Crosophile stands in for Dac this week.
It was only when we were compiling the blog that we realised that there is a theme here – given away (perhaps unnecessarily?) by the definition in 31ac. Varieties of butterfly appear in 19ac, 30ac, 31ac, 2d and 18d – maybe there are others?
We enjoyed this challenge – there were some ‘interesting’ definitions and only one slightly unusual word – the wild flower at 5d.
Across | ||
1 | A selfie that is taken and altered with Photoshop? (5) | |
FALSE | An anagram of A SELF |
|
4 | Lover unaltered in extremes of torment is a Walter Mitty (9) | |
FANTASIST | FAN (lover) + AS IS (unaltered) in T |
|
10 | Food basket hotel dropped off – it takes a long time to see what’s currently available? (8) | |
AMPERAGE | ||
11 | Company love notice put back to front – such things attract attention (6) | |
COOEES | CO (company) O (love) + SEE (notice) reversed or ‘put back to front’ | |
12 | A woman with no time for such a tricky game (6) | |
BRIDGE | BRIDGE |
|
13 | I got for nothing small tin of mostly meat – cold, perhaps? (8) | |
SNIFFLES | SN (tin) IF (I replacing or ‘got for’ the ‘o’ (nothing) in ‘of’) FLES |
|
14 | Remove crockery in fragments aware earthenware material lies around (5,4) | |
CLEAR AWAY | An anagram of AWARE (anagrind is ‘in fragments’) with CLAY (earthenware material) ‘lying’ around | |
16 | Woodland spirit stayed put a short period of time (5) | |
SATYR | SAT (stayed put) YR (abbreviation for ‘year’ – ‘period of time’) | |
19 | Erica and Ted? (5) | |
HEATH | Double definition – Erica being a genus of heath(er), and a reference to Ted HEATH, former PM | |
21 | Keep lying with brief account, one in a series (9) | |
FIBONACCI | FIB ON (keep lying) ACC (‘brief’ account) I (one) | |
24 | North America’s states consume last of gasoline. Make you sick? (8) | |
NAUSEATE | N A (North America) US (states) EAT (consume) E (‘last’ letter of ‘gasoline’) | |
27 | God of love getting a head start (6) | |
APOLLO | O (love) with A POLL (head) in front or ‘starting’ | |
28 | Strong river has portable shelter pitched alongside (6) | |
POTENT | PO (river) TENT (portable shelter) | |
29 | Adult slips into busy city life after cut in service (8) | |
FACILITY | A (adult) ‘slipping into’ an anagram of CITY LIF |
|
30 | ‘S’ seen in table edge inlaid in black marble say (9) | |
BRIMSTONE | RIM (edge) ‘inlaid’ in B (black) STONE (marble, say) – Brimstone is the old name for sulphur – S in the periodic table | |
31 | Butterfly‘s a tiny bit orange at one end (5) | |
WHITE | WHIT (a tiny bit) E (last letter or ‘one end’ of ‘orange’) | |
Down | ||
2 | E.g. Nelson, respectworthy though short and missing end of limb (7) | |
ADMIRAL | ADMIRA |
|
3 | Persevering with speed dates initially gone wrong (9) | |
STEADFAST | FAST (with speed) with an anagram of DATES in front or ‘initially’ – anagrind is ‘gone wrong’ | |
5 | Safe places in Hackney for a wild flower (5) | |
AVENS | ||
6 | Geek taken on by astute chief (6) | |
TECHIE | Hidden in or ‘taken on by’ astuTE CHIEf | |
7 | Be a food critic? (5) | |
SCOFF | A cryptic definition – a critic might SCOFF, and a food critic would have to eat or ‘scoff’ in order to critique the food | |
8 | Natural landscape features divine around East Tyneside area (7) | |
SCENERY | SCRY (divine, as in ‘make out’) around E (East) NE (Tyneside area) | |
9 | A heartless naive MCP with no power perhaps? (7) | |
CAVEMAN | Cryptic definition – An anagram of A NA |
|
15 | A champ‘s assumed name as finally taken (3) | |
ALI | ALI |
|
17 | Yes, greetings and thank you for going up to religious leader (9) | |
AYATOLLAH | AY (yes) + HALLO (greetings) TA (thank you) reversed or ‘going up’ | |
18 | Military parade about to be included for head of state (7) | |
MONARCH | MARCH (military parade) round or ‘including’ ON (about) | |
20 | Shock upset – visit initially blocked entrance (7) | |
ENAMOUR | MANE (shock, as in hair) reversed or ‘upset’ + |
|
22 | Firm allowed computing to produce a flier (7) | |
COLETIT | CO (firm – company) LET (allowed) IT (computing) – we think this should be two words, and weren’t aware that ‘Coal Tit’ could also be spelt this way | |
23 | Knock on the door from rogue with cheapo wares (3-3) | |
RAT-TAT | RAT (rogue) TAT (‘cheapo wares’) | |
25 | Second XI in very hot water (5) | |
STEAM | S (second) TEAM (XI – eleven) | |
26 | I’m delicate but within limits feel fine (5) | |
ELFIN | Hidden within feEL FINe | |
Well played the bloggers. SNIFFLES defeated me (a really hard parse with SN for ‘small tin’ my nemesis) and I was slowed for ages by having SLATE for ‘be a food critic?’ (jokey back-formation from Nigel SLATER. No, you’re right it’s rubbish).
Tough stuff today. Thanks to all.
SATYR, APOLLO and ELFIN are butterflies too.
I had ROAST in 7d!
And why not?
Therefore I couldn’t finish this crossword which I found hard.
Missed the butterflies.
Not sure whether ‘initially’ is in the right place in 3d.
Thanks to B&J and Crosophile.
Way beyond me today. Got about two-thirds of it, then had to replace the displacement activity with real work. So the butterfly theme passed me by.
MCP? Still no idea what that is. Surely ‘altered’ in 1ac is doing double duty? SCRY is a new one on me.
I’ll stop now and thank all three.
I think there might be a case for “with Photoshop?” as the definition for 1a.
MCP is in the usual dictionaries. Male Chauvinist Pig.
Thanks Crosophile and B+J
Stymied myself by putting CODLIN in 11A: CO + {NIL + D(-Notice) reversed}, a codlin being a sort of moth, and at the time I thought the theme was butterflies and moths…couldn’t quite parse the rest of it, though!
Never mind, tomorrow’s another day.
Still a bit more theme to be found 🙂
There’s also 2D & 18D.
Still something else … 🙂
Simon @ 8 – those two were mentioned in Bertandjoyce’s preamble.
Is the missing butterfly 1a? There’s a so-called False Apollo butterfly as well as the Apollo.
Or could it be 15d Ali, who floated like one? 🙂
That brought a smile to our faces – thanks Michael!
And thanks to you for the blog!
I feel sure Ali is deliberately thematic, right there in the middle of the grid. Should have spotted it sooner, I guess.
I hadn’t thought of the Ali butterfly link. Nice one. 🙂
No, it’s a lurking hidden entry.
We need a little extra hint unfortunately!
B&J
Try the diagonal starting at 30.
DOH!
That is superb! Thanks for the hint – it was only a matter of time before the gibbering set in and a man in a white coat approached me with a giant butterfly net.
Many thanks to crosophile. I’m off to watch Papillon. 😀
Got there in the end. 😀
Thanks very much for the comments and the blog
It feels like half of these comments invoked chaos theory, so the hidden message was doubly appropriate. 🙂
And by the way, there’s a butterfly called Leptosia nina so… [cont p. 94]
Missed the theme although I did notice 30 and 31 but thought it just coincidence – should have realised that ‘butterfly’ in the clue to 31 was a hint.
A bit harder than the usual Wednesday fare; I struggled with this, notably the right hand side and particularly the NE corner. And couldn’t parse ENAMOUR (which was the only word that would fit). But some great clues – my CoD is the aforesaid 30, BRIMSTONE; as a chemist I appreciated the periodic table reference.
Thanks, Crosophile and B&J.