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Susan Hintz pauses from a Colorado-themed jigsaw puzzle set up on her puzzling table at the Looney Bin. Photo: Dan Hintz.

By Susan Hintz

With plantar fasciitis sidelining me from beachcombing, I was in search of a new hobby. One day, while canvassing the local big box store, my eyes caught sight of a loon puzzle. Even at 1,000 pieces, the puzzle seemed perfect, especially when I imagined it finished and framed for the bunkhouse at the Looney Bin, our summer cottage. So, into the cart it went.

A day or two later, I received a hobby store flyer advertising puzzles for sale “up to 40% off.”  Even I couldn’t pass up that bargain, so I made a visit to the store. Once there, I found the puzzle aisle and scoped out what they had. There were several to choose from, but only a few were of interest.

Advertisement for Stapleton Realty. The heading reads Outdoor Enthusiasts. There is a photo of a new-looking pole building with a tall bay door and a regular entry door. There is a cement pad with a picnic table in front of it. The ground is flat and there is a line of evergreen trees behind the building. The description reads: 2 Acres. Minutes to Crystal Mountain. 37-foot by 47-foot pole building on the Benzie Manistee snowmobile and A.T.V. trail. Finished inside. Well and septic and a full camper hook up. Insulated, Paneled and heated 29-foot by 28-foot shop area with an exhaust fan and a new furnace. 12-foot side walls and a 10-foot bay door. 14-foot by 8-foot heated, carpeted office or bunk area and a shower in the bathroom. Also a utility room with a utility sink and washer and dryer hook ups. near the Betsie River and M-115. $189,900. m.l.s. number is 1926929. Contact Christine Stapleton on her mobile phone by text or call. 231-499-2698. Click on this ad to be taken to the website. Equal Housing Opportunity. Designated REALTOR.Advertisement for the Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts. On the left is a print by Glenn Wolff that is mostly black with some white outlines of trees, spiraling tree roots, a partial moon, prayer flags, stars, comets, spirals, birds flying in the night sky, the backs of a woman and her dog next to a lake. On the right is a painting by Nancy Adams Nash of a whimsical white figure with small head and huge hips and a heart-shaped red area over where the heart would be on a person. Next to the figure are a series of almost square boxes. The largest box appears to be on the ground next to the figure and subsequent boxes are smaller and appear to recede in the distance or climb the wall next to the figure. Each box is hooked to the one above it by one corner. Inside each box is a small line, and each line inside the box is a different color. The art exhibition is called: Glenn Wolff and Nancy Adams Nash: Land and Myth. Showing now through April 13. Hardy Hall Gallery open Wednesday thru Sunday, Noon to 3 p.m. Free Admission. Ramsdell is located at 101 Maple St. Click here to be taken to the website.Grand Traverse Regional Land Conservancy ad is an aerial view of the Betsie Bay channel leading to Lake Michigan, a.k.a. Frankfort Harbor, from the viewpoint of Elberta and a view of Elberta Beach, with the Frankfort Coast Guard station and a marina on the far right. Words superimposed on the photograph are: Protected Land means saving your favorite places." and the conservancy just saved 36 acres and lots of shoreline in Elberta including for a waterfront park. Click on the ad to be taken to the organization's website.

As I was contemplating which puzzle to take home, a fellow puzzler joined in the perusing. We got to chatting, and she highly recommended a particular manufacturer’s puzzles known for their larger, sturdier pieces. And it just so happened I had one in my hand! She recommended going online to check out their selection. To my surprise HOLY Batpuzzleman! POW! BAM! They had some great Michigan-themed puzzles. I made my online purchase for the Michigan Landmark puzzle (plus a few more), and I awaited their arrival.

In the meantime, I unboxed, started sorting and assembling the loon puzzle. Holy wow, this one was going to be challenging. Two days into it, I was still assembling the border. I would work on it for hours at a time, finding it hard to pull away. I would sort, resort and sort again.

After two months of being sidelined with COVID-19, I finally completed the puzzle. However, after admiring my work, I noticed I was missing some pieces! What a total deflator. I looked all around my work area, to no avail. A friend told me some puzzle manufacturers will send you the exact missing piece, whereas others will send you the whole puzzle. As luck would have it, this manufacturer wouldn’t send just the missing pieces, leaving me to sort through a thousand pieces to find five! Not going to happen.

The disappointment didn’t deter me from unboxing the next in the lineup. While the hubs was away, I set up my puzzle table and got to it. My intention was to work on it over a couple of days, however, once I got started, I became a puzzle addict and couldn’t stop until the last piece was placed at 1:30 a.m., well-l-l past my bedtime!

I’ve shared pictures of my completed puzzles with friends and family and overwhelmingly I get:

“You’re nuts!”

“You’re crazy!”

“You have way too much patience.”

For me, though, it’s challenging yet relaxing. Yes, it takes determination and patience. It’s also strategic. With each new puzzle, I discover ways to tweak the process, resulting in faster completion times.

Puzzling, as it seems, is peaceful. It puts me in my own little world, where the outside world is tuned out, solitude is soaked up and a sense of accomplishment is achieved.

You may be a puzzler if you enjoy a challenge while seeking solitude.

Susan Hintz is a creative entrepreneur who loves beachcombing, photographing nature and writing about her hobbies and the outdoors.

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