Here is the answer to last week's bonus problem:
Kipping #3-
1 f4 Nd1 2 Nxd1
1...Nc2 2 Nxc2
1...Nxc4 2 Nxc4
1...Nd5 2 cxd5
1...Nf5 2 Bxf5
1...Ng4 2 Bxg4
1...Ng2 2 Bxg2
1...Nf1 2 Bxf1
1...Nd2 2 Bxd2
1...Nc3 2 Bxc3
1...Nxc5 2 dxc5
1...Nd6 2 cxd6
1...Nf6 2 gxf6
1...Nxg5 2 fxg5
1...Ng3 2 Bxg3
1...Nf2 2 Bxf2
1...f6 2 Qh5
"The key, 1 f4, sets up a zugzwang position, and White will eventually mate by means of 3 Rd8, if both of Black's knights can be induced to leave the e-file, to enable the white queen to guard e7. As it turns out, this is not a difficult business, for no matter which knight moves, and irrespective of where it arrives, it exposes itself to capture, so that the other knight is then forced to move (unless Black plays 2...f6/f5, which will allow 3 Qh5). This problem therefore presents a doubling of the Grab theme: each of two black units is grabbed wherever it goes." The other theme shown is a Double Knight Wheel.
To close out our discussion of the Knight Wheel, here are a couple of problems sent to me by Siegfried Hornecker:

Siegfried Hornecker MatPlus Winter 2009 #2

Siegfried Hornecker and Martin Hoffmann Schweizerische Schachzeitung June 2005 (Version) #9
11 points total, for sending me complete variations to both problems. Send your solutions to me, at
garykevinware@yahoo.com , by next Wednesday. I will be posting the regular problem(s), later this evening.