Enigmatic Variations No.1618 – Different Relation by Hedge-Sparrow

“Three related unclued entries all suggest how ten answers must be modified before entry. In the completed grid, solvers must highlight five words (suitably disposed, 38 cells in total, all confirmed by Chambers) which have a DIFFERENT RELATION to one of the unclued entries. Chambers Dictionary (2016) is recommended; all entries are real words or names.”

Notation
Definition word
Indicator [word]
Anagram WORD*
Reversal <WORD
Unmodified/modified entry EELS/SEEL

There weren’t a lot of gimmes (26ac was one – at least for me), there were a few misleading “put x inside y” indicators (e.g. 10ac, 42ac), and there were a number of unusual words. Still, the setter didn’t “double up” on these – or at least not as much is sometimes the case (where the construction, the answer, and/or the constituent parts are difficult).

I doubt that many solvers were surprised by the method of entry of the ten modified answers. It was nice that the anagrams were all real words.

The three unclued entries were easy enough to guess with a few letters: BATS, BANANAS, and CRACKERS. But to which would the five words have this DIFFERENT RELATION?

I noticed that all of the modifications were in the down clues, but apart from that I was rather slow on the uptake. The ten anagrams are, (in retrospect) obviously, in five columns. The five words each span two of the anagrams (including at least one letter that has moved from the original word). They are the names of five bats – suitably hanging upside down.

The PDM was rather lovely. Our five pendulous bat friends are (L to R) BARBASTEL, NOCTULE, SEROTINE, SPECTRE, and LEISLER. All but the penultimate are native to the UK, which has 18 native species of bat. The non-native, better known as the spectral bat (Vampyrum spectrum), is a carnivorous leaf-nosed bat found in parts of the Americas.

Across
1 Plants bearing substantial fruit and edible tubers (5) COCOS
5 Rough BARK (vessel)’s {ALL (quite) P (quiet)} [within] (8) BALLPARK
10 D (Delta) AREA (region) [harbours] waders (5) ARDEA
11 DRIES (Prohibitionists) [gathering] EAT (to consume) [endless] sweeties (7) DEARIES
14 Lower CASE [not initially] [used for C (chapter) in] ABC (primer) (5) ABASE
15 Girl <{LETS (prevents) [outdated] ALE (beer) [bottles]} [being returned] (7) ESTELLA
16 [In the end], HIKERS NEED (have occasion for) [short] cut that’s no longer used (4) SNEE
17 Prickly shrub’s EBB (decline) [in] N (north) UK (country of ours) (6) NEBBUK
20 O (Old) DICK (fellow) [dismissing] KIPLING‘s [first piece] of lyric poetry (4) ODIC
21 < [Repellent] TOTS (mites) [besetting] A (Australian) mammal (5) STOAT
22 Aged companion AT (occupied in) < [wheeling] {RED (Balmoral’s rubbish) NET (bag)} (8) ATTENDER
23 South American capital FUND [exposed] [in] CASINO* [bust] (8) ASUNCIÓN
26 [Synthetic] PEARL* [forming] partitions in shepherd’s purse? (5) REPLA
29 Japanese poem < [recalling] {A KAW (bird’s cry)} (4) WAKA
32 Relaxed and PLATONIC (affectionate), [but out of] PL (place) (6) ATONIC
34 Oil producer‘s < {MEN (ships) [circumnavigating] E (earth)} [westwards] (4) NEEM
38 Divinities ARE* [enigmatic] [in] ODES (works of Horace?) (7) OREADES
39 DEMURE (Chaste) D (daughter) [escapes] enclosing wall in The Globe (5) EMURE
40 Plans [crossing LHASA APSO (Asian dog) [(removed from capital city)] with] [short-tailed] MUTT (mongrel) (7, two words) MAPS OUT
41 Foam < [backing] UPS (lifts) [frame of] MASTERPIECE (5) SPUME
42 Difficult ABUSE (to misrepresent) STR (straight) [lines] (8) ABSTRUSE
43 Big bucks E (earls) [spent in] STAGES (places of rest) (5) STAGS
Down
1 {WELL-FANCIED ASH}* could be FELLED with this (8) CHAINSAW
2 CRAM (Hastily learn) B (book) O (of) rhyme (6) CRAMBO
3 Ancient oath GODSON (sponsored child)[’s uncovered] (4) ODSO
4 KEELS (Barges) [unloading] K (a thousand) fish (4) EELS/SEEL
6 DIAPHONE (Stop) [spitting out] PHO (noodle soup), girl! (5) DIANE/ADENI
7 Sail LATE (dead) [close to] WIND [to avoid] END (object) (6) LATEEN/LA TÈNE
8 [Farthingless] FAILED (bankrupt) was indisposed (5) AILED
9 < ASK (Inquire) [about] SPENSER[‘s term] for adjudicator of poetry (4) KSAR
10 [Opening of] ENQUIRY [into] BLAT (German newspaper)’s complaint (5) BLEAT/ABLET
12 {E (European) J (judge), ONE} [breaking} R (rule) O (over) brutal slaughter of beasts (7) REJONEO
13 Out-of-date vinegar IS [consumed by] EEL (swimmer) (5) EISEL/ELSIE
18 Pin money in LA (4) KAIL
19 One Spitfire’s [reckless] ASCENT*, [not having wings in] SYNC (4) ETNA
24 < {[In] SA (South Africa), BAR (advocates)} [rearing] horses (5) ARABS/SABRA
25 COR (Homer) DON (put on) ring (6) CORDON/CONDOR
27 Spirit NE (born) [in] PUMA (mountain hunter) (6) PNEUMA
28 TIER (Story) [about] CARROLL[’s ultimate] “hatter”? (5) TILER/LITRE
30 Holds on to S (spades) [after] < PEEK (sly glance) [towards North] (5) KEEPS
31 [Wanting entry], STRESS (force) lock (5) TRESS/RESTS
33 Intoxicating plant juice < [uplifted] AMOS (prophet) (4) SOMA
35 Deliberate MISUSE (maltreatment) [destroying] IS (lives) (4) MUSE
36 CHIROPODIST[[‘s beginning] [to cut] PES (foot) muscles (4) PECS/CEPS
37 MUST (New wine) [promoting] S (son)’s obscene conversation? (4) SMUT

 

 

C O C O S B A L L P A R K
H A R D E A D E A R I E S
A B A S E T E S T E L L A
I L M O L S N E E J E S R
N E B B U K I E N O D I C
S T O A T A T T E N D E R
A S U N C I O N R E P L A
W A K A O L R A T O N I C
S B E N N E E M C S E T K
O R E A D E S U E M U R E
M A P S O U T S P U M E R
A B S T R U S E S T A G S

 

2 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No.1618 – Different Relation by Hedge-Sparrow”

  1. An excellent puzzle. What I appreciated most were the clues, made all the more challenging by having to modify ten of the answers, and the grid design, of which the symmetrical placement of those ten answers was a noteworthy feature.

    The endgame would have been difficult if I hadn’t noticed NOCTULE upside down in the grid – clearly pointing to BATS. Two other bats quickly followed: BARBASTEL and SEROTINE. After a vain search for other creatures, I used my imagination and decided to highlight BASE/BALL and BANANAS, both of which match BATS in two DIFFERENT ways and contribute to a total of 38 cells. I suspected there was a better alternative, and indeed there was. I have never heard of the bat species Spectre or Leisler.

    A DNF, then, for me, but a very enjoyable one.

    Thanks to Hedge-sparrow and Mister Sting.

  2. Thank you, Mister Sting, for the excellent blog, and to you, Alan B, for your kind comment – I’m very glad you enjoyed the puzzle even though you weren’t quite able to complete the end-game. I’ve had one or two other comments privately, and it seems solvers generally found the puzzle to be quite a bit harder than I thought it was. I don’t find it very easy to judge the difficulty of puzzles I create, and clearly my judgement in this case was a bit awry – sorry about that. But anyway, I’m glad it still gave some enjoyment.

Comments are closed.