Tuesday, 30 January 2024

Campaign Delays and Tweaks......and diplomatic language

Nearly a month into the new year and I haven't got around to playing the solo campaign. A mixture of lethargy, tiredness, work, other pastimes and time spent with the Margravina has put the breaks on.  A week ago I was seriously thinking of switching the campaign to a 'play by map' format and fight the battles out on the tabletop. This would lengthen the overall time taken to play the campaign, but at least allow some map moves in spare moments. I dithered around with this ("I haven't got any Italian looking trees made yet") until eventually I got to Friday and I set the table up after work for the 'play on table' format. This is where the whole campaign area is set-up on the table. Hexes are about 40 miles across. Thus:


Northern Italy and part France - castles indicate ports: Toulon, Nice and Genoa. River is the Po (only one shown on the whole board). The church to its western end represents Turin. Hexes with trees represent mountains

The whole "map" of Italy. I didn't represent the heel and foot. The leftmost column of hexes will represent the sea - I need to cover it in something blue. The "city/port" towards the bottom left is Naples, next one up Rome. A northern biased map. On reflection I've probably made the leg too wide near the bottom.

Moves will represent a month of time. Troops will move at 2 hexes per turn unless they cross mountains or the Po. All other rivers and difficult terrain (towns and villages are assume to slow movement right down) are "factored in". Unlike my general AWS campaign a year ago, the Alps can be crossed, but passes are closed to armies for several months of the year, and stacking is limited to represent the effect of narrow valleys on columns. This should prevent the French and Spanish amassing overwhelming numbers on the Piedmontese unless the latter leave the passes unchallenged.

I recently bought some 1:2400 ships from Magister Militum, to represent the Gallispan and British fleets. My, they are tiny! You have to glue on masts and some sails. You can imagine how that went! I managed to get 4 done in an hour before I gave up. I'll try to finish the rest before the weekend and given them a shoddy coat of paint. Wonder if anyone in the house has some tweezers.

As luck would have it, on Saturday evening the 17-year olds wanted a small gathering in the Kriegskabinett, so the gang could plan their post-A-Level trip. My nerves about gangling youths knocking the table were unnecessary, I'm pleased to say. And in a boost to my ego, one of them asked me if those were "Albanian style eagles" on the flags - I hand paint my flags on these 6mm figures, so I was 'dead chuffed'* the eagles on the Austrian flags were recognised as such.

**********

And finally (as they used to say on the News before items about skateboarding squirrels and the like), I came across the missive below on anti-social meeja. I do hope it's genuine.



Thursday, 25 January 2024

The Best Regiment in the British Army

If you're at all interested in the AWI, this video is well worth spending an hour and a half on. The first third to a half is talk about Robbie MacNiven's book, The Pattern: The 33rd Regiment of Foot in the American Revolution 1770-1783. The rest covers the research undertaken, characters in the regiment (and other units that crop up) that the team find interesting, how they became involved in re-enacting and favourite items of kit. A real geekfest - and that's a positive thing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YnWcFCeXQCY&t=29s

I bought and read the book last year and found it excellent and full of inspiring actions. Also it strengthened the impression I was getting from a few recentish books on the professionalism of the British Army of the 18th century. 

Another book named-checked in the video is Don Hagist's volume on the flank companies of the AWI, These Distinguished Corps. Also very worth reading.

Sunday, 21 January 2024

Languages spoken at Waterloo

In case you haven’t seen this clip before https://youtu.be/0GQ036V5lyA?si=A7TZ84JarP4OTxa9

This is a fun little exercise. A clip of the climax of the battle from Bondarchuk’s Waterloo, with characters speaking their own languages. It doesn’t have English subtitles, but most of us have probably seen the film so many times that we know much of the dialogue off by heart not to need it. Apart from which, I’d bet our hobby interest has given us a reasonable smattering of French and German, and especially military vocabulary.

Cheeky way that Boney’s internal dialogue is portrayed 😄

Sunday, 14 January 2024

Walk the ground……but which ground?

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/01/13/civil-war-mystery-solved-true-site-battle-stow-archaeology/ 

In another example of serendipity (see Jonathan Freitag’s comment to the previous post today), I saw the above link to the Daily Telegraph in my Google News feed. Normally the DT is behind a paywall but for some reason I was able to read the whole article. 

In case you can’t read the article, it quotes Simon Marsh of the Battlefields Trust saying that the site of the ECW Battle of Stow is actually about a mile distant from the location registered as the battlefield by Historic England. The Battlefield Trust’s case is based on archaeological evidence (present on the ‘new site’ but largely absent at the ‘official site’). Historic England will consider the evidence submitted and decide whether to change the registration (which will have consequences for preservation of the site).

The mighty Elbe

 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-67946123.amp

No permission to post this but I will happily take it down on request.

Came across the above photo on the BBC site (see link). It’s a picture of a farmers’ protest on a bridge over the Elbe at Torgau, Saxony. Torgau itself is on the left bank as you head downstream (west at this point). It’s striking how wide the river is this far from the estuary. May not be a surprise to anyone else but it was to me.

To coin a phrase from Saving Private Ryan, ‘that makes any town on this river prime real estate’. A quick glance at a map shows the old city centre still has the shape of the gunpowder era ramparts. 


Post Script

Especially for a Disgruntled Fusilier, a shot of the Elbe at Lobositz (Lovesick in Czech) looking up towards the Lobosch (Lovoš):

Obviously not as mighty as the river by Torgau, but significant nonetheless.

I did take a 'drive' down from the saddle between the Lobosch and Homolka mound down towards Lobositz on Google Streetview as Steve suggested. It's difficult to see much with modern road signs etc. One thing that is obvious, looking north from Lobositz is how far away the Lobosch is - our toy soldiers, out of scale for the ground scale, diminish distances as the late, great Paddy Griffith noted in 'The Case Against Toy Soldiers' nearly 40 years ago in Miniature Wargames.

Thursday, 11 January 2024

That is so-o-o-o last year!

They say, if you want to know where you're going you've got to know where you've come from. I'm not sure who 'they' are but 'they' are always credited with wisdom or power, so I'm not going to argue. I feel I'm at one of those decision points in life generally. Not some 'mid-life crisis (I'm too old for that, and I'm broadly happy with my circumstances). So no fast cars or motorbikes. I would grow a moustache, which I hear is de rigeur with bloggers d'un age certain, but with my eyebrows it would just look stupid. Like a lot of folk with a 6 in front of their age, thoughts about retirement plans have made their way to the forefront of my mind. Not that it something likely in the next few years - not unless ERNIE does me a big favour. But those sort of 'real life' questions also provoke questions of what I want to do in my spare time, long term as well as short-term.

No conclusions have been reached just yet, but a bit of 'state of the nation' reviewing wouldn't go amiss. What is my current level of activity like? What am I doing? Does it satisfy my wants? That sort of thing. So here's a review of last year's wargaming related activity. Other hobbies/pastimes do exist in my life, mainly swimming and following Grimsby Town, and a short summary of last year for both would be "not enough". Have I done enough wargaming?


Reading/'Research'

Let's start with reading (or more broadly 'research'). It always starts with reading. I bought and read 13 military history books last year.  By period this breaks down to:

  • English Civil War - 2
  • War of the Austrian Succession - 2
  • Seven Years War - 2
  • AWI - 2
  • 18th Century more generally - 5

The last category is hard to breakdown by wars since they all covered several decades. E.G. the Army of George II, or the biography of James Keith. All 5 spanned the WAS and SYW though. So that gives you a clear idea of my focus.

Other sources of information plundered: 

Obviously there's t'internet: blogs, Wiki, history websites, YouTube, Royal Collections Trust (great for maps) and last but not least, Kronoskaf.

Podcasts. I've listened to probably 150 military history podcast episodes. Including every episode of We Have Ways of Making You Talk (not my period but interesting, and there are some universal themes), Military History Plus (very broad scope, but with a heavy WWI focus) and the Life & Times of Frederick the Great. Numbers are high because I can do this while driving, painting, housework or DIY.


Modelling

After reading comes the planning, then the assembly of 'armies' and terrain to fight over. In an echo of the volume (but not the quality) of Jonathan Freitag's output, over 1000 figures came off the painting table and were based up. Bear in mind however that mine are all 10mm (AWI and ECW) and 6mm (everything else). Counting cavalry as 2 and each artillery base as 5 (1 gun plus 4 gunners). The period breakdown is:

  • AWI  - 92
  • SYW/WAS - 965

All the AWI figures are Pendraken and all the SYW painted were Heroics and Ros (save a couple of Irregular officers which were re-purposed). The American Revolution figures were all Brits/Loyalists. The SYW/WAS includes British, Hanoverians, Reichsarmee, Austrians, Spanish and Piedmontese. So not a bad total.

In terms of 'terrain' pieces I only painted up 7 buildings (AWI) and a couple of packs of brick walls. Less good, but I didn't need to do much. This is the great benefit of limiting the scale models used and having restricted geographical scope (Europe and NAM).

Hastenbeck in September


Games Played

OK, how do the actual games totals look? With 21 games played, a school teacher could mark my report "could do better. Splitting them by period we can see a pretty varied scope:

  • Ancients - 3 (1 Bronze Age, 2 Punic Wars)
  • AWI - 5
  • ECW - 2
  • WAS - 5
  • SYW - 1
  • ACW - 4
  • Spanish American War - 1

These were all one-off games except for 1 PBEM AWI and 1 solo WAS campaign.

Split by 'mode'

  • 3 games I hosted remotely; 
  • 12 remote games hosted by Jonathan Freitag*; 
  • 1 was PBEM; 
  • 5 were solo. 

No face-to-face games: how very 21st century. Or you could say "should get out more".

* and many plaudits go to Jonathan for his hosting, and scenario preparation, and rules revisions.

Broken down by rules used:

  • Jolly Broom Man's AWI campaign rules - 1
  • Homebrew WAS rules - 1
  • Jon's ECW rules - 2
  • Loose Files & American Scramble -3
  • Basic Impetus - 3
  • Twilight of the Soldier Kings - 4
  • Fields of Honor (with period variants) - 7

First off the blocks for 2024. 

Interestingly, I seem to be drifting more into the War of the Austrian Succession than SYW at the moment, looking at the numbers above.


Conclusions and Thoughts for 2024

In terms of games, I want to do more. The main thing that's held back the number of solo games is ....me. I've allowed things to drift. Partly this is motivation - but I want to do more and will get more out of it if I game more. A bit of it is connected to not having a permanent set-up. A part of it is also settin-up big games. Twilight of the Soldier Kings is great because it gives a good, historically plausible game in a few hours. I tend to spend too long on the set-up. If I can find a more efficient way of setting-up I can get more games in.

Painting levels are OK. I don't have a massive lead pile. I have some odds and sods that have been hanging around undercoated for a while, but these are 'ancillary pieces' (pack animals, villagers etc). Having initially said I will keep my Spanish and Piedmontese WAS collection down, I am very tempted to get more. (1) because I like doing them; (2) I am getting into the 'sub-period' the more I find out about it**; and (3) because I really 'need' more ;-). Actually I'll get some games in with what I've got first. If I do go ahead with it, I'll probably do c.1000 figures. The amounts of Spanish and Piedmontese in the total for 2023 was 965.  I know when I have them, I can churn them out.

** in fact, as well as the WAS, there are several battles in the War of the Polish Succession I fancy having a go at too. So don't be surprised to see Guastalla on the table.

I doubt I will be adding to my ECW collection (I managed to get through 2023 without touching them) or my AWI forces.

At some point I really need to think about my book collection. I have outgrown my cabinet and I have to question whether I will read them all again. So maybe some need to go out of the door before more come in?

I will be disposing of some figures soon. The Erbprinz said he wants to store his Napoleonic Prussians at his place when I suggested e-Bay. My Baccus Anglo-Spanish-Portuguese chaps could do with a new home. Some other unpainted figures will be going out of the door sooner than later.

None of this addresses what else I would like to do in the future. Ancients and Colonial have long-been kicked around as unfulfilled aspirations, but nothing solid has been done about it. Partly this is hesitation over acquiring a heap of new terrain and buildings, to say nothing of more books and 'research'. Another 'itch' to scratch is an 18th C Ottoman army. Campaigns figure large in my wish list too. I had ideas for an ECW mini-campaign nearly 3 years ago and have done sweet FA about it. And I keep saying, the Italian WAS campaign is imminent!

The shape of things to come?


Expect some more navel gazing. Oh that reminds me. I have been thinking about buying a handful of 18th C ships (scales down from 1/300th) for the Med aspects of my WAS campaigning and possibly for the Great Lakes/AWI. I can find ships for the Napoleonic era and for the Anglo-Dutch Wars/Pirates period, but nothing specifically for the mid-century. Any ideas will be gratefully received.



Monday, 8 January 2024

We regret to announce...

....a delay in the war in Italy. This weekend was looking clear. No commitments. No football to watch. But before my morning swim yesterday I felt a bit of the fatigue I've been suffering from lately. I went ahead with the swim, taking it fairly easily, but the rest of the day I basically couldn't be bothered to do anything for the rest of the day*. Sunday started with very bright weather. The sort of weather that just cried out for a walk. So after a slow morning, the Margravina and I walked in to Richmond and headed for the Curzon Cinema to watch One Life, which was as good as I expected. Back at home energy levels were low and I ended up having a two hour kip.

* I did finish off the Leven buildings later in the evening though - I thought I'd taken a photo but it seems to have disappeared.

So instead I'll offer up some snaps from our mini-break in Lincoln between Christmas and New Year. Most of them are self-explanatory I hope.

View from the temporary Margravian residence

The local burg looks impressive, but unfinished. I shall have to send the margravate's engineer to study it.


A cold and wet day, but it was warm in 'the big church on the hill'. Glad to see the CofE has joined the 21st century and has contactless donation terminals.

Closer examination of this carving reveals people near the hand 

Apologies, I don't know the terminology for church architecture, but this is spectacular!

Various regimental colours in the Armed Forces Chapel. These all look post-1801 Act of Union as they have St.Patrick's Cross. 

More colours starting with the Grenadier Guards, a unit with close ties to Lincolnshire along with the 10th Foot/Royal Lincs Regt (obviously), and a number of the SAS 'Originals'. One of the lancer regiments too, but I can't remember if it was the 17th or 21st.



One for our Antipodean brethren. Links with Lincs presumably as it was such an important area for Bomber Command.




Big Sis explained that this gargoyle is very modern, dating to the period after the financial crash of 2008/Credit Crunch

Remains of one of the towers from a Roman gateway

Another Roman gateway

Random shot of a wonky building. Lots of these in different sizes and shapes. One of them on Steep Hill, houses a model shop - could find nothing that I needed though.

This roof appealed to me. Something of the Old School 18th century Wargame about it, though I guess it would be difficult to model the curves, if you're not rich enough for those German model railway buildings.

The old Liberal Club building. It must have been grand in its day.


Lincolnshire red wine?! Wasn't bad, but the winery has closed now apparently. Good with that Lincolnshire delicacy Haslet. I meant to get some to bring back to the benighted lands of the South, but forgot. Growing up I didn't realise haslet was an especially Yellowbelly thing. It was just something my dad had in his 'packing up'.

I didn't make it to the Bomber Command Memorial as it was closed. But definitely next time. Also didn't get to see the Magna Carta as it wasn't on display. Hopefully I'll get to see it another time. All in all a lovely city to visit, and only 2 hours by train from Kings Cross. Even better was getting to see my biggest sister and brother, their spouses and 2 out of 3 of brother's children and his grandchildren. Brother's offspring have all migrated to the Lincoln area.




Thursday, 4 January 2024

Can you see what I see?

Packing material from a drawing board ordered by the Margravina for her horticultural designs. Dimensions are about 45 x 65 cm.


For those of you not on my wavelength, my recent acquisitions from Leven (below) could be used with it.

Clockwise from top left: Mediterranean church, monastery, Roman HQ, various Mediterranean houses/taverna.

I’m going to have to brush up my drawing skills.

PS I didn’t get a chance to run my Italian WAS campaign on 1st but the coming weekend looks promising.

Tuesday, 2 January 2024

Wargaming spooks in '70s TV fiction

No, surprisingly not Callan this time. Freeview channel 'London Live' (channel 8) has been showing another old, downbeat British 'spy' series from the 70s. Sandbaggers. I don't recall seeing this at the time, probably because it aired between 1978 and 1980 - when I was busy being a teenager. Here's the Wiki page on it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sandbaggers

Whenever I've remembered it's on, I've enjoyed watching it. In Monday's episode (series 1, episode 4) one of the aspirant recruits to the 'Sandbaggers' team turns out to be a wargamer, as are several other possibly compromised security-related public employees. So be careful down at your local club!

PS, the reason for the cancellation of the programme is worth a series in its own right (see the Wiki article).