The top half went in very smoothly, then the SW corner slowed me down a little. There were no obscure classical references and no obscure flora or fauna, but what seemed an unusual number of clues using only the outside, or only the inside, of words. My only MER (minor eyebrow raise) was at the answer to 6dn. As ugly a word as you’re likely to see!
My clue of the day was 10ac, for the artistic way the answer was hidden! Thanks to the setter for a very enjoyable puzzle.
Clues are in blue, with definitions underlined. Answers are in BOLD CAPS, then wordplay. (ABC*) means ‘anagram of ABC’. Deletions are in [square brackets].
In support of what I hope will become a campaign to urge the club site to use a font with serifs, so we poor solvers can tell the difference between yam and yarn for example, this blog is in Times New Roman font. What could be more appropriate?
Across
1 Overweight Florida infant burying its head (6)
FLABBY: FL (Florida), BABY (infant), with the leading B moved inside (“buried”). An inventive piece of wordplay.
4 Idiot bowled over extremely naive leader (8)
BONEHEAD: B (bowled), O (over), N[aiv]E, HEAD (leader).
10 Duck swimmer sees, partially (7)
IMMERSE: hidden answer.
11 Cutting maple branch is complicated to start with (7)
ACERBIC: ACER (maple), then B-I-C: the letters that the next three words start with.
12 Surge? This does, regularly (4)
TIDE: odd letters of ThIs DoEs.
13 Surprised Oscar, about to get into bed (10)
BEWILDERED: WILDE (Oscar, that is) and RE (about), both getting into BED.
15 Student corrected Galileo and Newton on speed of light (9)
COLLEGIAN: “corrected” (anagram) of (GALILEO N*), after C (the speed of light). N is the symbol for newton (without a capital N), the unit of force in the SI system (which includes kilograms, metres etc).
16 Hard punches ruptured spine (5)
THORN: H (hard) in TORN (ruptured).
18 Followed three females leaving far-off area of Home Counties (5)
AROSE: take the F’s out of FAR-OFF, then SE (South East, aka Home Counties).
19 Green bottle’s contents swirling in glasses (9)
LORGNETTE: “swirling” (anagram) of (GREEN OTTL*), where “bottle’s contents” says to lose the first and last letters of [b]OTTL[e].
21 Heartsick depression about cut foot (10)
DESPONDENT: DENT around SPONDE[e].
23 Skinned shins and arm? (4)
LIMB: [c]LIMB[s] meaning “shins”, as in “shins up the drainpipe”, “skinned” of outside letters.
26 Recluse just recalled sex with ecstasy (7)
EREMITE: EREM=MERE (just), “recalled”; IT (sex); E (ecstasy).
27 Chair is deep but not wide, long but not hard (7)
LOUNGER: LO[w] (deep, minus W); [h]UNGER (long, minus H).
28 Rustic couple at first laboured in silence (8)
YOKELISH: YOKE (couple), L (laboured, at first), I (in, also at first), SH (silence!).
29 Cross new wife briefly chasing gutless hubby (6)
HYBRID: H[ubb]Y (“gutless”), b[RIDE].
Down
1 Force isn’t commonly weak (5)
FAINT: F (force), AIN’T (isn’t, “commonly”).
2 I am a droll, peculiar creature (9)
ARMADILLO: “peculiar” (anagram) of (I AM A DROLL*).
3 Expose stomach, reportedly (4)
BARE: sounds like BEAR (stomach, “reportedly”).
5 Love helping in lecture (7)
ORATION: O (love), RATION (helping).
6 English blokes becoming obsolete — or improving? (10)
EMENDATING: E (English), MEN (blokes), DATING (becoming obsolete). Not a word I would ever use!
7 Kind of sleep-deprived, think back and glower (5)
EMBER: REMEMBER (think back), deprived of its REM sleep.
8 Moral decline of 1960s for example initially narked church (9)
DECADENCE: DECADE (1960s, say), N (initially Narked), CE (church).
9 Arab sheikhs finally shunning sycophants on island (6)
YEMENI: YE[s]MEN (sycophants, shunning the S at the end of sheikS); I (island).
14 Ritual involving one miracle (10)
CEREMONIAL: involving” (anagram) of (ONE MIRACLE*).
15 Whine about stock in candle shop (9)
CHANDLERY: CRY (whine) around HANDLE (stock). I didn’t realise a chandler sold candles! I only knew of ship’s chandlers.
17 Heading away, the solver set off in boat (9)
OUTRIGGER: [y]OU (the solver, “heading away”); TRIGGER (set off).
19 Lancashire’s opener is lazy, small and uncapped (7)
LIDLESS: L for Lancashire, IDLES, S for small.
20 Out-and-out lies oddly cause resentment (6)
RANKLE: RANK (out-and-out), then odd letters of LiEs.
22 Elegant ships poetically capsizing (5)
SLEEK: KEELS “capsizing”.
24 Short of things to do, maybe, old dons procreated (5)
BORED: O for old “dons” BRED (procreated).
25 Gloomily disheartened, as expected (4)
DULY: DU[l]LY, “disheartened”.
19d struck a chord: “Lancashire’s opener is lazy, small and uncapped.”
The Lancashire batsman, Harry Pilling, died recently and The Times carried an obituary of him. He wasn’t an opener and he wasn’t lazy but he was uncapped and he was small. At 5ft 3in he was one of the shortest, if not the shortest first-class cricketers around. There is a photo you can find of him conferring ,mid-pitch, with the giant (6ft 4in) West indian batsman, Clive Lloyd, who also played for Lancashire. Talk about Little & Large!
Edited at 2019-06-01 06:19 am (UTC)
And thank you for reminding me of the reason I don’t like Geoff Boycott. He stayed at home and sulked in Yorkshire while David Lloyd, Dennis Amiss et. al. faced the fury of Thomson & Lillee on that ’74/75 tour
Back to the puzzle – a straightforward but enjoyable offering, and completed without any biffing.
FOI BONEHEAD
LOI ACERBIC
COD BORED
TIME 8:26
🙂
COD: THORN.
FOI 1dn FAINT
LOI 9dn YEMENI
COD 15dn CHANDLERY
WOD 19ac LORGNETTE
Was pleased to get Lorgnette and was also slightly bemused by Emendating.
Liked LIDLESS.
Now for the football.
David
PS used to go the Wax Chandlers’ Hall in the City.
Edited at 2019-06-01 06:29 pm (UTC)
Was able to get through this in just over the half hour which is about 2/3 of average time. Some really constructions along the way – was particularly fond of LOUNGER after finally working out the clever wordplay. Thought that AROSE, LORGNETTE, EMBER, LIMB and OUTRIGGER were also very good.
Got tangled up with 28a and entered an erroneous YOKELESS in the end.
Finished in the SE corner with LIMB, DULY and that LOUNGER the last few in.