Friday, February 18

"Firing into the Brown" #7 - Books, LCT's and sundry stuff..

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update...

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

I have been to...  "Landing Craft Tank LCT 7074"

Been meaning to share these pictures for ages as I found the subject fascinating..  last summer I took a ride down to Southsea on my new then e-bike ('Gertude', by the way..  don't ask..) as part of a circumnavigation of Portsea island - done for no other reason than it was a lovely warm day, with little breeze (so no sailing) and I had a new electric bike to ride..

Outside the D-Day museum (which I must revisit soon as I haven't been inside in ages) they now have a new installation - the last every surviving Landing Craft (Tank) in the UK, and according to the information I've read the last surviving LCT that was actually present on the beaches on D-Day.

She was saved from a life on the bottom of Birkenhead docks, where it had sunk following an interim life as a club house and then a nightclub (!), and restored/returned to it's war time appearance with a National Lottery grant - and it is huge... 

On D-Day this would have carried 10 tanks, the display has a couple of the Museums exhibits in it (a Churchill and a Sherman), it's a Mark 3 version, one of about 250 built..  She had a crew of 12, maximum speed of 9 knots provided by twin 460HP engines (fairly unusually she had petrol rather than diesel engines), about a 190 feet long..

The vessel was built in just three months by Hawthorn Leslie on Tyneside, at a cost of about £28,000, the equivalent of just over a million pounds today.

The "17" is to indicate that she was part of the 17th LCT flotilla, and given that she was only launched on April 4th, she had just two short months to prepare for D-Day (in fact, less than that, as she had engine problems after launch). Evidently this preparation was successful though, as on the day, commanded by Sub Lt John Baggott RNVR (picture following), a trainee solicitor in Swindon in "real" life, she landed 9 of her 10 Sherman's (another source says she had 1 Cromwell tank, 2 Sherman tanks and 7 Stuart - but confirms 9 of them were landed) on Gold Beach in support of the British and Canadian landings.. as ever, it is the story of ordinary people doing extraordinary things that leaves you gob smacked..

Sub-Lieutenant John Baggott RNVR, who commanded LCT 7074.
© National Museum of the Royal Navy

Then check the following (picture courtesy and copyright  the IWM) which is fascinating..  first..  look at the hole in side of the LCT next to them ... two, the Germans on 7074 don't seem to be too bothered about having been captured.. and three, on the back of the LCT with the hole you can just see written "looters will be shot", clearly the crew of that LCT were very proprietorial..  😁

LCT7074 7th June 1944 on Gold Beach with enemy prisoners for return to the UK. © IWM

"While I breathe, I hope" - inscription on the bridge..

After D Day she continued in her role of delivering men and tanks to Normandy, and over the following months made 32 landings in all.

To get an idea of the size of it - this might help with scale...

 
 
More here (3 and 4 in particular, are very interesting): 
  1. https://www.nationalhistoricships.org.uk/register/713/lct-7074
  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMLCT_7074
  3. https://www.combinedops.com/WW2_LANDING_CRAFT_LCT_7074_RESTORATION.htm
  4. https://blog.twmuseums.org.uk/lct-7074-hebburns-remarkable-d-day-survivor/
  5. https://museumcrush.org/worlds-last-d-day-landing-craft-tank-to-be-restored-and-displayed-in-southsea/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Just finished this one which was very good ..

David Gilman is probably better known as the author of the 100 Years War series of books featuring the archer turned knight Sir Thomas Blackstone, and very good they are as well - now to my knowledge that author hasn't completed that series but clearly fancied a change as a couple of books ago he started this series, set in modern times, and featuring the ex French Foreign Legionnaire, Raglan..

Raglan served a long and eventful career in the Legion in their special ops regiment, where he cultivated a number of very useful friends and contacts, one of whom, in this book has disappears in mysterious circumstances leaving only a message that if he does so, Raglan is to be contacted..

Raglan follows the clues, meets a number of people who do and don't help him, kills a fair number of them (😀), hunts and is hunted, but in the end tracks down his man (or rather woman) and Armageddon then ensues in the middle of a jungle..

I have never read any Jack Reacher books, but am enjoying the Amazon Prime series, and I can't help thinking Raglan and Reacher would enjoy each others company - wouldn't want to be in the pub with them at the same time though!

If you like special ops, Frederick Forsyth level weaponry and procedural detail, and a very easy reading thriller style, this is the one for you..  I do, so it's recommended...  9/10.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Elsewhere, re-basing has started..

These (following) are classed as already "good to go", being based to the standard size/look that I will do the rest with..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

"Laters", as the young people are want to say...

Friday, February 11

"Firing into the Brown" #6 - The Chattanooga is Hunted, and stuff..

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Regiments of renown"...   an occasional series...    also known as tricorne porn... 😄  

Longer ago than I can ever remember this was the picture that resulted in me painting the same regiment - the Royal Italien Regiment - for my Marlburian project ...

It may very well be, that I saw it in Wargames Illustrated but I honestly can't remember..   I think they are Front Rank figures, but whoever painted them, they were/are stunning (well done whoever it was), and provided the impetus to do the same for my little corner of the wargame world.. those brown coats with the red linings/turn backs really appealed...

The regiment (one of 52 raised by Louis in the period up to 1684!) was raised on April 27 1671, following a commission issued by Louis in the same year, by the Count Magalotti a naturalised Frenchman originally from the Florence area of Italy and formerly a captain in the Gardes Françaises. Recruitment was in Italy and the Piedmont region..

The regiment initially consisted of 27 companies, each of 204 men (that is huge!!) and Louis XIV was so satisfied when he inspected the regiment that he immediately decided to name it “Royal-Italien”. On the same occasion, he decided to dress the regiment with brown uniforms which was the same colour as the justaucorps - or coat - that he was wearing on the day of the review.

In 1672, during the Franco-Dutch War (1672-78), the newly raised regiment joined the Army of Flanders and took part in numerous operations and sieges, and also the battles of  Seneffe, Cassel and Saint-Denis. The regiment was reduced to 12 companies immediately after the war ended

My feeble copy...

In 1689, during the Nine Years' War (1688-97), the regiment was again busy, being at numerous skirmishes, sieges and offensives, and the battles of Fleurus, Steenkerque (where it distinguished itself) and Landen.

In 1701, at the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession, the regiment counted only one battalion and was still serving with the Army of Flanders. In 1702, the regiment were at Nijmegen; in 1703, at the sieges of Alt-Breisach and Landau and in the victorious skirmish at Speyerbach; in 1706, at Ramillies and the defence of Menin; in 1708, at Oudenarde; in 1709  at Malplaquet; and they served to 1713 in numerous other skirmishes, battles and sieges.

These guys deserve a new flag and I think I know just where to go for it [clicky]. They were completed back in March 2007, and are Warrior Miniatures figures

Bit more here:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Hunt the Chattanooga

In a triumphant conclusion to the mini naval campaign that I have featured over the previous weeks, I can confirm that the Confederate ironclad Chattanooga has been located and sunk..   but that kind of gets us ahead of the curve..

So as a reminder the Union fleet was as follows, comprising a Monitor, and two heavy woodenclads. The ships were at almost full strength (minor damage was accrued during the previous days of the campaign due to enemy action), but the most significant impact was to the firepower of the Monitor that had lost one of their two heavy guns due to equipment failure in a previous engagement..

...and then there is the Chattanooga, a "standard" (if there is such a thing) Confederate Casemate ironclad - strongly armoured and, for the Confederacy, well armed..

A few shots of the action follow - but in summary the Union ships sort to divide and conquer - splitting their attack so as to come at the ironclad from three different sides...

The woodenclads, being armed with light and medium guns were always going to struggle putting in damage on the ironclad, but in the end sheer weight of numbers began to have an effect, and in one lucky shot the ironclads steering was damaged and she ran aground - happily for her with enough arc of fire to keep up her bombardment..

The ironcald managed to get afloat a few turns later and but with mounting damage decided to try and make a break for the river..

Taking damage as she went..

Until the inevitable happened, and with one mighty broadside her guns were silenced and she struck to the triumphant Union commander, but not before she had done the same to one of the Union woodenclads - but Union mission complete!

The butchers bill..  two ships all but destroyed, but the Monitor only with light damage, and with a replacement gun would soon be back in action. All in all a good outcome, especially in light of the other successful actions over the previous days...

That was good fun, but that's enough Ironclad action for the time being - on to other things..... 😁

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

"Laters", as the young people are want to say...

Friday, February 4

"Firing into the Brown" #5 - Campaign finale, Pedestal and stuff..

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Been waiting to read this one for an age - probably from the first time I saw that it had been published as I am a bit of a Hastings fan boy, and I'm not sure I've read a duff one by him..

Pedestal was the code name for the operation to send a relief convoy to Malta in 1942, and this history was a bit of an eye opener measured against what I thought I knew already..

So what did I take away from this??

First , in 1942 the Royal Navy was nowhere near as accomplished as they were to become in the sphere of anti submarine warfare..  ASDIC was coming on line, but the in depth courses that taught the escort commanders how to tackle the submarine threat were some way in the future - the book is replete with examples of how the ships were just not used in the right way, and how exposed convoys and ships were at this time of the war to submarine attack..  in perhaps the luckiest night for submarines in WW2 an Italian commander sank an oil tanker, and the German U73 sank the aircraft carrier Eagle..

Second, ground to air (or in this case sea to air) coordination was also in it's infancy - despite having successfully offloaded almost 50 Spitfires to Malta, the lack of coordination between Malta and the convoy resulted in huge gaps in air cover for the convoy..

Three, British carrier born aircraft of the period were woefully under powered and under spec when compared with the enemies they were expected to take on in the air - the carriers had Hurricanes and Fairey Fulmars/Albacores, when what they needed was Spitfires.. the carriers themselves were wooden decked (little or no armour plating) and lacked the ability to get lots of planes into the air at the same time

Sinking of HMS Eagle..

Fourth, convoy coordination/communication was also in it's infancy, the Royal Navy put together a convoy comprising fast modern merchant ships (all of them were capable of 16 knots) but once the attacks started going in (by submarine, aircraft, and gunboats) most communication appears to have been by Aldis light as it was quicker and safer than transmitting in plain English..

Fifth, as in the Napoleonic wars, the British navy needed destroyers (frigates) by the score - they were the maids of all work; fast, well armed for their size..  the Navy sent a number of cruisers as convoy escort, but they were almost a liability, requiring more protection themselves than the support they provided, ditto the aircraft carriers -  there almost seemed a palpable relief when the point was reached on the convoy when the capital ships could be sent back to Gibraltar

All in all then a HUGE undertaking, and Hastings does touch on the multitude of views as to whether the action, and the casualties , were justified, but I tend towards his view, and also Churchill's that it was absolutely the right thing to do, and the right time to do it... 

A warts and all history treating each side to an equal review of their good and bad, tactics, personal performance of the offensive forces..  my overwhelming opinion at the end of it was huge respect for the merchant seamen who got those ships to Malta, and the clear indication that the Navy were ready to learn from the mistakes. Good read..   9/10.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

ACW Riverine Campaign – “Hunt the Chattanooga” - Summary Campaign diary

I'll shove this in full on the ACW Naval Project page (link in the sidebar) but as the campaign has come to an end, a summary of the actions and events seems timely..

Union Force/background:
  • Monitor (10 SP)  plus two decent wooden clads (8SP each and with a good light and medium armament)
  • Two additional ships as transports
  • Union player starts with 20 victory points (VP's)
  • 5 turns per day
Day 1

1st Turn
    • Shore battery identified comprising two earthwork batteries (10 DF each/trained; one with 4 light rifles, one with 1 medium smoothbore)
    • Union commander decides to send the Monitor in holding back the more vulnerable wooden clads, both batteries are destroyed but the Monitor takes a point of damage
3rd Turn
    • Confederate heavy gunboat encountered (6DF/MRL and LRL)
    • Again the Union commander decides to send the Monitor in holding back the more vulnerable wooden clads - the gunboat is quickly overwhelmed and with both guns knocked out , runs for it!
5th Turn
    • Tributary is seen leading off the main river..
    • Small Confederate gunboat encountered (4DF/LRL and LRL).
    • This time the Union commander decides to send in the two wooden clads as well as Monitor for a quick finish – the Confederate gunboat is destroyed in the first turn with no damage to the Union ships...
Click to embigen

End of Day 1:
    • The Union supply ships have travelled one section behind all day and catch up overnight and rearm the Monitor… 
    • Victory points currently 33:
    • five turns so -5 pts
    • -3 (for damage) 
    • + 10 (2 shore batteries destroyed)
    • + 10 (heavy gunboat sunk/destroyed) 
Day 2

1st Turn 
    • There is a rudder malfunction on Union wooden clad #2 and she can only steer straight ahead - good news given we have a straight stretch of river!
    • Confederate hidden battery encountered comprising two earthwork batteries (10 DF each/trained; one with 4 medium smoothbores, one with 1 medium smoothbore)
    • Union commander decides to withdraw and try the tributary first
4th Turn
    • Rudder repaired on Union wooden clad #2 but no other issues other than some trouble working up steam on the Monitor
    • Union commander decides to rest for the night before taking on the earthwork the next morning
End of Day 2:

No ammunition has been expanded, and all ships apart from the supply vessels which were stationary all day, were stationary for two turns.. Union commander takes the opportunity to refuel

Day 3

1st Turn 
    • The Union master gunner has become convinced that one of the two guns on Monitor is prone to failure and is likely to burst (throw a 1 and it explodes)
    • The Confederate hidden battery comprises two earthwork batteries (10 DF each/trained; one with 4 medium smoothbores, one with 1 medium smoothbore)
    • Union commander attacks with his full force in line ahead focussing on the stronger battery first..
    • With minor damage to the two wooden clads (1SP each) the two forts are overcome, but the Monitor does indeed lose one of it's guns in the process a major blow to the Union fleet
5th Turn 
    • No further issues during the day - the Union commander orders his force to anchor for the evening and brings the supply ships up from the section behind.
End of Day 3:
    • Union commander takes the opportunity to refuel the second supply ship..
    • VP's 36 (following victory over the batteries and losses to damage)

"...'ere 'Ank, did you hear that funny cracking noise last time we fired??"

Day 4

1st Turn 
    • Union wooden clad #1 runs hard aground and is well and truly stuck fast (roll a d6 at the start of each turn. The vessel is freed on a roll of 5+ but becomes permanently trapped if a 1 is rolled)
    • Union commander decides to halt until the ship is freed.
2nd Turn
    • By supreme effort the crew of Union wooden clad #1 managed to club haul her off the sand bank she became stuck on and the fleet is free to proceed…
    • No further issues during the day other than intermittent boiler issues on Union wooden clad #2 reports – speed is reduced but sufficient to keep up with the fleet (d6 roll of 5+ at the start of each subsequent turn will solve the problem)..
End of Day 4:
    • All ships were stationary for one turn while the wooden clad was freed up – no ammunition was expended. 
    • VP's 31

Day 5

1st Turn
    • Union wooden clad #2 reports boiler issues continue; somewhat shame faced the captain of Union wooden clad #1 reports that he has run hard aground again!
    • The fleet remain stationary for the whole of the day while they work to refloat Union wooden clad #1
End of Day 5:
    • All ships were stationary for all but one turn while the wooden clad tried to free up – no ammunition was expended. 
    • VP's 26
Day 6

1st Turn
    • By the supreme effort throughout the night by the crews of all the Union ships, they are able to report in the morning that Wooden Clad #1 is afloat again and ready to proceed. 
    • Pausing only to allow time for food and coffee the Union commander orders “up steam”.. and the Union flotilla departs
2nd Turn 
    • The lead ship identifies a Confederate shore battery comprising two earthworks both with rifled artillery (3 in one, 2 in the other). Union commander orders his force to open fire immediately..
    • Despite opening fire first, the initial Union broadside is devastating, completely destroying the first earthwork with one barrage! The other is also quickly reduced…
3rd  Turn 
    • The lead Union ship spots a huge Confederate ironclad – they have found their prey! The Union commander orders full ahead and all ships engage… 
Stay tuned for a battle report!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Not a great one for film critiquing but this was an unexpectedly good watch (I got it on Netflix) so I thought I'd pass the word to my reader, since wargamers do not live by little metal men and acrylic paint alone..

This is a docudrama on the Iranian embassy siege in 1980, the background of which in the film was good and also informative - despite having seen the pictures in the press and knowing about the SAS assault I hadn't realised what the hostage takers had been asking for, or indeed how duplicitous the Iraqi's were in all this.

The role of the negotiator I wouldn't have wished on my own worst enemy - between the Iranians on one side and Margaret on the other there was no way they were every going to get a good result by talking.. Mark Strong played the role brilliantly.

The role of the SAS is known, but as their representative Whitehall advised Cobra (the mini cabinet that meets in all emergency situations)  they are not supermen, and it was always going to be messy... and so it was (if the film is to be believed), with one of the SAS men being trapped while abseiling down the front of the building, and lots of smoke and confusion, but despite that, all hostages were freed (apart from one the terrorists killed during the siege, and one they killed before it) - and the terrorists? Well only one survived and he was paroled 25 years later.

Reading up on this on Wiki after seeing the film (well you do don't you..) the film looks to have been pretty close to the actual reality - the only major difference being the role of the diplomatic policeman who was taken hostage at the same time was under played in the film - in reality he got the George Cross for his actions during the assault, and it's a shame the film couldn't show that...

Well worth a watch - I'll give it an 8 out of 10..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Laters, as the young people are want to say...

Friday, January 28

"Firing into the Brown" #4 - rebasing, books, campaigns, profits..

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Time for another update...

Getting slowly into the swing of things..  first off the WW2 French rebasing may be complete, but it's now time for the Germans, who are currently based on a variety of base sizes, and with a variety of basing styles..  

I'll be standardising on the same basing I used for the allied contingent...  pennies for the grunts, 2p's for the officers/command, and standardised (as much as possible) basing for the vehicles..

As you can see - three of the bases are done already - the anti tank guns at bottom in the following were the last items added to the project back in 2018..

Quick/cheap basing tip - get a bag of pennies from the bank - did you know you can get a hundred for only a pound - bargain! 😁 

Better get on with it then...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 


From the Times last Saturday...  not my cup of tea, but "sci-fi slash fantasy" doesn't offend the modern sensibilities for 'glorifying war', and we've all been locked in for a few years with money to spend and a need for entertainment, so perhaps not so surprising ..

Hornby have seen much the same; "As predicted in a trading update issued in April, Hornby has achieved sales of £48.5m for the year to 31st March 2021, up 28% on the year before. The company said that the company has swung to a pretax profit of £345,000 compared with a loss of £3.4m for fiscal 2020" (source was an industry mag), wonder what their results will be this year?

... interesting, eh?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Maigret is going about his work in rainy Paris, shadowed by Inspector Pyke who is on secondment from Scotland Yard to study the famous French detective's methods. The routine is disturbed when Maigret receives a telephone call from the island of Porquerolles, and island off the Mediterranean coast of France, just east of Toulon. 

A small-time crook has been murdered, the night after he had fervently declared his friendship with Maigret in front of a large group of the island's inhabitants... 

Maigret and Pyke head to Porquerolles to investigate further and in doing so get to meet an extensive cast of locals, rich (and not so rich) exiles, fishermen, local policemen, waiters and waitresses (since there is always food, and the local white wine)

Stunning book, Maigret is as much about the local atmosphere and scenery, and life, and food, as it is abut the crime, and Porquerolles sounds like the kind of place I would very much like to go to..   9/10

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

Click to embigen as they say...
I am being stupidly entertained at the moment by the item to the left that was recommended to me by my reader in a comment on the last post (cheers, Jim!)..

It's available on the Wargames Vault [clicky] for a stupidly small amount of money, and while I suspect that most people will buy it for the myriad ship details/data in support of the rules (and has anyone played them by the way? I am intrigued as to whether they are worth a punt) what was specifically recommended to me was the included solitaire campaign..

I was playing around with this at the weekend, with no intention of starting it in earnest, and here we are several (real) days later and I am at the end of the 3rd day of the campaign! 😁

My campaign is called "Hunt the Chattanooga" but in essence the campaign is about hunting down a Confederate ironclad, on a stretch of river nominally in Confederate hands. 

You play the Union commander with a fleet of 5 ships (3 warships, 2 supply ships) looking to find the aforesaid ironclad which intelligence says is being built/prepared, and which needs to be stopped before it wreaks havoc on Union shipping..

The campaign documentation has an entertaining mechanism to randomly build the course of your river, with river bank terrain, a random effects chart for the Union ships (mechanical defects, rudder issues, etc.) and also what in D&D terms would have been called a "wandering monster" roll for any Confederate forces encountered as you advance up the river...including aforesaid ironclad..

Generating the river as you move along it is proving more entertaining than you would expect and the map following/right shows my progress to the end of Day 3 which as been eventful for the Union to say the least, despite them not yet finding the Confederate ironclad.

"Hunt the Chattanooga" - Click to embigen...

As my Union force I chose a monitor and two good timber-clads (ie. biggish ships, but with light armour although a decent armament), because as David says, where's the fun in a fleet comprised entirely of ironclads, and I wanted a bit of a challenge..

So how is it going?

There have been a number of small skirmishes (too small to put on the table, but easy enough to work out with paper, pen and dice) with battles against gunboats large and small, and also Confederate batteries on the banks of the river armed with random numbers/types/weights of gun. 

I would say that while the Union fleet have been successful to date, their progress has not been without incident..

On day 3, when the force was taking on a Confederate hidden battery, that had surprised them by suddenly opening fire, the return fire from the Union ships resulted in one of the two guns on the monitor exploding - a fairly major setback as the two guns on the monitor are the largest the Union have, and will be critical when taking on the Confederate ironclad

As well as that, other engagements have also seen ships being damaged, but as of the end of day 3, the Union fleet is still complete, and I would calculate about 75-80% effective - supplies are good (one of my supply ships is carrying fuel, one ammunition) and there's no need to withdraw yet. 

Next step for the Union commander is to push on round the bend of the river to see what awaits..  

As a campaign resource very much recommended, and for not much more than a pint in cost - stay tuned for further campaign updates...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

 Laters, as the young people are want to say...

Friday, January 21

"Firing into the Brown" # 3 - Riverine encounter, books and tanks

"So Carnehan weeds out the pick of his men, and sets the two of the Army to show them drill and at the end of two weeks the men can manoeuvre about as well as Volunteers. So he marches with the Chief to a great big plain on the top of a mountain, and the Chiefs men rushes into a village and takes it; we three Martinis firing into the brown of the enemy".

Kipling "The Man Who Would Be King"

Time for another update, and settling into our new name...... 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Back in November of the year before last I added some more iron/cotton/timber clad ships ships to the ACW Naval project (22/11/20 [clicky]), but as I was tidying the loft up the other day I was reminded that I hadn't actually used them in a game yet!

I'm a die hard fan of an (as yet?) unpublished set of rules for the period that I got from the inestimable Bill Gilchrist [clicky] donkeys years ago.. to my mind they play well with just the right level of complexity and simplicity to allow a thinking mans game that isn't too mired in the minutiae of how many inches of armour, and pounds of shot the ships are carrying that a lot of other rules for the period suffer from..

Decision made, and striking while the iron was hot the table was set for a swift set to primarily featuring the new additions..

Table set up - Confederate navy starts from the top of the following picture, which depicts the engagement area - a wide stretch of river with a few islands, one of which is occupied (but plays no part)..  as is so usual in the period, one force (the Confederates) are trying to get through to the other side of the table so as to force a passage for much needed supplies, but are opposed by a smaller, but better quality, Union force..

Opposing forces, following - Union on the left, Confederate on the right.. I thought a 3 vs 4 game might be fun - as said I've even up the odds by making the Union force slightly better lead in terms of commander quality..

Start of the game:

Opening positions as follows..

The Confederates win the initiative and dive to the right so as to pass the island to their left, the Union force conforms (possibly a mistake, but we shall see) - initial fire is largely ineffective, with only a couple of hits.. (black pompom in any of the following signifies a hit)...


In following moves the Confederates turn to port so as t open up their broadsides for firing, and rain steel down on the Union ships, causing multiple hits..

It is at this point that both commanders (ie. me) realises it would have made good sense to get one or two ships down the other side of the island so as to flank the other force, but too late now, and as is often the way with wargames, a 6 foot by 4 foot table is entirely negated as the entire action is fought in an area one foot square!

The Union double-ender following is running perilously close to shallows, but you can see the weight of fire concentrated on just three ships.. the damage to the small gunboat in particular is considerable (from memory, in addition to the loss of strength points they also suffered damage to steering, and also confusion on board - the gunboat was hit hard.

In the next turn the Union win the initiative, with 3 actions, but with the exception of a success in stopping the double ender careering off the table, their firing is largely ineffective.. The Confederate turn is mostly concerned with recovering damage on the small gunboat which they manage to do only by using all action points, but they also manage to shield it by interposing another one of their ships by way of an obstruction..  the iron continues to fly.. 

Close quarter manoeuvring continued, both sides were on no more than 3" movement (dead slow in rules terms)

..until eventually the inevitable happens and the small Confederate gunboat is sunk (bottom in the following) and the Union sidewheeler (top middle) is also dispatched..  both sides have lost a ship, but the Union ship carried more firepower and is the greater loss..

Key point - the Confederate side wheeler has tried to force it's way through so as to open up some space for manoeuvre, but the Union double ender is having none of it and rams them causing considerable damage both to themselves and the sidewheeler (neither of them are specially equipped for ramming) - honours go to the sidewheeler though - she fires everything from both sides and both ends and causes huge damage to the Union stern wheeler..

The Confederates push the advantage and continue to attempt a force through..  the sidewheeler pulls away from the collision firing as it goes, their big sidewheeler is trying to pass (left in the following) and the big cotton clad (bottom right) is also moving up..

Boom! 

Five hits on the Union stern wheeler (following) and she disappears beneath the muddy water in an explosion of smoke and steam - the Union double ender, their last ship - top right - deciding that discretion is the better part of valour, opens up all the valves and scarpers for home..


...the butchers bill..  a victory to the Confederacy but hard fought..

 
Post match analysis:
  • A most enjoyable game - you'll note in the last picture that I knocked up some plastic heat sealed ship templates, with a handy picture of the actual model to help navigate through multiple cards. In the old days we would have used chinagraph pencils [clicky] but I use old dry marker pens from work to mark off and remove any specific damages/speeds etc move by move...
  • I would say 3 or 4 ships a side is about the maximum that you can play solo - the wipe off cards were a big help as there was space for any specific notes I needed to remember move to move (eg. moves required because of turning, or rudder damage, heavy gun reload etc. etc.)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Well this one was a pleasant surprise..  it was offered for free on Kindle as a loan under my Prime membership - not something I've seen before, but as the subject matter looked interesting I took them up on the offer, and because I was fresh from an extended stay in Dickensian London and was looking for something light to clean the palate I started this straight after..

Well worth it I would say - even though I got it for free - while it wasn't 100% polished, the story, and characters, developed nicely as the book progressed and the background was interesting as well. 

The story concerns one Jack Pembroke, a Royal Navy Lieutenant in WW2, suffering what we would now call PTSD as a result of events/wounds at Dunkirk, but after physical recovery given command of a small group of converted trawlers equipped for mine sweeping in South Africa. 

The story concerns his coming to terms with the psychological effects on him of his experience at Dunkirk, but also at the same time learning the in's and out's of command over a disparate bunch of sailors (regulars and volunteers, British and South African), while at the same time doing the hideously dangerous job of clearing mines, but also dealing with the risk of German surface raiders, and increasingly, U Boats.

Bodes well for the next book which I will definitely be reading..  8/10.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The French tanks in the last post, or more particularly the camouflage, seemed to chime with my reader, so by way of an interlude - here is something that popped up on my Farcebook feed this week...

I had the very good fortune to visit the Musee des Blindes in Saumur (which is the French equivalent of Bovington) years ago (2006!! 😲), so have followed them on FB for some time..  the R35 in the video had been out on loan and returned to the museum recently so they put up a short video..  brilliant isn't it... 😀

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'Laters', as the young people are want to say...