What unusual quirks do you or partner have at the table?
#1
Posted 2013-June-10, 23:24
Another quirk is that she always carries the same green Parker Pen with her for filling in our our personals, saying that, "It's my lucky pen."
#2
Posted 2013-June-10, 23:31
#3
Posted 2013-June-11, 00:07
I prefer to pull the bid cards out of the box one at a time instead of in a stack. People sometimes tell me I'm doing it wrong, as if I haven't been using bid boxes since 1983.
#4
Posted 2013-June-11, 00:49
#5
Posted 2013-June-11, 02:41
#6
Posted 2013-June-11, 06:10
1. Sitting North- I always got East and West confused.
2. Bringing a pen into a serious match or competition, I used to find it brought me bad luck.
#7
Posted 2013-June-11, 08:31
What is baby oil made of?
#8
Posted 2013-June-11, 09:34
I am AR when I'm at a table. The boards need to be aligned neatly on the table marker which needs to be centered. I also hate a lot of trash.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#9
Posted 2013-June-11, 09:41
#10
Posted 2013-June-11, 09:48
GreenMan, on 2013-June-11, 00:07, said:
I assumed the notable players who did this developed the habit from screens and trays, where a stack of cards beneath the actual bid could get bumped when the tray is moved and cause problems ---and that unknown players just didn't know any better...because taking one out at a time and putting multiple bids back in order after the auction seem like a time-wasting pain in the butt.
The main reason the only tab of the bid cards which gets dog eared is 1C is because most players thumb their choice and pull everything lower out.
#11
Posted 2013-June-11, 10:03
2. I seem to think best (such as it is) when hunched over, so I typically declare and defend with elbows on knees, cards held under the table, and face just a few inches from the table edge. Have received a few comments and more strange looks. I hope to some day play with screens, but fear that people will think I'm trying to sneak a peek at partner's face/reactions through the gap by leaning down like this.
#12
Posted 2013-June-11, 10:22
I want to bring my Golden Retriever but I can't find a shoulder bag big enough.
Quirks; I hunt out the shortest pencil in the room. I think because short pencils are less likely to be taken by other players.
I must have an alert card in my bidding box, not a strip and I will swap my strip for a card in another bidding box.
At one tournament, sitting E/W, I carried an alert card around with me all session in my back pocket.
#13
Posted 2013-June-11, 10:39
jillybean, on 2013-June-11, 10:22, said:
I want to bring my Golden Retriever but I can't find a shoulder bag big enough.
Terry Michaels (widow of Mike Michaels of cuebid fame) trained service dogs and always brought her current charge to the club, often a GR.
#14
Posted 2013-June-11, 10:41
jillybean, on 2013-June-11, 10:22, said:
I want to bring my Golden Retriever but I can't find a shoulder bag big enough.
+++ Extending the regulations on service dogs to include more than seeing-eye, in order to be politically correct has caused other players with allergies or morbid fears problems.
I asked the ACBL at one time for guidance when they expanded to include emotional support service dogs. They chose to ignore my request. Club management must choose between the allergic or fearful and the emotionally needy as a business decision.
#15
Posted 2013-June-11, 10:44
aguahombre, on 2013-June-11, 09:48, said:
The main reason the only tab of the bid cards which gets dog eared is 1C is because most players thumb their choice and pull everything lower out.
Some newbies do do it that way out of newbieness. I find the extra effort putting the cards back to be negligible; for me it's preferable not to worry about my stack of cards going askew, and on those occasions when we start to pick up our cards and someone says "Please wait, I want to study the auction," I can just spread mine out again. Also, it saves wear on the 1C card.
These are small considerations, but they matter enough to me. Quirky, I know.
#16
Posted 2013-June-11, 11:51
jillybean, on 2013-June-11, 10:22, said:
I want to bring my Golden Retriever but I can't find a shoulder bag big enough.
You talking about Lynn Deas? I suspect she gets special dispensation just because of who she is.
I was operating Vugraph at a table with her last year. At one point she asked a TD to take her little dog out for a walk or something.
#17
Posted 2013-June-11, 12:00
We have one right-handed player who likes to put his bidding box on the left. He also insists that it's easier; maybe I don't see the problem because I'm short and my arm length is proportional.
Regarding people who take out bidding cards one at a time, it's always seemed like an affectation to me: "look, I've got such great manual dexterity I can do this". However, when bidding cards get out of order, it's almost always because one of you was at the table recently.
#18
Posted 2013-June-11, 12:41
barmar, on 2013-June-11, 12:00, said:
Manual dexterity? Please. I've already demonstrated that by pulling playing cards from my hand one at a time, without dropping (hardly) any.
AFAIK I'm the only one at the local club who manipulates the bidding box that way, and I'm careful to leave it in order, but somehow cards still get put in the wrong places sometimes by the grab-everything set.
#19
Posted 2013-June-11, 13:12
GreenMan, on 2013-June-11, 12:41, said:
It's not pulling them out that requires extra dexterity, it's putting them back in.
Quote
Their mistakes are usually easier to deal with. For instance, sometimes some of the demonination cards end up in the slot for pass/double/redouble cards.
#20
Posted 2013-June-11, 15:15
Subsequently (and this was still a number of years ago), I was sitting down to kibbitz Arnie playing with Dave Treadwell in the opening match of the Mens' Swiss Teams at the Lancaster, PA Regional (I told you it was a number of years ago). I noticed that Arnie was sitting in the South seat. When I pointed this out, his response was that "Treadwell invented the North seat!"