Summary: Playing a practice game of Clock Solitaire will help clarify and remaining questions. Learn how to play Clock Solitaire in this free card games video.
Like many, Reg Brittain has benefited from the poker boom of recent years. He learned poker at age 9 from his Papaw, and he has been thankful ever since. In 2006, Reg Brittain won...read more
"So we're doing our sample hand of Clock solitaire. We just played an Ace in the one spot on the clock face and we turned over a king. What happens? Well, there's no thirteen o'clock and a king equals thirteen, so it goes here and we have to turn up a card from our starter pile. We get a two, it goes here. I'm going to play a little faster. Ace here. Ten goes over here in the ten o'clock spot. Ten plays right here again. Jack is eleven. Queen is twelve. Eight. So we say, eleven, ten, nine, eight. Might be able to teach your kids a little bit of counting with this game. Nine goes in the nine o'clock spot. Three goes over here, across from the nine o'clock spot. Three, place here again. Jack, up here. And I think you get the idea of how this game is played. Just remember, every time you get a king, you have to stop, put it in the middle pile and turn over another card. And once you have reached four kings, the game, the hand, is over."
eHow Article: Clock Solitaire: Sample Hand 2
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