and photos.  The clues used a diverse number of tricks about a diverse group of places, although they generally referenced Seattle history, especially Seattle restaurant history.  Most of the answers were Googleable, at least in hindsight.  For example:
Never fear, Church is here, but how did she get from here to there? 
Clearly Church is or was a woman.  But Googling for 'Seattle Church' gets you nowhere.  Wikipedia comes to the rescue, as they have pages of famous people who have a particular surname, which leads you to Ellen Church, the first flight attendant in history, whose plane is on display at the Museum of Flight.  This was the menu I found, which my wife and I used for a delicious and heavily discounted meal on our 14th anniversary.

But that wasn't all, as all the menu winners were invited to participate in a final hunt on New Year's Eve Day.  Everyone could have a team of up to three in a car, and as many as you could get helping at home.  You can read the whole story, but here's a summary:  I assembled a formidable team, and together we solved five clues and a final puzzle in Gasworks Park to find two buried gold Canlis cards, each good for 2 dinners for 2 every year.  One we get to keep; the other must be given away to a philanthropic person in Seattle.  It reminds me of being a character in a Jane Austen novel.  Mr. Darcy is worth 2000/year, Mr. Collins is worth 500/year, and I'm worth 2 fancy meals/year.

Contest #2: Pop-up

Spot the Morse Code (photo by Joshua Longbrake)

 

Early in 2011, the Canlis brothers started a slick online campaign to help their chef, Jason Franey, win an online poll.  They took a series of black-and-white photos of themselves in famous Seattle locations (The Space Needle, Safeco Field, Gasworks Park) wearing signs such as 'Vote for Jason'.  This was clever enough, but there was another contest hidden in the campaign:  each photo had had a letter or letters Photoshopped into it in Morse Code.  After finding 'w', 'w', 'w' and '.' in the first four photos, it wasn't hard to determine that it was a web address.  One enterprising couple paid for a reverse whois lookup and discovered the domain before it had even been set up.

By this point, I had decided it was best to enter these contests as a team (particularly since I was about to go out of Internet range for a Mt. Rainier vacation).  Eventually, our team found "www.qth", which was good enough to guess the correct web address:  www.qthseattle.com (QTH is a 'Q code' from ham radio, indicating "my position is").  This address was subsequently used in Contest #3, so it's no longer secret (and the content has changed).

On the website, there were originally instructions to send an e-mail for a reservation to a pop-up restaurant, where Franey and the rest of the Canlis staff could try something a little different for a couple of nights.  The members of our team, as well as the couple mentioned above were the only ones to get a reservation before the reservations were open up to the general public, and we all got a free meal for two.  I took my older son, who declared it the best meal he had ever had in his life.

Contest #3: Keys

Key #1 was here (Photo by Brian Canlis)
By now, people were beginning to catch on that the Canlis brothers liked putting on these contests, so there was quite a frenzy when they started another one in late September 2011, with a link to the mysterious image above and little other explanation.  Crucial to this contest was the fact that JennyLee Lieseke, who had hunted unsuccessfully for a menu but did manage to get a free meal at the Canlis pop-up, had set up a Facebook group, Menu Hunters Anonymous, back in 2010.  Soon after this contest started, JennyLee started promoting MHA on the Canlis Facebook page as the place to go to talk about the new contest.  This time, the Canlis brothers cryptically mentioned that "you can't do it alone", so everyone seemed eager to collaborate on a solution, and MHA's membership grew from a couple of dozen to over 500 by the end of the contest.

After the first few days, it became clear that each photo represented a sign located somewhere in Seattle, and the signs in the pictures all had a hidden key attached.  After a few days of finding one key a day, the brothers released more details:  there were 30 keys in all, and each represented a table at the restaurant for a special dinner on Sunday, October 30.  Crucially, though, the keys were all already out there.  This started somewhat of a frenzy, as people started looking for and finding keys without clues.  After a day or so, with all the keys mapped on one Google map it became clear that the key locations formed the outline of a shape, which made searching even easier, as the keys could only be on the lines of the shape.  By the 9th day of the contest, all the keys were found.

1 of a precious set of 30 (Photo by Justin Tittelfitz)

But what to do with the keys?  The shape they formed was a giant arrow, and the keys were safe deposit box keys, so even with incomplete information it seemed logical the key bearers should go to a bank at the tip of the arrow.  At the bank, the employees would take your key and let you open a special box which contained your official invitation (and told you how many people were at your table).  On October 30, everyone met for a nice dinner party with great food.  In a great community gesture, many of the people who made contributions to the solution but never found a key (such as the compiler of the map, and the first person who suggested the 'giant arrow theory') got invited by key winners who had room at their table.

Contest #4: ???

There's no reason to think that's the end of the Canlis contests.  On their 61st birthday in December 2011, the Canlis brothers with little warning hid a menu at St. Marks Cathedral on Capitol Hill and released another clue.  They indicated they'll probably continue to hide a menu every year.  But the smart money says there will be another big contest sooner or later.  With great food for free, or at least cheap, a lot of people will be eager to try to win it.  If you live in the Seattle area, like Canlis and Menu Hunters Anonymous on Facebook, and join us for the next hunt.

News and Events

Where you need to be to win a DeLorean from the author of Ready Player One

 

Geocaching puzzle of the week:  I've been working on the Puzzler's Puzzle, which has a number of good puzzles.  Here's one I solved after a fancy dinner (at Place Pigalle, not Canlis) this week:  An Odd Cache.

And there wasn't much of a puzzle to this one, but the Amazing Race analogies continue, and this story has a Seattle connection:  James E Rogers grad wins space trip.



Thursday, June 7, 2012

Two Beginnings and an Ending

Obligatory Back to the Future pic

This week saw the start of two hunts and the end of another.  At stake: some books, a dozen emerald-studded objects, and a 1981 DeLorean.

Find some books, Seattle Teens

As promised, on June 1, the Seattle Public Library released details on its Teen Summer Reading Book Scavenger Hunt.  Basically, they are using a pre-existing website called bookcrossing.com to track the roughly 1000 books they have 'hidden' around the city.  You're supposed to be a teen to participate, so if you find a book with this label on the front cover
and you are not a teen, just put it back.

If you are a member of my vast teenage audience, go ahead and take it home, read it and 'release' it by putting it somewhere other teens are likely to find it.  Then post a note on BookCrossing giving a hint where you left it.  Unfortunately, BookCrossing's user interface is rather clunky for prospective seekers.  To find the hints, choose 'Traveling' from the 'Select Filters' dropdown in the right column of SPL's BookCrossing page.  Then look for books that have 2 or more journalers and read the latest journal entry.  Looks like there's no 'search nearby' function, so you have to look at journal entries until you find one near you.  A lot of them appear to be left in a library (c'mon Seattle teen readers, mix it up a bit!), but some have been left in cafes or stores as well.  I keep thinking someone will put one in a ziploc bag and hide it under a bench, but I think that's because I've been doing too much geocaching lately.

One of the titles hidden is Ready Player One by Ernest Cline.  Which is a great segue to new contest #2...

It's a New Car!  (Actually, an old car)


June 5th was the release date of the softcover edition of Ready Player One, a novel where video games play a central role, written by a guy who apparently shared some of the same obsessions of my youth (Atari 2600 games, Ghostbusters, Galaga) but hasn't quite let them go.  To celebrate/drum up interest in the book, Ernie unveiled a contest that will be played out over the summer.  Basically, there is a secret message in all print editions of the book (hardcover and softcover, so the message has actually been out there for almost a year), which leads to a series of 3 video games.  Be the first to conquer all three games, and you win a 1981 DeLorean which Cline bought on eBay recently (not to be confused with the 1982 geeked-out DeLorean Cline has been driving around for a while).  The car is claimed to be worth $25,000 (seems legit).

Should you rush out and buy the book/give up in despair because you didn't hear about this a few days ago?  Nope.  While the first game is out there waiting to be played and solved, the second won't be released until July 1st, and the third until August 1st.  So you have time.  In fact, if you're on the West Coast, you might have an advantage, since presumably it will be an all-out race on August 1st, and the game will actually be released at 12:01am EDT August 1st, a somewhat inconvenient time for some, but a good time (9pm) to start an all-night game party out here.  Order your half-racks of Jolt Cola now.

I bought the book on June 5th, mostly because the reviews seemed good and I knew at least my tween would enjoy it.  The coded message isn't that hard to find.  It took me only a few minutes of browsing the book to figure out what it probably was, and a few more minutes after I bought it to actually decipher it.  As for the game itself, it's an Atari 2600 game that doesn't seem to hard to solve.  "But wait," you might be saying, "my parents threw my 2600 out when I left it in the closet to go to college!"  Alternatively:  "The Atari 2600 is older than I am, grandpa.  Why would I have bought such an antiquated gaming system?"  Silly you.  2600 emulators are a dime a dozen.  You can play the game online as a Flash game (the 2600 had a whopping 4K of ROM and 128 bytes of RAM; your iPod remote is probably more powerful), or download it and play it on a standalone emulator (I use Stella for the Mac).

The game itself is like a low-resolution version of Impossible Mission, where you run around dodging robots and finding puzzle pieces.  Well, there's a deadly flasher involved as well.  But still, a familiar format, and probably one you can figure out pretty easily.  Tangent #1:  I spent one week at college playing Impossible Mission on my friend's Commodore 64 in lieu of actually studying for finals.  Tangent #2:  I'm always reminded of the evil scientist's cry of "Stay awhile... stay forever" when I pass the "Bothell:  For a day, or a lifetime" sign on Bothell Way.

Ernie Cline's book tour for Ready Player One stops at Elliott Bay Book Company on June 20th at 7pm.  Go ask him about the Jungian symbolism in Adventure.

Time runs out on The Clock without a Face (sorry)

Got no human grace

And speaking of books, the armchair puzzle book, The Clock Without a Face, was apparently solved about a week ago when the 12th 'number' on the clock face was found in Washington.  Washington, California, that is.  I'm sorry I had not heard of this contest before (there was a story on NPR a couple of years ago, but I missed it):  the book looks gorgeous, the puzzles look interesting, and it was all published by McSweeney's, so:  quality!

The object was to find the 12 'emerald-studded' numbers that make up the clock face (the actual numbers do not appear to be particularly valuable, so the joy was mostly in the solving).  Most/all of the numbers were hidden at highway rest stops, so the puzzles boiled down to figuring out a state, a highway, and a mileage marker.  Except the authors decided after a period of time to dig up the unfound numbers and give different clues (i.e., another puzzle).  The last number was left at General Delivery at a post office in a small town in California.  On a hunch, the finder e-mailed the hotel in town to ask about the fictional 'Roy Dodge' (the detective in the story), the hotel owner said they'd never had such a guest but, strangely enough, she was also the postmaster and a package had been sitting in the post office since last fall waiting for Roy Dodge to pick it up.  The rest is armchair puzzle book history.

Ongoing and Upcoming

Totally photoshopped, dude (see Geocache puzzle of the week, below)

Geocache puzzle of the week:  Where's This?  See the surreal picture above (an alternate view of the image in the puzzle).  Be amazed at how Google image search makes it possible to even come close to figuring it out without ever leaving your couch.  (Thanks to Grace Hensley for pointing me to this one.)