Solving Time: 40 minutes
There’s nothing like a week at a statistics conference to completely anaesthetise the few brain cells I possess which remain active, so maybe it’s just me, but this was by no means a walk in the park, with some easy clues interspersed with some tricky ones, making for a somewhat untidy solve. Here’s my take on it, anyway.
| Across |
| 1 |
Deliberately omitted. I got this one straight off the bat, which is something to brag about. |
| 3 |
F for fine + AIRY for breezy + CYCLE for song collection = FAIRY CYCLE, a generic term for a child’s bicycle, according to Collins, although completely unfamiliar to me. Here’s one worthy of the name and another which isn’t. |
| 9 |
REVISIT = REV for minister + IS + IT for “just what’s needed”. My second last in. I couldn’t make head or tail of this one (in fact I’ve only just seen how it works), and 2d was no help. |
| 11 |
MAID for young woman, reversed around G for good and RA for artist = DIAGRAM |
| 12 |
AUTOBIOGRAPHY = (BY PARIAH GO OUT)*. Another one which troubled me, mainly because I took “out” to be the anagrind. |
| 14 |
TERRA = TERRApin. Terra is Latin for earth or land (in legal contexts) according to Collins. Definitely not a case of terra incognita for me. |
| 15 |
APPREHEND, double definition. |
| 17 |
APATHETIC = PATH for way + CITE for refer, reversed, (next) to A for article. I’m not sure if the first “to” also means “next to” or whether cite = to refer. |
| 19 |
YAHOO = YO for greeting (as in “Yo bro”) containing A HO for house. Jonathan Swift’s creation. Maybe if they had been given that fairy cycle they wanted for their sixth birthday instead of a pair of sensible shoes, things would have turned out differently. |
| 21 |
CWT for “coal we took initially”, is short for HUNDREDWEIGHT. Another which required almost all the checkers for the penny to drop. The number of pennies in a hundredweight depends on whether it’s short, long or metric. The only thing I remember for sure is the number of foot poundals in a second. |
| 24 |
FORAGED = FOR for “on behalf of” + AGED for “folk over the hill” (!). This meaning of forage I only knew via the American Civil War (see the War Between the North & South) soldiers called “foragers” |
| 25 |
INSPIRE = IN for popular + SIRE for male parent around P for power |
| 26 |
(IS BEST ONLY)* = OSTENSIBLY, an unlikely looking possibility which didn’t exactly spring to mind. |
| 27 |
THE US for “area across the pond” minus the E for energy = THUS or so. When both checkers finally appeared I have to admit being taken aback. I was working on a foot poundal hypothesis. |
| Down |
| 1 |
GARGANTUAN = GAG for joke about R for king + AN + AUNT*. Some Rabelais to accompany Swift. |
| 2 |
RIVER for “Test possibly”, around EfficienT = RIVETER. My last in, having been completely taken in by the River Test and wanting it to have two t’s; but that would be Rosie the Rivetter (see blog title). |
| 4 |
ASTRONAUT = AS for like + TAUT for tight with RON for Reagan in situ. Another which took longer than it need have, since I had the Ron and the strait early on. Oh!, I see the problem. |
| 5 |
RIDER, double definition. Arab for horse is an old favourite, like She for Haggard novel. |
| 6 |
CHAMPS for sports stars + ELY for see + SEES for sights = CHAMPS ELYSEES |
| 7 |
CARLYLE = CLEARLY* |
| 8 |
EMMY is the answer, composed of MY for “this writer’s” and ME, being “the right person to turn up with this wrier’s award”, reversed. I’ll accept alternative suggestions. |
| 10 |
SUB-MACHINE-GUN = (HUMAN BEINGS Used Carelessly)* |
| 13 |
A + DRONE’S for skiver’s + S for son, with IT inserted = ADROITNESS |
| 16 |
PACK-DRILL, double definition, the second facetious. |
| 18 |
S for second inside A THIRTy = ATHIRST, “wanting a drink”. |
| 20 |
HAGGISH, double definition, the second sounding like a marinated haggis. Yum. |
| 22 |
Deliberately omitted. You’ve probably run circles around these. |
| 23 |
AFRO = Aspired + FRO for the opposite of to. |
I wasted a little time trying to do something with Child ballads for 3 across, but that was not it at all, as I found fairly quickly. ‘Hundredweight’ and ‘apathetic’ were just banged in from the definitions, but that was good enough. I really struggled with ‘thus’, thinking ‘theus’, which is the Latin word for ‘god’, and not ‘the US’.
My last in was ‘astronaut’, since I understood the clue correctly but thought I was looking for a bird. I ended up following the cryptic blindly – look what I found!
Crept under the 30-minute mark for only the third time this year, I believe, with THUS last in. That, as well as 21 entered without full wordplay understanding. ATHIRST is a word that will always lure some into entering ‘thirsty’ first.
I was planning to sit it out for a year or so before coming back with a witty response…but now, the very next time we get a state, it’s RI again. So whoever it was, I apologise for my lack of faith, and thanks for the tip! 24 minutes, with a lot of answers going in from definitions and checkers. The unknown FAIRY CYCLE and the unconvincing EMMY were last in.
I completely failed to understand HUNDREDWEIGHT, so thanks for that. A very neat clue now that I do!
I still don’t understand EMMY. From the wordplay it looks like “me” has to be “the right person”.
Oli
Hmm.
Fairly standard Times fare really, but that’s no bad thing.
Fairy cycle was new to me but fairly clued. Haggish served as a timely reminder that I need to come up with a speech to toast the lassies at a Burns supper next month.
Several seem to be unsure as to how this works. Surely ‘this writer’s’ is ‘my’ and if any person is the right one to turn up with ‘my’ it’s ‘me’; the surface reading makes it pleasing and the more acceptable.
what happened?
Thanks for clear and amusing blog!
Re. Last Saturday’s cryptic. Do we know why the puzzle here was not the one in the paper? Will you be blogging both? I’m glad someone here drew this discrepency to my attention – otherwise the puzzle in my newspaper would have already been in the recycle bin!
harry
I will try and discipline myself into solving this at a regular point in the day with an eye on the clock. I always start with the DT and Toughie and this is 3rd place in the solving day.
Not too hard today although I was held up (as others) by THIRSTY/ATHIRST which made me question other as yet unfilled ideas.
All came together in the end.
revisit that clue. About 40 minutes in two sessions.