Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Working It Out

ONE of the big challenges with 54mm wargaming is scenery, and specifically buildings.
There are magnificent-looking products on the market, but they tend to have a much larger footprint than is suitable for tabletop gaming.
This is especially the case for Project Kaiser, where I will be using a gridded table (actually two tables pushed together) with units likely consisting of four infantrymen, two cavalrymen or a gun and four gunners.
Bob Cordery, of Portable Wargame fame, came up with one possible solution earlier this month when he pointed out (http://wargamingmiscellany.blogspot.com/2019/05/wooden-castle-building-blocks.html) that discount chain The Works is selling Castle Blocks, a 75-piece wooden set intended for children aged 4+ to build a fort.
I went yesterday to a branch of The Works at the Stratford Centre - not to be confused with nearby Westfield - in East London.
Castle Blocks costs £25, and, like Bob, I was sorely tempted to buy a set as parts of the fort can easily be used separately to create built-up areas with something of a Germanic/East France look.
But perusing the store I found something even more suitable, and a lot cheaper.
Four 'wooden houses'
The label on the back of each house is titled "Decorate Your Own Wooden House." In small print comes the warning: "This product is not a toy. Please keep away from children."
In other words, the houses are aimed at adults. Now can you really imagine any adult wanting such a thing? Well, obviously there are some, and I am one of them!
The houses will require a fair bit of work before they are fit for the wargames table, but I am very pleased with my find.

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Historical Reminders

WALKED from Bad Wiessee to Gmund yesterday afternoon, taking advantage of bright sunshine before the sky clouded over later in the afternoon.
Gmund has a chapel from 1634 with a mural on the outside depicting two angels along with the words: EHRE DEN OPFERN MAHNUNG DEN LEBENDEN, which roughly translates as: Honour the victims - Exhortation to the living.
The 1634 chapel - renovated from 1988-91
The window has an Iron Cross with the year 1914 on it, and below the cross an iconic stahlhelm helmet, which started replacing the pickelhaube in the German army in 1916.
Near to the chapel is a fountain, dated 1894, with a soldier equipped in a style I associate with the 16th century at the latest, and probably from quite some time before that.
The soldierly fountain

Close-up of the soldier

Saturday, May 18, 2019

Beauty And The East

IF you like history and travel, then you could do a lot worse than get hold of a copy of a book I picked up for 99p from a branch of Oxfam (cannot recall which branch, but it might have been in Tunbridge Wells).
Colin Thubron spent four months walking through Lebanon in 1967 around the time of the Six-Day War.
The book's title, The Hills Of Adonis, refers to a Greek god of beauty who supposedly inhabited Lebanon's hills until he was killed by a wild boar.
The Hill's of Adonis - 2008 reprint by Vintage
Ironically, much of what Thubron writes about Adonis, especially of people believing the god annually died and was reborn, is dismissed by modern scholars.
But there is plenty of real Near East history here, starting from before the arrival of the Phoenicians, continuing through later conquerors including Byzantines, Arabs and Crusaders, and concluding with Lebanon's (very) limited involvement in the Six-Day War.
Naturally there is also much travelogue material, with Thubron finding the locals, whether Christian, Druze or Muslim. to be almost universally friendly before the Israeli-Arab conflict, but turning to hostility - at least from Muslims - during and after the war.
I had a similar experience of a seeming change in attitudes when I visited Jordan just before 9/11 and Tunisia just after it (although admittedly they are too somewhat different countries).
Thubron is a multi-prize-winning author, and apart from some purple patches of philosophy, I found The Hills of Adonis a rattling good read.

Friday, May 17, 2019

Abwinkl War Memorial

CONTINUING my visit to Bad Wiessee, which is beside the Tegernsee in Bavaria, I took advantage of a spell of good weather - it has been raining and cold much of the time - to head into the mountains.
My plan was just to walk along the town's panoramaweg, but then I decided to head up to Bauer in der Au at 904m.
However, it soon became clear from signposts that the restaurant or mountain hut supposed to be there was no longer open.
Since I had set off at about 1pm, without having lunch, I switched plans again and headed further up to Aueralm at 1270m.
I knew Aueralm consisted of a "mountain cabin" as I passed it last year when ascending the Fockenstein (1564m).
Fortunately the cabin was open (it turned out it closes on Mondays) and I enjoyed a lentil soup and large slice of blueberry cheesecake.
I had reached Aueralm via a different route from the one I took last year, so decided to descend by last year's route.
But I only had walking shoes without ankle support and no walking pole, and soon decided there was too much snow on the ground to make that route advisable.
Instead I came back down to the lake, and so to Bad Wiessee, via Abwinkl, which, depending on your temperament, could be called a large village or a small town.
This proved a good choice as Abwinkl has an interesting modern war memorial, liberally decorated with Iron Crosses.
Abwinkl - modern war memorial
There are many more names listed for WW2 than for WW1, including some who died in the early months of 1946.
It is not clear if these last deaths were military personnel who died of their wounds, or perhaps as Soviet prisoners. From the way precise dates are given, I would guess the former.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Recommended Read

FINALLY got around to reading Jonathan Clements' A Brief History Of Khubilai Khan - Lord Of Xanadu, Emperor Of China, which I bought in March in Hampstead for £3.99, marked down from £8.99.
My current trip to Bavaria gave me the necessary spare time, helped today by it literally raining non-stop, and the book has proved a riveting read.
Khubilai … part of publisher Robinson's A Brief History series
I cannot claim to have more than a passing general knowledge of the Mongols, but Clements' treatment of his subject comes across as balanced and dispassionate, not being afraid to point out where sources are contradictory and/or problematic.
There is little in the book for wargamers per se - no battle maps, for example - but I found the whole description of Mongol warfare and life to be engrossing.
I will certainly look out for more books by Clements, and for more on the Mongols.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Now That's What I Call Model-Making

AM staying in a landhaus beside the Tegernsee in Bavaria, where mine host is clearly something of a dab hand at model-making.
Two superb models
These are marked as being for 12cm figures, and are brilliant pieces of craftsmanship, but their quality is reflected in their prices - 220 euros for the model on the right; 250 euros for the one on the left.

Thursday, May 09, 2019

Spring Clean

AM slowly spring-cleaning my flat, which has reminded me of a problem most wargamers come across sooner or later - a lack of space.
Specifically in my case is a lack of space for displaying my library of wargaming and model-soldier books.
I have for quite a few years had them lined up across the top of one of my bookcases, but the numbers have grown to a point where the books were threatening to slip off either end.
My solution has been to remove books that could be said to be not directly, or at least not purely, wargame-related, eg my two volumes of Osprey Essential Histories. I have also removed 'books' that are more-or-less just rules with very little other writing, for example Black Powder and WRG rulesets.
I have not yet decided where I will store these, but for the moment my wargaming library is looking a lot less precarious.
My wargaming books, minus rulesets, etc

Wednesday, May 08, 2019

If You Can Keep Your Head ...

I DECIDED to convert six of my artillerymen into Prussians by replacing their kepi-clad heads with pickelhaubed ones.
Infantryman and gunner before converting
The process of cutting off heads was fairly easy, and nothing will go to waste as the kepi-clad heads can be put on the infantrymen, converting them into French infantry.
After converting … now a Prussian gunner and a French infantryman
Supergluing the 12 replacement heads on the full batch of figures was a simple process ...
The full batch converted
… but gamers with more experience than I have of working with soft plastic will by now have spotted a flaw.
It turns out superglue is not-so-super with certain materials, chief of which is the soft plastic that Armies In Plastic uses for its figures.
I left the glue to bond overnight, but 24 hours later the heads came off before I could even wash and prime the figures.
As things stand … six headless gunners and six headless infantrymen
A quick surf of the internet brought a product called Tricky Stick to my attention: ttps://deluxematerials.co.uk/products/tricky-stick
It seems you use it to cover the two surfaces you wish to join. Once the surfaces have dried, you can use superglue as per normal.
I have ordered a 50ml bottle from Upstairs Downstairs of Sandown, Isle of Wight, for £9.50 plus £3 posting.

Tuesday, May 07, 2019

New Magazine Purchase

I BOUGHT Ancient History magazine for the first time last week as the issue's theme, Living The Urban Dream - Cities In The Ancient World, interested me.
Ancient History … 60 pages
The issue is numbered 21 and cost £5.99, for which you get 60 pages with very few adverts.
That is very much a good-news-bad-news situation. It is good that the magazine is so 'full', but bad that it is not attracting much advertising.
Still, since Ancient History apparently comes out every two months, it has been going for more than three years, and I certainly wish it well.
I am not sure the articles taught me anything I was not already more-or-less generally aware of, but with the exception of an out-of-place piece on the cartoon character Asterix, every piece kept me reading to the end.

Monday, May 06, 2019

Bonus Time

SURPRISES awaited me when I opened my latest order from Transport Models, with first up being the two boxes of Union artillery.
A Union artillery box and contents
Each box is supposed to contain "1 cannon with a 5 man crew." Grammatical concerns aside, each box actually comes with an extra barrel and elevator (probably not the right word, but I am referring to the part of the gun used to elevate and depress the barrel).
A gun assembled, with spare parts at the front
I have no idea what, if anything, I will do with the spare parts, but I will have no such difficulty in using the bonus that came with the Union marines.
The box is supposed to have "20 plastic action figures" in "10 poses." In fact, as can be seen in the photo below, it had 24 figures in 11 poses.
Federal bonus
No surprises with the Prussians - each box had its correct number of 18 figures in nine poses.
One of two boxes of correctly turned-out Prussians