The following problem from Five Hundred Mathematical Challenges was a challenge indeed, even though it appeared to be a standard travel puzzle.
“Problem 118. Andy leaves at noon and drives at constant speed back and forth from town A to town B. Bob also leaves at noon, driving at 40 km per hour back and forth from town B to town A on the same highway as Andy. Andy arrives at town B twenty minutes after first passing Bob, whereas Bob arrives at town A forty-five minutes after first passing Andy. At what time do Any and Bob pass each other for the nth time?”
See the Perpetual Meetings Problem for solutions.

This is a problem from a while back (2015) at Futility Closet.
Here is another engaging problem from
Here is another challenging problem from the 2004 Pi in the Sky Canadian magazine for high school students.
This is another fairly simple puzzle from Futility Closet.
Here is another simply amazing problem from Five Hundred Mathematical Challenges:
This is a delightful and surprising problem from
Here is another train puzzle, this time from J. A. H. Hunter’s Entertaining Mathematical Teasers:
It is hard to believe a whole year has passed since I started this blog. What is even more surprising is that by February I thought I was about done. I had more or less uploaded the math curiosities and problems I had been thinking about over the years and had presented most of the math essays I had written. There are of course only a finite number of math problems in the world, so I thought I was about done. But much to my surprise I kept finding one more thing that interested me, either an essay or math problem. So here I am. We will have to see what the next year brings.
I have been subverted again by a recent post by Ben Orlin, “