Tuesday, November 5

Treasure Hunting in the Mint Museum

On Saturday (Nov. 2), I took part in a treasure hunt contest.  Sleepbetter.org sponsored a contest in Charlotte, Minneapolis, and Milwaukee called “The Quest for the Lost Hour”.  Each city had a main prize of a $10,000 donation to the charity of your choice.  I gathered a team consisting of my brother Chris and my friend Lee.  I signed up and solved the rather simple qualifier puzzles that had to be finished to compete (most were simple searches for a piece of data on their web site; a few involved codes). 

We assembled at the Randolph branch of the Mint Museum in Charlotte along with 10 other teams to test our treasure hunting skills.  If you’ve never been on a treasure hunt, the concept is this:  each team is given clues that they must solve to complete the event.  The clues will generally reference some feature of a nearby location that has to be used to solve it (so that it’s not just sitting in a room solving puzzles).  Sometimes the clues lead to other clues that you have to find onsite and solve to continue on the trail.  Generally, teams are required to stick together (as they were here) as this makes the event much more fun and makes it reasonable for short-handed teams to compete.  In this particular hunt there were eight easy clues and four hard clues - none of them unlocked subsequent clues within the museum.  All of the clues were worth points (easy were 100, hard were 250) and players had two hours to finish them.  Finishing earlier would give you credit for breaking ties only.

Our approach was to find all of the sites as quickly as we could, with no concern for how hard the clue was supposed to be; we were pretty sure we would need to solve all of them to win.  We found several hard clues and solved them rather quickly.  Some were fairly interesting as well:  solve a code which instructed us to apply the supplied cold pack to the back of the clue page to reveal the answer, decode a Vigenere cipher, solve a book-type cipher to discover the location of the UV flashlight that reveals the real answer.

The easy clues, however, were much harder.  Why?  Because the answer sheet has a certain number of boxes for each answer to show you how many letters long it should be ...and the answer sheet they handed out was for another city.  All of the “easy” clues were the wrong number of letters, while the answers to the “hard” clues were common to every city (the events took place simultaneously) and the correct answers fit perfectly.  Sometimes you could come up with another answer fairly easily and make it fit, but usually nothing reasonable would work.  After about 40 minutes we had gathered back at the starting point with the information we thought we would need to finish. 

We inquired if the spaces on the answer key were correct (which we were assured they were), we solved the Vigenere cipher, then went off to repeat all of the clues that wouldn’t fit properly.  During the next hour, we and the other teams hovered around the locations that kept giving us impossible answers and wracked our brains while the annoying obvious correct answers (that wouldn’t fit) stared us in the face.  We turned in our answers about fifteen minutes before the deadline (and turned in first), convinced that we would not come up with anything better.  Since I was very much starting to suspect the validity of the answer sheets at this point, we kept one answer even though it didn’t fit and wrote all of the original answers on the margin of the paper. 

Before the top teams were revealed we were told that yes, the answer sheets *were* indeed wrong.  We ended up being declared the winner, but not surprisingly there were many complaints and suggestions of how to rectify the situation.  We let the officials know that we had no objections to repeating the challenge and re-assigning the charity donation to the winner of the next event (I didn’t say this about evenly splitting up the prize, as I was rather less excited about that prospect).  After a couple of days I received an email saying that the event would be repeated; all of the charities will get $1,000, while the winner of the repeat event will still get $10,000 for their charity.  No word yet on exactly when it will take place.  Props to Carpenter Co. (who sponsers the website) on ponying up extra charity money due to the error.

It was fun, and I would do it again (and hopefully will).  I’m definitely hoping it is more challenging next time, and error-free.