Napoleonic, WSS & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that


Wednesday, 29 March 2023

Guest Spot: The Mighty Albannach (30mm ECW)

 I'm delighted to feature some photos very kindly sent by my good friend Albannach (Iain). He is a great fan of vintage 30mm - especially the Jason range produced by Les Higgins, back in another century.


He writes: Very happy for you to feature these. The command are two Traditions sculpted by Stadden. There is one Tradition musketeer and one pikeman, interestingly the latter is marked 'Marcus Hinton' on the base. The rest of the foot are Higgins

I [also] have nine mounted figures, but need to find a painter to do them justice. 

 

If anyone has any of these figures, or knows of any, or has any interesting information about them, please send a note for Iain to this blog and I'll pass it on.

In the meantime, here are some delightful pictures for your delectation. The big figures certainly have a presence, don't they? Many thanks, Iain!










Sunday, 26 March 2023

Hooptedoodle #439 - Resumption of Normal Service

 In case you didn't miss me - I'm back!

This blog has been invisible to anyone apart from myself for a few days; if you were refused entry during this period, please don't take it personally. Regard it, rather, as a little holiday.

This short spell of solitary has been a further step to shift the attention of a nasty little bot which has been "scraping and copying" the content of my blog for years, and reproducing it on a supposedly legitimate website, along with a huge amount of other stuff, including news items and assorted clickbait, to generate advertising revenue. I shall not mention the name of this website (partly since I cannot utter the word without swearing aloud); let us just say that it is US-based, caters for software engineers, offering job adverts, techie tips and presumably providing yet another dark place where they may avoid doing any actual work or meeting any real people. I complained about it some years ago, but was afforded very little sympathy or help either by Google or the regulators.

Things appear to have moved on a little - work has been going on in the US to limit this kind of thing. I am gratified to note that it is now 3 months since one of my posts was ripped off; since this was pretty much continuous for years, I guess something has changed. Maybe the bots finally realised that my work was not quite on-stream for their readership.


Whatever, I've changed my Blogger settings back to "public", which is why you are able to read this, and, without wishing to tempt fate, I may have a beer with my lunch today.

Cheers!

Saturday, 11 March 2023

Battle of Orthez - 27th Feb 1814 - C&C game

 On Wednesday I hosted a C&C miniatures game - the Battle of Orthez. The plan was to play this as a 4-handed game, but sadly Stryker was unable to join us, because of illness in his family, so Goya commanded all the Allies, and The Archduke and I had the French.

A crowded field - lots of troops, and rather busy terrain - the scenario was basically the "Epic" game taken from the C&C user site, scaled down a bit for troop numbers and physical size to fit my 17 x 9 hex table.

As ever, the game was enjoyable, though the action developed rather slower than usual, no doubt because of the complexity of the terrain, and we did not finish. The official Victory Point requirement for the win was 12 points (which included some points for possession of built-up areas and hills), and we were at 10-9 to the Allies at the point where we had to adjourn to get some dinner and allow Goya to get his train! In fairness (as ever), I think that if this had been the historical end to the action then Soult would have been obliged to retreat (again).

 
My camera was giving me some problems on Wednesday, so there are less photos than usual; here is the view from behind the French left flank, early on. The French army finds itself in an unfamiliar situation for the Peninsular War, defending a ridge position. The town of Orthez is top centre; the pale green counters on the edge of the board indicate where the French reserves may appear later - the bad news for the French is that the reserves are very poor conscripts, rated as "Militia" for C&C purposes, which means they are disadvantaged in melee combat, and potentially suffer triple retreats!
 
 
Here we are behind the French right (which was my view for the day). In the foreground is the village of St Boès, and beyond it the walled churchyard, where the 25ème Léger held out for most of the day
 
 
On the Allied right, two regiments of Light Dragoons (correct 1814-vintage chaps in shakoes, kindly supplied by Goya) splash through the fords across the river (Gave de Pau, which nowadays seems to have mysteriously become the River Ousse) and force some of Harispe's infantry into square. The French cavalry obligingly shifted out of the way and left the infantry to get on with it! This was a nasty affair - the fighting here reduced all the units involved to a poor state - the French cavalry did appear later to see off the Light Dragoons...
 
 
On their left, the Allies seemed intent on attacking through the woods, Viet-Cong style. I think some work on the C&C house rules is required for our next game here - otherwise I may be turning up with an army of elephants, for old times' sake
 
 
The Allies focused on Orthez and the churchyard, and their delay in attacking the centre gave the French time to develop their field artillery on the hills, which rather put paid to any major attack in that area subsequently
 
 
Harispe's boys working hard to hold Orthez - they lost part of it for a while, but took it back. The bridge over the river is blocked and may not be used, though the Allied artillery was a nuisance firing across the river
 
 
Rouget, in the centre of the French line, waiting for an attack which never came
 
 
After a prolonged struggle, the Allies took the churchyard - here the Brunswickers, from Walker's 7th Division, get the job of holding it
 
 
Near the end of the day, Taupin's Division, who as far as I recall never shot anyone, are still in position at St Boès, though they are no longer supporting the churchyard to their front. If the game had continued, things would probably have got more difficult for them


My thanks to Goya and the Archduke for their excellent company and the chat, for very kindly buying dinner (which was definitely not in the script!) and for making the trip for what was a terrific day.

 

Rules Observations

Some years ago (Oct 2018) I was disappointed in my attempt to produce a decent scenario for Eggmühl, since the C&C rules made it almost impossible for French troops to attack the big Austrian battalions in wooded country - the Austrians just shot them when they came in range. Subsequently I decided that the "Ranged Combat" effect of muskets needed some adjustment, and I added this to some experimental changes to introduce a dice-based activation system, replacing the Command Cards, to produce my own house-variant C&C game, Ramekin, which has served me well for a while now.

This week's game was excellent fun, but I fear that, in a fiddly terrain, one of the reasons we got a bit bogged down was exactly because ranged musketry was not effective enough, the game was dominated by artillery fire and melee combat (which is probably quite authentic for this battle) and the individual game turns were quite long.

I was left with a feeling that I would like to try the original C&C again - cards and all - and restore the Ranged Combat rules to their former strength. One feature of the original game is that the individual turns are short, but there are lots of them - I'd like to try that again. There is also a possibility that my rules have unwittingly pushed the game away from what the Real Guys would describe as "the true period flavour" [God help us].


Thursday, 2 March 2023

Orthez: Setting Up a Game by Very Small Steps

 I've now assembled the battlefield, which may be fudged slightly to get the soldiers in. I had a great idea for representing the famous Vieux Pont, but alas I was outsmarted by the fact that the bits didn't fit together as I had hoped. Never mind - I did (briefly) consider some brave scratchbuilding with spare MDF and porridge, but wimped out.

The soldiers can stay in their Cupboard and boxes until the day before the game (the game is Wednesday), to keep the dust and the sunlight off them - I have a sketch map showing who goes where, so that shouldn't take long. My house may be a shambles, but my soldiers are immaculate.

 
An empty Commands & Colors battlefield is an odd sight; this is the view from the North East, the French will be defending the long edge on our right here. This is the 10'4" x 5' version of my battleboard
 
 
Here, on the French right flank, you see the village of St Boès and its church
 
 
View from behind the Allied left, with St Boès at this end and Orthez at the far end. You get extra points if you spotted a couple of spare pieces of Mothercare's interlocking Safeplay floor leaning against the radiator. My table is based on a substratum of these - good for stability and sound insulation (in case the people who live under the table are disturbed by the warfare)
 
 
The scenery will not win many awards - here is my cheap-and-cheerful impression of the iconic bridge at Orthez. The 4 arches have become 1, the central tower has moved to one end. It is still unuseable, though, since the bridge and the archway have been blocked up with masonry, and one of the arches has been mined (see if you can guess which one). You will observe that by 1814 France had sunk to a state where all the stonemasons had been sent away to fight in the war.


Saturday, 25 February 2023

Battle Research - A Meeting with an Old Friend

 In my studies to put together a scenario for my forthcoming Battle of Orthez, I was recommended to have a look at a book by Major-General FC Beatson, published in 1925.

Now, as it happens, this book was one of a number of old hardbound volumes I once had, all previously the property of the library at Wellington School. They were pretty dirty, and they smelled of cigarette smoke and mildew and were generally unappetising. There came a time when I had to unload a lot of books - the collection had got out of hand, partly as a result of my working for a while just around the corner from the legendary MacNaughton's Book Shop, in Leith Walk, Edinburgh. The Beatson books didn't look particularly inspiring, and they went out in the clearance.

Well, I found that some of Beatson's back catalogue is now available on Kindle, so I bought this one for about £4.

You know what? - it's bloody good. It is deliberately aimed at officer trainees, and Beatson's rather eccentric use of punctuation takes a little getting used to, but it contains just the sort of nuts and bolts stuff about the organisation and narrative of a campaign that I thrive on, though it is definitely a product of its time and would probably chase most sensible readers away very quickly.

There is excellent material on routing the supply trains as the army moved north into France, and a lot of detail on the political difficulties caused by the confrontation between British officials and the Spanish Cortes. Being a Kindle edition, of course, the photos and maps have disappeared, but I can cover for that. 

It seems that Naval & Military stock a complete Beatson trilogy of Wellington's 1814 adventures, so you can still get them. I'm sure I had another volume, on Waterloo, but my personal legacy of Wellington School's military section included Fuller and a few others, so I may be mistaken about this.


 

With all due apologies to the Major-General for not being sufficiently respectful last time round, I am enjoying my new Kindle book.

Friday, 24 February 2023

Rumblings: Forthcoming Game - Orthez


I have a face-to-face wargame scheduled here for 8th March, which will be my first live 4-handed game for a couple of years, so I'm working on the scenario and the game details in preparation for that. It is to be the Battle of Orthez (27 Feb 1814), and I'm looking forward to it. Orthez, right at the tail end of the Peninsular War, is not quite my usual period, so I've been doing a lot of reading to get up to speed, and have enjoyed this. Should be a very decent game, I think. 

This blog has been quiet lately, and I've had a few kind emails from friends wondering whether I have, in fact, died, so I am pleased to announce that I am still around. I regret to say I've been struggling with depression since the New Year - not an unfamiliar companion - and have been deliberately keeping a low profile, but I like to think things are improving, and today's sunshine does no harm at all. I've been sort of waiting until I have something to say!


Sunday, 5 February 2023

Hooptedoodle #438 - Balloon of the Month?

 



I promised myself I would not get involved in any further political noises here, but I am sufficiently shaken by a recent article in the Sunday Telegraph to break my own ruling. Just this once, mind.

The person in the second photo may seem familiar to you. If you can't quite remember the name, or if it seems now like some fleeting practical joke which lost news value very quickly, I must (reluctantly) remind you that this person was - unbelievably - the shortest-lived UK Prime Minister in history. That's right - the one whose primary mission, as far as I can detect, was to make her immediate predecessor look rather less stupid in comparison.

Let us not dwell on the impact her brief stardom had on markets and the cost of borrowing. Although she seems intent on establishing a career as a public speaker (I hope she's very cheap), she has been pretty quiet since her dismissal, but she has now gone into print to claim that she was right, after all, and the world was too dumb to understand.

In particular, she has coined a bogey-man term which is new to me - she has blamed her failure on "the left-wing economic establishment". This is heavy stuff - something new for her readers to tremble at. I suspect that her use of "left-wing" in this context is a rather specialised one, meaning "having a shred of decency", but I hasten to add that I do not wish to know what it is intended to mean, and that I don't want anyone to damage what is left of their mental health by trying to make sense of it.

I am reluctant to post this, and will probably not publish any comments, but I feel obliged to make the point that, if I had a recent history as spectacularly embarrassing as hers, I would be hiding somewhere very obscure. I would not be waiting for Mr Sunak's downfall as an opportunity to leap back into the limelight.

I hope she keeps very quiet and just goes away. If the good citizens of Norwich are happy to keep her as their elected MP, then God bless them. If not, they know what to do about it.