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====== 1999 Convention Reports ======
Here are some convention reports from NPL members [[#from_tyger|Tyger]] and [[#a_virgin_con-goer_in_the_virgin_woods|Sprout]].
===== From Tyger =====
"This is like going to heaven without having to die first." -- Eric
Con started a little strangely for me. I had wanted to fly over
with Lunch Boy on Tuesday, but there were no frequent flyer seats
available, and I reserved for Monday night. Thunderstorms on
Monday delayed the flight to Salt Lake City so much that I would
have missed the last connecting flight to Bozeman, so I ended up
the next day on the flight I'd originally wanted. LB and I
chatted, then he fell asleep and I did puzzles. The connecting
flight had every seat full and a baby on a lap, and I was lucky to
get a seat at all (that's a story in itself), and wasn't near the
other Krewe on board.
I met Dart and Gotcha for the first time at the airport, and got to
see Gotcha's handiwork the rest of the week, as she braided the
hair of at least a dozen people in patterns both simple and
intricate but always beautiful. A dozen of us boarded a van to Big
Sky and in between chatting with QED, Dart, and Treesong, I got my
first breathtaking views of the Rockies from ground level. Some of
us early arrivers, including Qaqaq, Noam, and Ariadne, took a walk
up one of the ski mountains, where someone took a picture of Bartok
doing his Maria von Trapp impersonation. Forget the password
protection, Bart, you wanna burn that baby.
Then I checked into our lovely duplex condo which had a surprising
number of dead animals and animal heads nailed to the wall,
including a dead ferretlike mammal disarmingly close to someone's
top bunkbed. Thankfully, I was not sleeping there, but downstairs
in a room with Sue++ and Saxifrage that had its own bathroom and a
door to the hot tub room. I had dinner with some condomates, and
we invited everyone over to our place for games and hot tubbing,
though LB was the only guest to join Sue++ and me in the hot tub.
Went to bed about 12:45, after seeing one of Sprout's videotaped
game show appearances: a fairly lame show on PBS that never made
it to national distribution. Sprout's partner, a middle-aged woman
he had never met before, was introduced by the MC as liking "to
rescue small animals from unusual places." O-kay.
Wednesday morning I noticed for the first time the stupendous view
from our front balcony, which D. Ness and G Natural were up early
enjoying. Had a decent buffet breakfast with a happy crew, then
went hiking through the Gallatin National Forest to Lava Lake with
D. Ness, Sue++, and Atlantic. It was 3 miles uphill to the lake
and 3 miles back down, and well worth the trip. Near the lake, we
ate a lunch bought earlier at the Hungry Moose, a terrific small
health-food/grocery store, while a chipmunk the size of a small cat
watched us from several yards away, we put our garbage into our
packs, then lingered for an hour. Atlantic took his camera and
tripod and walked around the lake a bit, while the rest of us went
closer to the lake to rest in the sun or dip or feet in the icy
cold water. On returning to our bags, we found that the chipmunk
had chewed the leftover pickles and that a small bag of garbage was
nowhere to be found. The chipmunk must have swung it over his
ample shoulders and stalked away with it.
We got back late in the afternoon, just in time to shower, clean up
a little, and start a pasta dinner, which unfortunately was not
finished by the time the scheduled pre-Con party began in our
condo. I played some games, solved Ai's cryptic handout with
Sprout, then nudged QED toward its solution and chatted with him a
bit. I also ate numerous lemon squares that Sprout baked.
Thursday, our condo prepared a most fantastic communal breakfast.
We had bought eggs and butter and English muffins at the Hungry
Moose. Panther toasted the muffins, GNat made omelets using
broccoli and tomatoes left over from the previous night's party,
and I made a salad from the fruit people had in their private
stashes: apple, apricots, bananas, plums.
Then came the whitewater rafting trip. Everyone seemed to have a
raft guide that walked right out of Cosmo or GQ; there was a lot of
moaning and pining away going on in the hot tub conversations
afterward. Especially by straight men with a raft guide named
Audra. My raft guide had a nickname, Maverick, and he insisted on
learning and using our noms: Charts, Jo the Loiterer, Sax, JrMan,
Sew Do I. He entertained us at one point by rowing to shore and
diving into the river from a bridge. We all, including Maverick,
played lateral thinking situational puzzles, 20 Questions style,
all morning and just through the ample and tasty lunch (when Bartok
and Fraz joined the puzzling). (My favorite was "A horse jumps
over a tower and lands on a man, who promptly disappears from the
scene." By asking yes/no questions about the size of the tower,
and finding out that it was less than 1 foot tall, but more than 1
inch tall, I was able to guess in a much shorter time than most of
the other puzzles took me that the situation was a chess game.)
About 15 minutes after lunch, the water got too rough for that, and
we concentrated on listening to Maverick's directional paddle
commands. It was a totally fun experience, and I never once felt
that I was in any danger.
That night marked the official start of Con. This year's
introduction info, besides one's nom and hometown, was to state
one's favorite word in the world. WILLz started off by saying his
favorite was "mellifluous." Many other people also gave words that
they liked the sound of. My favorite word was "yes." Other
notables: "employed, because it means I can be here" (Mellifur),
"retired" (Sanit), "ex-host" (Qaqaq), and Rastelli's: "I decided
to go about this systematically, and after analyzing all of my
writings over several years have discovered that my favorite word
is 'the'." We played a mixer game by Jo the that was confusing at
first, but lots of fun once it got underway. Teki arrived in the
middle of it and I dragged him onto our team, which was short a
member. Then I teamed with Trazom, 100 Down, and Ariadne to face
Wrybosh's challenge to pose a question that exactly 50% of Krewe
could answer correctly. The answer to our question of who were the
3 Major Prophets of the Old Testament (Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel),
later proved not as widely known as we had hoped. We also enjoyed
a film by Cache and Chainsaw, both sadly absent from Con in real
life, in which we were asked to find transposals of things
appearing. Of course, the Krewe came up with many answers that the
filmmakers didn't intend, and, oddly, voted down one of the
official answers (tearing, ingrate) as not being actual things.
After the official games, I solved the Harth cryptic with Squonk
and took lots of pictures.
Friday was the Yellowstone trip -- my first time in Wyoming. On
the bus ride there, Wombat and I cosolved Form Fiend's message. I
took lots of pictures of hot springs, steam, colorful pools of
thermophilic bacteria, and bubbling mud at the first stop. Ate the
best veggie burger ever at the Old Faithful Lodge, bought souvenirs
for the kinfolk, and saw the geyser spout on schedule. Saw several
magnificent waterfalls that afternoon, as well as wild bison and
elk. Cosolved the Slik cryptic with Al De Suda on the way back.
Friday's buffet dinner was exotic and wonderful, and I enjoyed the
company of Twisto, Val-U, Teki, and others while sampling elk chili
and the first of several incarnations of huckleberry seen that
weekend. I could have lived without the elk meat, but the well-
seasoned chili went very well with the polenta from the trout dish.
I also liked the vegetable lasagna and soft brown rolls.
Friday evening, we were treated to Rastelli's excellent juggling
and comedy routine. For the finale, he drew En's "beautiful
portrait" while juggling three balls. The result reminded me of a
quote by Samuel Johnson about a dog walking on its hind legs: "It
is not done well; but you are surprised to find it done at all."
I teamed with G Natural, Trazom, Mercury, JrMan, Sew Do I and 100
Down for Squonk & Cecil's "Questions of Fortune." In this
variation of "Wheel of Fortune," each team could ask only yes or no
questions. We solved the first one, an event, (Macy's Thanksgiving
Day Parade) based on enumeration only & thought we were pretty
smart. It was the only one we solved — if you don't guess on
enumeration, arriving at the final answer is a looong procedure.
I annoyed myself on the 50/50 Trivia Questions submitted by teams
the night before: I *knew* I knew the identities of the current
Canadian Prime Minister and UN Secretary-General, and the exiting
Spice Girl, but couldn't think of them at the time. After the
games, I chatted with Eric, Lyric, Qaqaq, and Fraz; then Fraz,
whose condo was near mine up the hill, insisted on showing me the
shortcut to get back. Walking across the grass instead of using
the road was indeed shorter, but totally unlit. Terrified, I clung
to his arm for dear life (it *is* bear country) and don't know how
he managed to navigate so well so quickly.
Saturday I managed to wake up in time for both breakfast and the
business meeting. Good news for me: my proposal for NYC Con in
2001 was unanimously encouraged (though not, of course, officially
approved yet). Not as good news: Lunch Boy announced his
intention to not edit or mail Enigmas anymore. It looks like Sue++
will be doing the printing and mailing from Boston, so no more NYC
mailings. (The regulars, however, have decided to continue meeting
at the same diner for dinner after the mailings end, tentatively
scheduled for the first Tuesday of each month.) Uncanny announced
her intention to retire as VP, and after the meeting, I told Quip
I'd like to run for her vacated slot.
After lunch, I toured the mall, the hospitality suite, and the
common areas of the lodge with Crax and Gotcha to get familiar
(with the hotel!) in preparation for the evening puzzle hunt. I
spotted a beautiful full-length multicolored leather/suede/wool
coat in a fur store in the lobby, and Gotcha took a picture of me
in it with Noam, whom we persuaded to don a similarly-patterned
jacket. We kept searching, and I kept thinking about that coat,
which cost more than 2x anything I'd ever worn before, excluding
jewelry. Finally, I called my husband, and he said go for it.
Yippee! I bargained about 15% off the price of the coat, and wore
it for the afternoon puzzle competition. In between co-solving
with 100 Down, I looked at his pictures from the week before when
he and his family visited Grand Teton National Park. Of course,
they were, as everything else in the Wild West, full of beautiful
things to behold. I went back to the condo, changed into a casual
dress, and got a ride back to the lodge for the photo session from
Sue++ who wowed the crowd with a red tube top/shoulder cover set,
slinky pants, and heels.
Supper was followed by a fascinating talk by Hot on Italian
puzzles, complete with examples of traditional-type and NPL-adapted
examples in English crafted by him and other Krewe. The numerous
picture puzzles showed off Crax and Randd's artistic talents.
For the past few years, Wombat and I have been randomized onto the
same teams for Saturday night puzzle extravaganzas, and have found
ourselves most compatible teammates. However, this time, even with
the wonderful new feature of separating us racers from the people
who prefer to savor each puzzle, we were on adjacent teams. So I
cheated the gods of randomicity and switched with someone to get on
Wombat's team. Wombat said: "You'll ruin the karma!" I
responded: "What karma? We always lose!" The other members of
this team were Philana and Kray, and we did finish in the top ten
and win one of the Hershey bars, which we happily shared at the
end. My favorite in this series of hidden puzzles by Fraz and
WILLz was the smell test: bowls covered with hole-punched tinfoil
contained different foods that had to be smelled. You wrote the
names down on the paper, and some of the letters had numbers
underneath; the resulting ordered letters were the next puzzle
location. Wombat identified the root beer, and I got the lemon,
cinnamon, and apple pretty quickly. Also figured out, on a return
sniff after the resulting message was too weird, that what we had
as vinegar was actually mustard (which does contain vinegar). I
also liked climbing the rope to the play fort to retrieve a puzzle,
and thought the puzzle with the solution "Montana" followed by a
series of numbers and letters was ingenious: I think it was Kray
who realized that it was a license plate number, and sure enough,
right outside the lobby door in the "never park here" zone was
Uncanny's unlocked car with the next puzzle in the front seat.
(Um, I *don't* think we'll try this at NYCon 2001). After-hours
games included Pictionary, by Dart, which went on for hours, and
which I joined for a couple of shorter times. Unfortunately, I was
not playing when the items to describe were a list of phrases
containing the word "tiger." I also enjoyed a long phone
conversation with Quiz, who called the hospitality suite from his
home in Florida. Next year we'll talk in person, I hope!
Sunday morning, thanks to my pairing with 100 Down the day before,
I was able to pick up a cryptic crossword book and _The
Puzzlemaster Presents_ (by WILLz) from the prize table. I passed
up a ride to the Lewis and Clark Caverns to take a much-needed nap.
I woke up at about 5, showered, packed, and started preparing food
for the dead dog party to be held at our condo after the pizza
party at the pool (which I skipped). I thought we'd have nothing
to serve our guests, but we got most of the leftovers from the
hospitality suite, as well as Fraz's condo, whose residents had
managed to obtain seats on Sunday flights, plus a few donations.
Alf arrived early and shared in the preparations. We made 2 green
salads (Ranch and Italian/parmesan) and a fruit salad, heated up
Atlantic's lentil casserole (and threw in a few herbs from the
condo spice rack), and put out cheese, crackers, chips, salsa,
cookies, beer, wine, soda, and spring water. It was like the
miracle of the loaves and fishes; there was more than enough, and
later, Sprout made yet more delicious chocolate chip cookies.
Over raw cookie dough in the kitchen, QED said he'd been watching
a lot of reruns of Match Game from the 1970s with Gene Rayburn, and
he wants to do an NPL Match Game for future cons. Volunteers for
a "celebrity" panel included Qaqaq as Charles Nelson Reilly, and T
McAy, who does a mean impersonation of Brett Somers. I suggested
also having an NPL member who is relatively serious and will give
an answer that the rest of the panel won't. QED would divide the
room into 2 teams, which would take turns sending up players for
one question each. Questions would all be Krewe-related. Someone
suggested: "Whenever I see Treesong, he has a [blank]." Four of
us there answered: 2 each "grapefruit" and "briefcase." (Asking
the absent Tree later, he answered "button.") I hope QED decides
to have 2 sets of questions, one for regular play, and more
"interesting" ones for after-hours fun.
In the upstairs common area, several Krewe played a Cheapass Game
for about 2 hours at the table while others of us talked on the
sofa near them. At some point, I ended up in the hot tub for a
long time, sharing tales of "worst dates ever" and other horror
stories with G Natural, Eric, and Sue++. Also played when Squonk
and Cecil shared some "Questions of Fortune" that they didn't get
to during the official program, teaming with D.Ness and dev/joe/.
The highlight of the party, though, was the Pyramid game,
instigated by T McAy, which started early in the evening and gained
momentum throughout the night, until by 2 a.m., all of the 20 or so
people still at the party were involved as writers, participants,
or onlookers. It started out with T McAy and Noam writing and
giving clues to each other for plausible $10,000 Pyramid final
rounds, in which you have 60 seconds to clue 6 categories to your
partner by listing items in the category. However, cluing such
plausible categories as "Olympic host cities" and "Indian tribes"
soon proved to be not nearly as much of a challenge to Krewe as to
the people on the TV show, so the categories started getting harder
(things that flicker, things made of cork); more NPL related (what
Merl Reagle would say, NPL members who juggle); more edgy (naughty
things); and just plain weird (what Brian Boitano would do). It
seemed that pretty early on in the larger-group game, the time
limits got thrown out of the window. Also, there would be a clue
giver, and a clue receiver, and a separate clue writer (a la NPL
charades), for each round. The writer would show the giver the
categories, one by one, and the giver would do his/her best to get
a correct answer out of the receiver. A kibitzer sat nearby to
help a stumped giver. For the tougher categories, almost the
entire room would eventually jump in to help give or receive,
depending on whether they had seen the categories. The only one
who didn't ever jump in, as far as I could tell, was the writer.
Writers included Eric, Al DeSuda, Atlantic, Trick, QED, and T McAy.
Some of my favorite categories, from memory and from some of the
paper that was used (unfortunately, I couldn't find the wacky ones
from the end of the night, so those are from memory only):
* What a trumpeter swan would say
* What Noam might say
* Things that come in threes
* Things with lines
* Things that are fragile
* What Herbert Baus would say
* Things that have sections
* What Famulus would say (careful - Wombat's here) \ [Wombat works for Famulus at Random House]
* Hitchcock films with one-word titles
* Things that have tricks
* Uses for a beanbag
* Things that are painless
* Things that are symmetric
* Things your mirror image might say
* Things that are 2-colored
* Other uses for a camera tripod
* Things Alex Trebek would say during a commercial
* New reasons Quiz would give for coming late to convention
* Proposed new slogans for beer ads
* Name of a new Sesame Street character
* What Uncanny would say to her bottle of vodka (this was a crowd favorite: "Oh, I want you, and when Convention is all over, I'm going to drink you all up!")
* Parts of a vibrator (Atlantic clued this to me, and went straight from "the cord" and "the plug" -- which didn't help me as I've never seen one with a cord or plug -- to very explicit)
* Things bigger than a breadbox ("the universe" didn't lead to the answer, but "Rosie O'Donnell" did; the receiver remarked, "when I heard that, I knew size was what we were going for")
* Hunks of the NPL (T McAy to Saxifrage: "Chainsaw. Mobot. Chainsaw. Mobot." Crowd member: "Mobot, to Sprout.")
* Things that coalesce
* Things that are faceted
* Gizmos (this proved to be *really* hard)
* People you (the giver) want to have sex with ("Audra the raft guide. Audra." Qaqaq (as kibitzer): "His wife, if he had one." Giver: "My girlfriend, if I had one." Qaqaq, for the giveaway:
"His mistress, if he was going to cheat on the wife he doesn't have.")
* Why NPL members make better lovers
* What you (the giver) would say if trying to seduce the receiver
* Unlikely NPL couples (one of which was "Twisto and Trick," to which Trick responded: "I'd say unlikely is an understatement.")
The wackiest one I heard: What a dishrag would say if running for
president and trying to cover up a sex scandal ("I did NOT have sex
with that sponge")
The last one of the evening, as the party ended just before 4am: Things that are
mellifluous. This was appropriate, since "mellifluous" was the favorite word that
Willz opened the official Con program with.
Several of us got on the 6am shuttle bus Monday morning with little or no sleep
(I was glad for that nap the day before!), including Noam and Al DeSuda, who
cosolved next to me on the flight from Bozeman to Salt Lake City. (Lilith and
Lunch Boy were on my flight from SLC to Newark, but we were very spread out in a
nearly full plane.) I saw a deer from the van window on the way to the airport
-- a last little bit of wildlife to remember Montana by. I don't envy Trazom planning
Bay Con (or whatever next year's Con ends up being called) and am glad NYCon is not
until 2 years from now, because Contana is one tough act to follow.
===== A Virgin Con-Goer in the Virgin Woods =====
**by Sprout**
As I deplaned in Salt Lake City and approached the gate for my flight to Bozeman, I was
still apprehensive about arriving at the Con so early on Tuesday. This was my first Con, and now
in a possible fit of insanity I had committed to spend six days with a group of people who are a
menace to signs with moveable letters. My fears were allayed as three Krewemen (Treesong,
Noam, and Al de Suda) hailed me over to the gate and mob began to form to head to Montana.
Thanks to Tyger's firm but maniacal stance toward the people at Delta, she was also able to join
us on our flight. The flight was full. Each of us were nearly evenly distributed throughout the
plane. Every now and then, you could see an NPLer's head pop up and scan around (like
watching prairie dogs in the habitrails at the Bronx Zoo when I was a child).
Upon arriving at Bozeman Airport, we met up with a West Coast flight that had such
travelers as Dart and Gotcha. Even though this was my first Con, I had met most of the people in
our shuttle to Big Sky in my Stamford experiences. So, I was relieved to be among friends while
still being giddy as a school girl (without the pigtails). After nearly missing my flight out of
Boston, I was very happy when we saw the Huntley Lodge. We entered the lobby and saw a big
metallic bear that put the FAO Schwartz bear to shame. Soon, we headed up the hill to the
Beaverhead condos.
It was both an honor and a privilege to be a member of "the condo" (no insult meant to
"the other condo", which housed some NYC Krewe with a token Canadian, Fraz wonderful
people who visited us often). We had the Beaverhead condo where people seemed to collect
every day (even though we were way off the beaten path compared to the other residences at the
resort). Ah, the chosen few: Tyger, Panther, Saxifrage, Sue++, G Natural, Dart, Cazique, D.
Ness, Al de Suda, Kray, Wombat, and myself (with /dev/joe and Atlantic stopping in as well). So,
we got to host the pre-Con party, the pre-pre-Con party, and the post-Con party. And since I had
a fully functioning kitchen, I was happy to provide lemon squares and cookie dough (both cooked
and raw) for the masses. I love to bake; I find it relaxing, but it gives me that Sally Field feeling
too . . . "you like me, you really really like me." In addition to the amazing kitchen, we had two
porches, a hot tub, a nice TV, a piano, and the largest, scariest wooden statue of a beaver I ever
did see. I lost 5 minutes off my life the first time I saw it in the darkened room.
So, during this first night of acclimation to the thin air and all those shiny points of light up
in the sky, the pre-pre-Con gathering was simple game playing. The next day, most people headed
up the mountain or out to the caverns; I, on the other hand, relaxed and baked all day for the pre-
Con party. It was so exciting to see all these people at the party of whom I had heard the legends
("she can anagram faster than a Franklin") and whose puzzles I had come to love ("Oh no! Not
another enigmatic rebus from Chicago"). I didn't play many games that night. I was saving up my
energy to get wet (in the Gallatin River) with my 59 closest friends.
Ah, the rafting trip. I was impressed by Dart's retelling of our adventure. He managed to
tell an entire story about 7 people in an ill-fated boat without mentioning "Gilligan's Island". Oh,
rats. Now I've done it. Next came the Yellowstone tour which was fun, but it was rather
anticlimactic after having been on the S.S. Minnow where the Skipper, Mary Ann, Ginger, and the
Professor all went in for a dip. (But that leaves the question: who was Lovey Howell? QED, Dart,
or me?)
Teki described our Yellowstone tour as "going from place to place waiting for an eruption."
This was both apt and had the double entendre necessary to make it into my less than subtle Con
report. There were several really cool geysers, including Clepsydra, which I then learned is 10C,
meaning "water clock", from the Greek for "water stealing". Old Faithful just could not hold a candle
up to even the most banal of the bubbling mud pots. I need to look into some landscapers to see if I can
have one put into my yard in Somerville.
I began my tour on the coolest of the two buses, the one with the hip male tour guide;
here, I had co-solved my first cryptic on the ride out with Al de Suda. For the second part of the
trip, Fraz wanted to swap buses with me so that he could solve a cryptic with his partner on my
bus (and I could solve with G Natural who was on his bus). While my bus was quite laid back and
was going to miss me, the "new" bus was all thrown in a tizzy by my replacing Fraz. I had
disturbed the status quo and made people change seats. Eventually, the other bus forgave me for
not being Fraz, partially due to my inclusion of much witty repartee and several promises of fall
hedge trimming.
After a day outdoors, I followed the sign downstairs to the "Pale Ale Guzzlers Union at"
the ballroom. The formalized events that were part of the program were incredible. I started off
with my favorite word: tergiversation. I had only read it and wasn't sure how to pronounce it;
after polling many around me, there were two clear choices, and appropriately I had trouble
choosing. I served as the transcriptionist for Duplicate Wurdz since I cannot anagram or spell and
I have never played Scrabble (please, don't revoke my NPL membership), but Randd, Hot and
Cazique were amazing tilegods. But I think my favorite short event was Wrybosh's 50-50 Trivia
game. I was amazed at the logic that went into all the question creations (and I am shocked that
that many people were fluent in Spice Girls knowledge).
The whole concept of co-solving cryptics to me was great. I had a wonderful time solving
with Al de Suda, G Natural and Dart. However, next year, I want to try solving with people I
didn't already know well (everyone, keep that in mind for next year's dance cards). Now listen to
the following sentence about cryptic co-solving: "Tyger and Sue++ did Trick's in bed." (Tyger
and Sue++ were bedmates in the condo and shared Trick's cryptic submission. Get it?) Not only
that, everywhere you looked there was another cryptic; it was like pennies from heaven (I collect
large cents from before 1858 so that means a lot to me). Ai, Anomaly, and Ucaoimhu provided
entertaining puzzles, but the coup d'‚tat was the set of 5 cryptics that made up the trilogy "The
Con-Goers Guide to Wombat's Stolen Theme." [Note: for those people who are keeping score at
home, this is a reference to the Douglas Adams books.] Sometimes, puzzle solving can be a very
solitary endeavor, but the Con was a wonderful time to explore doing things with each other . . .
and in an incredibly non-competitive atmosphere. No one even tried to throw any of those
plentiful complimentary muffins at me to screw up my "German Sausage" solving.
But of course, I have now learned that just as much (if not more) goes on in the
unorganized hours (and hours) after the program ends each evening. One staple appears to be
Mafia (and not the bad final movie of Lloyd Bridges). Mafia is a psychological game where you
try to identify the good guys and the villains at the table by watching their body language and
listening to what they say. The first time I played Mafia with the Krewe was at Stamford '99: I
had convinced them through my incredible savvy that I had never played before, and I made it as
one of the Mafia killers down to the last three survivors. But then Fraz and Trazom made me
crack. I was destined to get back at Fraz. We played again at the Con. This game started at 2 am.
I was quickly squished like a little bug by the insidious doppelganger that had replaced the
normally timid and sweet Fraz.
I also played all the versions of Jeopardy that Al de Suda, Noam, and Maelstrom had put
together. We even set up a game of former Jeopardy players [En, Ember, Saxifrage, Qaqaq (who
should have been on Jeopardy) and myself] which I managed to win though luck of knowing the
final answer (The most populous US capitol city) after being dead-last the whole game before
that. I thought Squonk and Cecil did an excellent job with Questions of Fortune. A great concept
that was a lot of fun to play. (Although the after-hours "one percent, two percent, and whole
milk" left me feeling a little lactose intolerant.)
The last thing I want to mention about official Con events is the amazing Scavenger Hunt that
WILLz and Fraz put together. My team was made of Ember, Panther, and "The Member Formerly
Known as Gymnast." We started off with the noms referring to the old Con photo, and somehow
managed to pull out a solution with only recognizing half of the faces. My job on our team was two-
fold: to work to solve the puzzles and to shush Panther every time she screamed out our latest
epiphany to a team passing by. (Panther was proud of our progress but my competitive streak was
demanding secrecy.) I decided that this was a prime opportunity to get to meet the staff in our lodge
better. Now, while the local paper might have felt the Krewe were not meant to grace the cover of GQ
magazine, it seems that the entire staff of the lodge (and our tour guides too) were all attractive men
and women. So, I befriended several of the cute guys who worked at the Lodge and batted my
eyelashes at them and offered them lemon squares to let me know where things were. I even got a
personal escort to the vending machine by this really nice blonde guy. In the end, we managed to get a
candy bar by coming in 7th. It was such fun. My team was great, and we all worked so well together.
On Sunday, Ariadne, Wombat, Lunch Boy and I (with the vehicle of the ever beautiful and
radiant Uncanny) headed out for the aforementioned (if you read Squonk and Cecil's report)
Lewis and Clark Caverns. They neglected to mention that the caves are named after the pair
because Teddy Roosevelt wanted a park named after them somewhere; the caves were actually
discovered by another group after the deaths of Lewis and Clark. Keeping with the pattern of
attractive guides and staff in Montana, our guide was very nice; he led us through the majesty of
these simple caves. This was my first time in caverns and on our ride back, I had my first
homemade root beer, too! This was a great bonding experience for the four of us.
Well, Sunday night finally came around. After our trip to the caverns, we missed the pool-
side pizza party (but we got to eat the leftover pizza) as the Monday-departers made it over to
"the condo" for one final evening of puzzling debauchery. Many of us were on the shuttles that
left between 4 am and 6 am so we decided to just play all night rather than risk sleeping past our
only link to the outside world. But this even was special for several reasons, one of which was the
amazing opportunity everyone took to mock me. But the bestest reason of all was the beginning
of the NPL version of the "$25,000 pyramid" (or whatever value you choose to remember it as
being). I know I was there at the start, with QED in the kitchen writing out sets of 6 categories on
napkins with felt tip pens. Atlantic and /dev/joe were among the first victims of our categories.
They started off as things like "Things that are fluffy" and "Parts of a car". By the end of the
evening, everyone on both floors of the condo was involved either playing or creating sets of
categories. The following six make up a set of some of my favorites from the evening:
* Parts of a ball bearing
* Things Uncanny would say to a vodka bottle
* Splendid things
* Things that coalesce
* Things Don Knotts would say if he were a better actor
* New excuses Quiz might have for missing the Con
The games eventually broke up, and I showered and packed. When my sleep-deprived
semi-corpse got the chance to sleep, that's what it did. Somehow I managed to get
approximately 10 hours of sleep total over my six days in Montana; I tied that amount
of sleep between my shuttle ride and both flights. As I deplaned in Boston, a flight
attendant said to me, "Boy, you sure can sleep." It only took me the entire month of
August to recover, and now I cannot wait for Con Francisco.
//Afternote:// As I look over my Con photo that recently arrived in the mail, I am reminded
of the incredible fun I had at my first Con. The photo also saddens me for two reasons: that I will
have to wait a year to see some of these people again and that that hideous goatee I shaved off
after the Con is immortalized in it. Also, looking at the picture reminds me that I have some more
people to meet and names to learn next time (except for Jon Dark, the sole person with his official
nomtag still on). [//You could read that? Ed.//]