Kubb

Posted by R | Posted in Activities, Odd ways of spending time | Posted on 20-04-2010

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It has been a fantastic weekend.  The weather was superb, the folk from Iceland saw to it that there were no disturbances from overhead aircraft, and I had almost nothing better to do than lounge about in the sun.  Or at least that was true until I started playing Kubb.  Now if that means nothing to you, then please read on.

Kubb is a game which is still not terribly well known in the UK, although it seems to be gaining popularity the whole time.  The origins of it are a matter of contentious debate; some say it was invented by the Vikings, and others claim it started in a school in Harrow (near London).  The two stories don’t seem terribly compatible, but frankly I don’t care because the important bit is that it was invented.

Like all good games it’s phenomenally simple, and can be played just about anywhere where you can find a  8 metre x 5 metre flat surface.  Grass is ideal, but a beach or even a paved area would work fine too.  A Kubb set comprises of numerous wooden pieces of various different sizes;  There are six tubular throwing sticks, ten rectangular Kubbs, four corner markers, and a large “King”.


The rectangular playing area is marked out by the four stakes, one in each corner.  The King is placed in the middle of the pitch, and finally a line of five Kubbs is set up between the corner markers at each end of the playing area.

Kubb is a game of two teams comprising of up to six people in each, but if you have fewer players then it makes absolutely no difference at all.  The aim of game is to under-arm throw the throwing sticks to knock over all of the “Kubbs” in front of the opposing team.  Once knocked over, the members of the opposing team have to throw the toppled Kubbs back into your half of the pitch, and they are stood up to become additional targets for your opponent.   Play then switches sides, and the other team attempts to knock over as many Kubbs as possible, starting with the ones which you forced onto their target area.  This simple process continues until there are no more Kubbs left on the opposing half of the pitch for you to knock over, at which point you are allowed to attack the King in the centre which will win you the game.  There are some additional rules which add some cunning twists to the game, and if you’re interested a full set of rules can be found at http://kubb.co.uk/ .

Although it might initially sound simple, it’s actually a game which requires skill, strategy, cunning, and obviously a good aim.  Personal experience has taught me that a plentiful supply of something alcoholic adds to the enjoyment of the experience quite significantly!  Kubb sets are cheap to buy, or if you are handy with wood then you could easily make your own (and probably gain a lot of pleasure from doing so).

Kubb is one of those games which is almost impossible to adequately describe without actually playing it.  It’s roughly comparable to Boules but requires more ingenuity and is considerably better fun.  It’s not athletic, and the mentality required to play it is similar to that of watching cricket.  “Lazy” would be a good word, thus making it a very good way to spend some time in the fresh air doing something very marginally above “bugger all”.

Roll on Summer!

Taunted By A 50p Coin – The Humiliation!

Posted by R | Posted in Odd ways of spending time | Posted on 14-07-2009

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That’ll teach me – The moment I write that I can’t find a 50p coin then I start getting taunted. Within just a few weeks of complaining to you all about the lack of shield-bearing 50p’s in the world, I hear from someone that I’ve known since college gloating to me that he’s not only started looking for the special edition coins but actually completed the set.

Then, as if to rub salt into the wounds, I find this page on the web. It would appear that my good friend, whom for the purposes of this exercise will be identified by his blogging name of “Plutus”, has decided to mock me. “Everything has a price” does it? Pah! At the time I sent him an e-mail politely informing him that he was a git. It seemed only appropriate. But in fairness to him, he did offer me the coin for which I am grateful. However, it would seem that whilst I was recently away on holiday the “50p coin elf” has visited my flat and completed the collection for me. I suspect that actually it was my Dad, who was looking after the flat whilst I was away. Naturally I am delighted, and I can now bring an end to the whole sad affair. It’s must be the most stress I’ve ever had from trying to find £1.88 .

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Why Can’t I Find The 50p?

Posted by R | Posted in Odd ways of spending time | Posted on 13-06-2009

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example_coins

OK, so just how hard can it be?  I have a 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, and a £1 coin.  Why oh why, after nearly three months of looking, can I not find a 50p?

Now some of you will by now understand exactly what I mean, and will probably be nodding in appreciation of my plight.  However, if you have no idea what I am talking about then perhaps I should explain before we go any further.  The Royal Mint, which for those of you whom are unfamiliar with British money, is the agency appointed by the British Government which is tasked with making our coins.  In actual fact they make coins for many countries, and some medals too, but for the purposes of today it’s the coins that matter.  In addition to the millions of ordinary coins that they produce each year, The Royal Mint also occasionally make some special editions of the coins that we Brits use in everyday life.  Not for any special reason, it’s just a bit of British tradition that has been kept up over the decades, and I personally think it’s a harmless bit of fun that works quite well.  The Americans would call it “quaint”, which is fine because I happen to think that Americans using the word “quaint” is quite quaint.  So all in all, the system of “quaint” seems to work pretty well too.

Anyway, back to the coins.  british_coin_setThese special edition coins are often released to the market, aimed purely at collectors.  Some of the coins are historic, some are  designed to commemorate special events, some are presented in frames, some in shiny boxes, but all of them are invariably shipped all over the world at exorbitant cost yet they are never actually intended to be used as coins in the traditional fashion.

Frankly this is something which I don’t really understand, because surely the whole point of a coin is that it represents a monetary value, and that you swap it for something that you need.  If you can’t spend it, then what’s the point of it?  It just becomes and object without a purpose.  It’s a bit like people who collect cars but never drive them – I don’t understand that either.  This time though, the Royal Mint have done something a bit different; they’ve released a series of coins which were not specifically aimed at the collector’s market, and so they’ve dispensed with the frames and the shiny boxes, and just released the coins into general circulation for people to find.  Not all of the coins in production at the moment bear the new design, and so occasionally you’ll get given a handful of change in a shop, and you’ll find something which stands out as being a bit different.  The series of coins in question have been very cleverly designed because they all have part of a picture on them, so that when you fit them together into a certain pattern like a jigsaw puzzle (another quaint British invention!) they make they shape of a shield bearing a coat of arms.

Now despite being simple and ultimately pointless, I think that this is quite a clever idea and it seems to solve the issue of the pointless collector sets which I have just berated.  Those people who like to collect coins can do so, arrange them neatly into a very shiny box, and then gaze at them adoringly as the coins sit in their house gathering dust.  Meanwhile, those of us who like to spend money can continue to do so because even the special edition coins work perfectly well as standard monetary instruments.  However the point is that the same objects fulfil both requirements, thus saving on production costs and generally pleasing everyone in the process.

Sadly there is a catch, and I am a tad ashamed to admit that I think I’ve been suckered by it.  As you have probably guessed by now, I am certainly not the sort of person who would ever buy a complete set of coins because I simply don’t see the point.  However, given that these coins are in general circulation, I feel strangely compelled to seek out each one in the set.  Please don’t ask me why because I don’t really know; I have no particular desire to keep them once I’ve got them, and I don’t need to construct the shield to make my life complete because I can perfectly easily see a picture of it on the web.  But nevertheless completing the set somehow feels like what I ought to do.   Being an engineer I am also a creature of habit.  I like structure, procedure, order, logic, routine, and in the words of James May “I like things to be just so”.

Therefore when I come home from work in the evenings I will invariably empty my trouser pockets onto the desk, make myself a cup of tea, and then sit down to make a deliberate point of doing precisely nothing for five or ten minutes.  Except now I find myself emptying my pockets and then taking a cursory glance to see whether any of the coins from my pocket are from the set.  Over the months this has resulted in a small handful of the new ones, and I’ve now got all of them except for the 50p.  And this, quite frankly, is irritating me.  incomplete_coin_setThe shield is incomplete, there is no structure, no sense of order, and worst of all it means that I have not completed what I’ve (albeit unintentionally) set out to do.  And that’s just not good enough!  Of course, the logical side of my character tells me to give up on the whole thing and just spend them, but I somehow can’t bring myself to do it.  It just feels wrong, and so the quest continues.  The whole thing is starting to get ridiculous, because as a result of owning duplicates of some of the set, I now have £4.73 sitting on my shelf which is doing absolutely nothing.  I could have spent that on….. well…. I don’t know what actually.  But the point is that it’s a waste!  I just want to find the missing coin so that I can move on and have done with the whole sorry affair, but despite my best efforts it continues to elude me.

So please, when you finish reading this, reach in to your pocket and take a look at the contents.  If you’ve got an odd-looking 50p with the tip of a shield on it, could you please consider sending it to me to put me out of my misery?  Because then I’ll be able to get on with spending money again; you know – like a normal person.