Guardian Cryptic 29,638 by Vulcan

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A pleasant solve – my favourites were 21ac, 25ac, and 8dn. Thanks to Vulcan

ACROSS
1 KATYDID
Grasshopper fouled D-Day kit (7)

definition: a type of insect related to the grasshopper

anagram/"fouled" of (D-Day kit)*

5 BIDFAIR
Look likely to make an honest offer (3,4)

definition: to bid fair is to seem likely e.g. 'the project bids fair to succeed'

to bid fair or to make a fair bid could also mean "to make an honest offer"

9 SIEVE
Riddle of the Jumblies’ craft (5)

definition: a riddle is a type of sieve

reference to Edward Lear's poem The Jumblies which starts "They went to sea in a Sieve, they did"

10 ULLSWATER
Let walrus swim in lake (9)

anagram/"swim" of (Let walrus)*

11 MINIMALLY
Car may tour a couple of lochs at the very least (9)

MINI=brand of "Car", plus MAY (from surface) going around ("tour"): two letters L (short for loch) ="a couple of lochs"

12 TYROL
Two novices go to ski here (5)

definition: a region of the Alps

TYRO and L (short for learner) are two words for novice

13 RIGID
Invariable outfit I had (5)

RIG="outfit" + I'D="I had"

15 BILIOUSLY
Irritably, William accepts deferred payments (9)

BILLY="William" around IOUS=I-owe-you-s="deferred payments"

18 PARAMEDIC
She may offer sick camper aid (9)

anagram/"sick" of (camper aid)*

19 SOUTH
Shout out, giving this direction (5)

anagram/"out" of (Shout)*

21 IN ONE
1-0 for United (2,3)

I=one="1", plus NONE=zero="0"

23 EARBASHED
Reproached at length and clipped round side of head (9)

to clip someone round the side of their head could mean to hit or bash their ear

25 MANGETOUT
Husband, unpack the vegetables (9)

MAN="Husband" + GET OUT="unpack"

26 GOUDA
What may arrive with biscuits some mutt’s about to eat for all to see (5)

definition: a type of cheese, something that may be served with biscuits

A DOG="some mutt" reversed/"about" and around/"to eat": U (Universal rating for films, "for all to see")

27 REENTRY
Leaving space for astronauts (7)

when astronauts leave space, they re-enter the Earth's atmosphere

28 DO-OR-DIE
Recklessly determined, but fail after entrance (2-2-3)

DIE="fail" after DOOR="entrance"

DOWN
1 KASHMIR
Coins and notes only, they say, in disputed region (7)

sounds like ("they say"): 'cash mere', with 'cash'="Coins and notes" and 'mere'="only"

2 TWEENAGER
Sweetly pretty princess growing up: she’s 11 or 12 perhaps (9)

TWEE="Sweetly pretty", plus reversal/"up" of REGAN=a "princess" in Shakespeare's King Lear

3 DREAM
Hope engineers can plug reservoir (5)

RE (Royal Engineers) inside DAM="reservoir"

4 DOUBLE BED
It’s needed for the rest of the partners (6,3)

cryptic definition: in the surface, "for the rest of the partners" is to be read as 'for partners to sleep', but could be read as 'for the remaining partners'

5 BELLY
Lead off folk and blues singer that shows guts (5)

remove "Lead" from Lead BELLY, the name of a "folk and blues singer" [wiki]

6 DOWN TOOLS
Some Irish devices stop working (4,5)

DOWN TOOLS=tools from County Down in Ireland="Some Irish devices"

7 ALTAR
Announced change for place of wedding (5)

sounds like ("Announced") 'alter'="change"

8 RURALLY
Sport convention in the country (7)

RU (Rugby Union, "Sport") + RALLY="convention"

14 DAMNEDEST
One’s utmost effort in French is condemned upfront (9)

EST='is' in French="in French[,] is" with DAMNED="condemned" in front

16 LACERATED
Part of shoe considered torn (9)

LACE="Part of shoe" + RATED="considered"

17 SLUSH FUND
Undeclared reserves that melt away when the heat is on? (5,4)

definition: undeclared reserves of money [that might melt away / disappear when there is 'heat' from the authorities]

"melt away…" is also suggestive of SLUSH in the sense of snow/ice

18 PRIMMER
More disapproving of Mike opening elementary book (7)

M (Mike in the NATO alphabet), going into/"opening" PRIMER="elementary [text]book"

20 HYDRATE
Need to do this, suffering dry heat? (7)

anagram/"suffering" of (dry heat)*

22 OUNCE
Cat’s very light weight (5)

double definition: an ounce is a snow leopard, a large cat; or an ounce is a measure of weight

23 EBONY
At rear of pasture, thin tree (5)

end/rear letter of [pastur]-E, plus BONY="thin"

24 AGGRO
Problems a good grocer halved (5)

for definition e.g. 'to give someone trouble' / 'to give someone aggro'

A (from surface) + G (good) + half of GRO-[cer]

63 comments on “Guardian Cryptic 29,638 by Vulcan”

  1. paul
    @1 - March 10, 2025 at 8:28 am

    Pleasant indeed. I came to see if there was any explanation of the hyphen in the clue for IN ONE, but it seems not. I suppose that the clue works if we just ignore it. “10 for United” wouldn’t be such a nice clue. Thanks Vulcan for the fun and thanks manehi for the usual neatly put together blog.

  2. J99
    @2 - March 10, 2025 at 8:29 am

    GOUDA took a while and MAN for husband was also difficult for me. Good start to Monday. Thanks both.

  3. michelle
    @3 - March 10, 2025 at 8:30 am

    An enjoyable Monday challenge, neither too easy nor too difficult.

    Favourites: EBONY, SIEVE, BELLY.

    New for me: BID FAIR = look likely.

  4. sofamore
    @4 - March 10, 2025 at 8:31 am

    I wonder why 27a is not hyphenated. And I thought the heat in 17d might be the police.

  5. GingerTom
    @5 - March 10, 2025 at 8:32 am

    A lot of fun, as usual with Vulcan, on a Monday morning. Carelessly went for Earlashed, not a word, instead of Earbashed. So a near miss for us
    Thanks to Vulcan and manehi

  6. AlanC
    @6 - March 10, 2025 at 8:33 am

    Nicely done and I had the same favourites as manehi plus TWEENAGER and HYDRATE.

    Ta Vulcan & manehi.

  7. jackkt
    @7 - March 10, 2025 at 8:34 am

    Very enjoyable but there’s an alternative answer at 12ac: TIROL. This should have been picked up in the editing. The Times 15×15 had one of these today too.

  8. Julie in Australia
    @8 - March 10, 2025 at 8:37 am

    Liked it a lot. I often think Vulcan isn’t given due credit as a setter – “Mild Mondays” and all that. I enjoyed the accessibility of this puzzle combined with more than enough challenge for me. I really liked 26a GOUDA, 4d DOUBLE BED, 5d BELLY and 14d DAMNEDEST. Unfamiliar with ULLSWATER at 10a but perfectly gettable. Thanks to Vulcan and manehi.

  9. Tim C
    @9 - March 10, 2025 at 8:40 am

    Nice to solve if only for ULLSWATER, which brought happy? memories back of Striding Edge and Helvellyn

  10. KVa
    @10 - March 10, 2025 at 8:52 am

    Liked TWEENAGER, IN ONE, DOUBLE BED and HYDRATE.
    Thanks Vulcan and manehi.

  11. Anna
    @11 - March 10, 2025 at 8:58 am

    paul @ 1
    I think it’s supposed to read as a football score. (One-nil)

  12. ArkLark
    @12 - March 10, 2025 at 9:17 am

    Pleasant enough, gentle offering. I liked MANGETOUT!

    I thought the heat was melting the slush (melting ice).

    Thanks Vulcan and manehi

  13. ARhymerOinks
    @13 - March 10, 2025 at 9:21 am

    A fine start to the week – I thought the surfaces for PARAMEDIC and HYDRATE were terrific!

    Thanks to Vulcan and manehi

  14. Mike
    @14 - March 10, 2025 at 9:30 am

    Enjoyable. I needed your help for belly.

    Bit puzzled by dam = reservoir. I can see they’re related, but not the same, unless I’m missing something

  15. ravenrider
    @15 - March 10, 2025 at 9:34 am

    sofamore @4 hyphens are usually not included in the enumeration given with the clue. This appears to be because often it would give away too much about the solution. I would say that manehi made an uncharacteristic small error in not including a hyphen when giving the solution, but perhaps there is justification that reentry could be correct.

  16. simonc
    @16 - March 10, 2025 at 9:36 am

    Mike @14

    My thoughts entirely!

  17. scraggs
    @17 - March 10, 2025 at 10:13 am

    IN ONE and SIEVE I didn’t parse, but completed the grid and thought this was a good Monday offering.

    Tim C @9 I have memories of Striding Edge which I wouldn’t call happy, since I was halfway across it when I realised walking along ridges on very icy days really isn’t for me…

  18. poc
    @18 - March 10, 2025 at 10:14 am

    Ravenrider@15: On the contrary, hyphens are frequently part of the enumeration, though some answers work with or without them. In this case Chambers does have the hyphen. However I agree it would have made the solution too easy.

    Why the plural vegetables in 25a when the answer is singular?

    I see the Print option has now returned. Let’s hope its absence was a bug rather than a feature.

  19. FrankieG
    @19 - March 10, 2025 at 10:27 am

    Was unsure, as jackkt@7, of the unchecked Y or I in 12a T(Y/I)ROL and T(Y/I)RO. — 18d PRIMER and PRIMMER can be homophones, especially in the US.

  20. scraggs
    @20 - March 10, 2025 at 10:34 am

    poc @18 I think MANGETOUT works as plural, in the way that, say, I’d use “cauliflower” to describe several stalks (or whatever) of that vegetable.

  21. gladys
    @21 - March 10, 2025 at 10:46 am

    Mike@14: I was interested to find that in Africa (and maybe in other drier parts of the world ) the “dam” means not just the wall or embankment that creates the reservoir, but the resulting lake.

  22. Blaise
    @22 - March 10, 2025 at 10:47 am

    I intuited the trick for DOUBLE BED but until I got the first crosser I was (somewhat prudishly?) hung up by MARRIAGE, WEDDING and NUPTIAL all having too many letters to fit.

  23. FrankieG
    @23 - March 10, 2025 at 10:58 am

    [earworm for 6d: ★ Of The Cointy Doin (1988) {saw them at The National, celebrating Dublin’s millennium}]

  24. Offspinner
    @24 - March 10, 2025 at 11:02 am

    Re 21a I get that 1-0 is one-nil
    but I don’t see how that equates to IN ONE.

  25. Staticman1
    @25 - March 10, 2025 at 11:04 am

    Put TIROL instead of TYROL. I think the former is the German spelling so it’s probably fair even if I am a little sour. Also opted for the wrong answer on the Times ambiguous clue. I am staying well away from the lottery counter today.

    Other than an erroneous REENTER stopping me getting EBONY this was a pleasant solve with a few more difficult bits.

    Liked MANGETOUT (I good huh? ….oh type of clue) ULLSWATER and EARBASHED (another penny drop clue)

    Thanks Manehi and Vulcan

  26. scraggs
    @26 - March 10, 2025 at 11:07 am

    Off spinner @24 1-0 equals one, represented as “I”, and nil: “NONE”

    So I plus NONE is INONE which gives the answer. I hope I haven’t further confused you…

  27. Offspinner
    @27 - March 10, 2025 at 11:24 am

    Thank you Scraggs @26. Pretty contrived for a Monday!

  28. Ace
    @28 - March 10, 2025 at 11:27 am

    Favorite was 25A, my LOI and a chuckle when I saw it. Lots of clever surfaces. I liked 10A, 12A, 18A, 4D, 5D, and 20D.

  29. Martin
    @29 - March 10, 2025 at 12:28 pm

    I don’t see how 12a can be ambiguous when “tiro” isn’t a word and, as Manehi explained, “tyro” is.

  30. Martin
    @30 - March 10, 2025 at 12:40 pm

    I take that back! Just looked in Chambers.

  31. Hadrian
    @31 - March 10, 2025 at 12:46 pm

    Ravenrider@15, poc@18- I get that a (2-5) enumeration would have made RE-ENTRY much easier, but at least it would have been correct? Unless there’s a dictionary that okays reentry, or a crossword convention that excuses ‘re-‘ words from such enumeration? All that aside I enjoyed this a lot; EBONY and EARBASHING also held me up which, as a musician, they probably shouldn’t have. Thanks V and m

  32. shirl
    @32 - March 10, 2025 at 12:54 pm

    I agree with the doubts about 3d. Dam is the blockage that creates the reservoir, not the resultant lake.

  33. Valentine
    @33 - March 10, 2025 at 1:14 pm

    I’ve never heard of earbashing, must be British. My spellchecker thinks so too.

    Since mrpenney hasn’t joined us yet, I’ll explain that in the US “primer” is pronounced “primmer” when it’s a book but not when it’s paint.

    Thanks for a jolly Monday to Vulcan and manehi.

  34. loiner
    @34 - March 10, 2025 at 1:19 pm

    Re 3d….FWIW.we have a dam near us in North Yorkshire (Glasshouses Dam)which is just a reservoir for a now defunct mill, so I have no problem with the clue.

  35. ronald
    @35 - March 10, 2025 at 1:19 pm

    When I solved the first straightforward anagram, KATYDID at 1ac I couldn’t help but be reminded of that series of children’s books by Susan Coolidge. Advertised on the back of other books of this genre that I must have been tucking into in the 1960’s. “What Katy Did” (1872), followed by “What Katy Did At School” (1873), and some years later by “What Katy Did Next”. (1886). Just saying, I don’t suppose any one else remembers – don’t think I actually ever read any of them…
    Last one in today was the Dutch cheese at 26a.

  36. ronald
    @36 - March 10, 2025 at 1:24 pm

    ..thought I certainly read several of the Richmal Crompton Just William books at the time, however…

  37. muffin
    @37 - March 10, 2025 at 1:44 pm

    Thanks Vulcan and manehi
    I struggled in the SW, not helped by entering AIRLOCK at 27a. I thought that was quite good, and RE-ENTRY was LOI – it really should have been given as 2-5.
    Leadbelly might well be unknown to solvers younger than me.
    Favourite DO-OR-DIE (which did show the hyphens in the enumeration).

  38. Sarah
    @38 - March 10, 2025 at 1:45 pm

    Ronald @35 – I had exactly the same thought, and even read at least one of the books, which had a picture of Katy on a swing on the front cover. I seem to remember her having an accident (falling off the swing?) leaving her unable to walk, and bearing it with angelic sweetness of temper. I preferred Anne of Green Gables.

  39. Adrian
    @39 - March 10, 2025 at 2:17 pm

    Collins and other dictionaries have “reentry”, so complaining about it seems a bit tedious. We manage without a hyphen in mangetout and earbashing…

  40. Amma
    @40 - March 10, 2025 at 2:22 pm

    Lovely puzzle – I enjoyed that.
    Ronald@35, Sarah@38 – I remember reading all of the Katy books and also Anne of Green Gables. I still have the books though I could never interest my daughter in them. Maybe the grandchildren?

  41. Bill T
    @41 - March 10, 2025 at 2:23 pm

    I think 21a references the old football saying “1-0 to the Arsenal” (from a time when the team was more defensively orientated and quite likely to win by that score); if the United here is the Manchester version then yesterday saw the two clubs united in a 1-1 draw…

  42. TanTrumPet
    @42 - March 10, 2025 at 2:45 pm

    Is IN ONE a common phrase for United? I put “As One” initially, although I couldn’t parse it. The “1-0” parsing is clever, but it’s not a phrase I can recall hearing.

    I was also held up in the NE having nho BID FAIR or TYRO meaning novice, but I got there eventually.

    Thanks to Vulcan and manehi.

  43. Gervase
    @43 - March 10, 2025 at 2:48 pm

    Good puzzle, with solid constructions and smooth surfaces.

    I particularly liked the clue-as-definition for PARAMEDIC and HYDRATE; MANGETOUT and IN ONE.

    I’m not particularly bothered by the orthography of 27ac. The hyphen has largely been dropped from ‘cooperate’, previously always ‘co-operate’ or even ‘coöperate’, and there seems less ambiguity in REENTRY.

    There is a grammatical mismatch, like the one we had last week, which caused some fluttering in the dovecotes, in the clue for ULLSWATER: ‘swim’ works for the surface, but ‘swims’ would be more appropriate for the wordplay. Just saying…

    Thanks to Vulcan and manehi

  44. Eoink
    @44 - March 10, 2025 at 2:52 pm

    I took the partners in 14d to refer to bridge partners and had a very stretched interpretation for “double bid”. Thanks to manehi for the much more fitting answer.
    (I’ve been getting database errors today and seem to have lost my first attempt to post this, I had to enter my details again.)

  45. AlanC
    @45 - March 10, 2025 at 2:56 pm

    Gervase @43: I had the same thought about ‘swim’ as a mismatch.

  46. DotInFrance
    @46 - March 10, 2025 at 3:02 pm

    Ronald @35 The 3 Katy books were some of the only books I owned in my rather underprivileged childhood (violins!) so I read them over and over again and loved them, especially their word games in those heady days before TV and smart phones. And I’m still playing word games today as you can see…

  47. Thom
    @47 - March 10, 2025 at 3:49 pm

    Seemed exceptionally difficult for a Monday to me, including many, many references I had not heard of (Regan, Tyro, Lead Belly, Jumblies) not to mention a few definitions that were beyond my understanding (ounce, katydid). I had no chance!

  48. Zoot
    @48 - March 10, 2025 at 4:55 pm

    muffin #37 Leadbelly may be more familiar to younger generations than you think. I have seen several references to him recently, but always as Lead Belly as Thom @47 writes it. I don’t know why or when the change came about. His surname was Ledbetter and the reference books use the single word version.

  49. Robi
    @49 - March 10, 2025 at 4:55 pm

    REENTRY seems to be more of an American spelling and it’s in Merriam-Webster. Most of the other dictionaries have RE-ENTRY. I liked the instruction to the husband to unpack the vegetables for MANGETOUT and the Irish DOWN TOOLS.

    Thanks Vulcan and manehi.

  50. MuddyThinking
    @50 - March 10, 2025 at 5:00 pm

    Muffin @37: my 17 year old is a big Leadbelly fan. I think he is one of those musicians that spans the generations. But you’ve either heard of him or you haven’t, like a lot of GK. That said, it took me forever to solve that on (2nd last in, EBONY being last). A very slow solve but got there in the end so quite pleased.

  51. Alanio
    @51 - March 10, 2025 at 5:23 pm

    3d – Rare but exists,
    This is from Heaney’s ‘Death of a Naturalist’:
    All year the flax-dam festered in the heart/ Of the townland;

  52. Roz
    @52 - March 10, 2025 at 6:11 pm

    Thanks for the blog , good puzzle in the Monday tradition , I would have loved this when I was learning .

    Bonjour AlainC @6 , for some reason I thought you would be at number 3 . Au revoir .

  53. Slingshot
    @53 - March 10, 2025 at 7:55 pm

    Surely united would be “at one” or “as one” – “in one” seems very contrived and in my head I keep hearing it in a Jim Bowen / Bullseye voice. Never thought of twee as sweetly pretty; sickly sweet or chintzy perhaps. “Bid fair” is a new phrase for me, I’ve only heard it as “set fair”, though that doesn’t fit the clue of course.

  54. Pauline in Brum
    @54 - March 10, 2025 at 8:08 pm

    My favourite today which took forever to parse was the tricky IN ONE. Thank you to manehi and Vulcan for a good start to the week.

  55. Tim C
    @55 - March 10, 2025 at 11:13 pm

    gladys @21 and others, dam is pretty common in Australia to refer to the contents behind the wall.

  56. DannyH
    @56 - March 10, 2025 at 11:40 pm

    “In one” is fair for united I think in the context of things being put together eg “a radio and alarm clock in one.”

  57. LunaLo
    @57 - March 10, 2025 at 11:46 pm

    Thank you, manehi!
    There were some references I never heard of (Leadbelly, Tyro, IOUS), so I couldn’t parse the clues, though worked out the words from definitions and crosses.

    Liked SIEVE for Jumblies, MANGETOUT (LOL), IN ONE (tricky and amazing), HYDRATE (there is a wordplay and the whole clue is a definition – beautiful)!
    Thank you, Vulcan!

  58. DannyH
    @58 - March 10, 2025 at 11:48 pm

    Got hung up on 1-0 as an answer to the question of What Katy Did ie Katy did nothing (rather like United this year.)

  59. Gee Andrew
    @59 - March 11, 2025 at 3:48 am

    For 21ac did any else think IS ONE was the solution from 1 minus 0 is one? Thanks to vulcan and manehi for the puzzle and the blog.

  60. MinG
    @60 - March 11, 2025 at 8:10 am

    Ronald@35 the book was my first thought too. I did read them, you didn’t miss much!

  61. Slingshot
    @61 - March 11, 2025 at 7:35 pm

    DannyH @56 good point, thanks, that does make sense.

  62. R Srivatsan
    @62 - March 13, 2025 at 4:38 am

    I wondered if “Leaving space for astronauts” = REENTRY wouldn’t classify as a specific kind of clue, perhaps a semantic oxymoron, where the surface relationship between the clue and solution is an inversion of meaning.

    Thanks both

  63. Mig
    @63 - April 29, 2025 at 3:57 am

    Surprising number unparsed — SIEVE, TYROL, TWEENAGER, BELLY

    Missed EARBASHED, MANGETOUT, and EBONY — should have got the last. Tantalising and annoying to get so close to completion

    SOUTH/shout not much of an anagram — just one letter moved

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