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The Gardener and the Cook (Posted on 2006-03-01) Difficulty: 3 of 5
The following special catch puzzle appeared in the issue of The Weekly Dispatch for All Fools' Day, 1900. It caused considerable amusement; for out of a very large body of competitors, many quite expert, not a single person solved it, though it ran for nearly a month.

" A race between a man and a woman that I happened to witness one All Fools' Day has fixed itself indelibly on my memory. It happened at a country-house, where the gardener and the cook decided to run a race to a point 100 feet straight away and return. I found that the gardener ran 3 feet at every bound and the cook only 2 feet, but then she made three bounds to his two. Now, what was the result of the race?"

A fortnight after publication the editor added the following note: "It has been suggested that perhaps there is a catch in the 'return,' but there is not. The race is to a point 100 feet away and home again—that is, a distance of 200 feet. One correspondent asks whether they take exactly the same time in turning, to which I reply that they do. Another seems to suspect that it is really a conundrum, and that the answer is that 'the result of the race was a (matrimonial) tie.' But I had no such intention. The puzzle is an arithmetical one, as it purports to be."

  Submitted by goFish    
Rating: 3.6250 (8 votes)
Solution: (Hide)
tomarken deserves similar credit to one of the original respondents noted below but needed to follow through for the full marks.

Nobody succeeded in solving the puzzle, so the author had to let the cat out of the bag—an operation that was dimly foreshadowed by the puss in the original illustration.

But he first reminded the reader that this puzzle appeared on April 1, a day on which none of us ever resents being made an "April Fool;" though, as he practically "gave the thing away" by specially drawing attention to the fact that it was All Fools' Day, it was quite remarkable that all the correspondents, without a single exception, fell into the trap.

One large body of correspondents held that what the cook loses in stride is exactly made up in greater speed; consequently both advance at the same rate, and the result must be a tie. But another considerable section saw that, though this might be so in a race 200 ft. straight away, it could not really be, because they each go a stated distance at "every bound," and as 100 is not an exact multiple of 3, the gardener at his thirty-fourth bound will go 2 ft. beyond the mark. The gardener will, therefore, run to a point 102 ft. straight away and return (204 ft. in all), and so lose by 4 ft.

This point certainly comes into the puzzle. But the most important fact of all is this, that it so happens that the gardener was a pupil from the Horticultural College for Lady Gardeners at, if I remember aright, Swanley; while the cook was a very accomplished French chef of the male persuasion!

Therefore "she (the gardener) made three bounds to his (the cook's) two." It will now be found that while the gardener is running her 204 ft. in 68 bounds of 3 ft., the somewhat infirm old cook can only make 451/3 of his 2 ft. bounds, which equals 90 ft. 8 in. The result is that the lady gardener wins the race by 109 ft. 4 in. at a moment when the cook is in the air, one-third through his 46th bound.

The moral of this puzzle is twofold: (1) Never take things for granted in attempting to solve puzzles; (2) always remember All Fools' Day when it comes round. He was not writing of any gardener and cook, but of a particular couple, in "a race that I witnessed."

The statement of the eye-witness must therefore be accepted: as the reader was not there, he cannot contradict it. Of course the information supplied was insufficient, but the correct reply was: "Assuming the gardener to be the 'he,' the cook wins by 4 ft.; but if the gardener is the 'she,' then the gardener wins by 109 ft. 4 in." This would have won the prize. Curiously enough, one solitary competitor got on to the right track, but failed to follow it up. He said: "Is this a regular April 1 catch, meaning that they only ran 6 ft. each, and consequently the race was unfinished? If not, I think the following must be the solution, supposing the gardener to be the 'he' and the cook the 'she.'" Though his solution was wrong even in the case he supposed, yet he was the only person who suspected the question of sex.

Comments: ( You must be logged in to post comments.)
  Subject Author Date
Puzzle ThoughtsK Sengupta2023-08-03 11:09:45
solutionNadia Modagon2006-11-21 15:30:51
re(2): Solution (of the simple-minded type)Monika2006-03-12 09:18:00
Solutionagain with a correction to what I just saidAdam2006-03-10 13:28:58
Solutionjust an update to my solution..Adam2006-03-10 13:27:09
SolutionNo SubjectAdam2006-03-10 05:05:54
No Subjectdestructor2006-03-09 20:36:00
Solutionre(3): Solution? Agree with ChelseaStephen2006-03-06 20:58:53
Weekly Dispatch says...Highway62006-03-06 15:02:04
Upon reflection --- :-)brianjn2006-03-05 20:09:49
re: Solution (of the simple-minded type)Kenny M2006-03-04 13:12:01
SolutionSolution (of the simple-minded type)Monika2006-03-03 11:33:43
puzzle is an arithmetical one??brianjn2006-03-02 21:13:16
Solutionre(2): Solution? Agree with ChelseaKenny M2006-03-02 17:47:42
re(2): April 1, 1900 - SundayJer2006-03-02 13:11:02
Lateral thinking time!Jack Lim2006-03-02 09:36:42
re: April 1, 1900 - SundaygoFish2006-03-01 18:49:54
re: April 1, 1900 - SundayChelsea2006-03-01 18:32:01
April 1, 1900 - Sundaysue2006-03-01 18:13:13
SolutionProbably solutionDej Mar2006-03-01 18:12:19
re: Aha! (Spoilers if I'm right)Vernon Lewis2006-03-01 18:05:26
SolutionAha! (Spoilers if I'm right)Dustin2006-03-01 16:42:52
Some ThoughtsDefinitive answerHugo2006-03-01 15:51:26
QuestiongoFishtomarken2006-03-01 15:42:33
SolutionTwo possibilitiesFederico Kereki2006-03-01 15:33:28
re(2): Solution?Charlie2006-03-01 15:18:48
re: Solution?Chelsea2006-03-01 14:55:50
NopegoFish2006-03-01 14:21:24
Some ThoughtsSolution?tomarken2006-03-01 13:36:35
Solutiona problem for us long-legged folksBob Smith2006-03-01 13:26:02
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