Since my newly arrived Spanish light cavalry units have standard bearers - which is extremely unusual for my Napoleonic cavalry - I've had to make an effort to find out a bit more about the subject.
After an amusing afternoon playing around with PaintShop Pro, I've produced a couple of original efforts. I am not overly thrilled by the quality, but I believe that the real things were about 85cm high - you may include or exclude the fringes as you wish - so at approximately 1/72 scale they should print up OK. If they are of interest, please feel free to download and use them, but bear in mind that they are pretty much guesswork. The first one bears the arms of Merida (a town in Estremadura) and the second the royal seal of Ferdinand VII.
If anyone wishes to come up with the genuine regimental standard of the Husares de Estremadura and the Cazadores Voluntarios de Espana then I'll be delighted to use those instead!
Napoleonic & ECW wargaming, with a load of old Hooptedoodle on this & that
Sunday, 18 August 2013
Saturday, 17 August 2013
Hooptedoodle #93 - Trending with Bernard
I am quite a fan of Spotify, the online
music service – so much so that I actually pay for it, and I don’t know many
people who do that. Thus I find it a little disappointing that Spotify is
trying to condition me. I almost feel a bit betrayed.
See
what your friends have been listening to, it urges.
Why on earth would I want to do that? Not
so much because I don’t actually have friends, I hasten to add, but because,
though I really hope my friends are enjoying their choice of music, I am not
likely to be influenced one way or the other. And just a minute – what friends
are these? Does it know who my friends are? I get a faint whiff of decaying
spam – is it possible that Facebook is involved somewhere here?
Ah yes – social networking. How nice.
Maria
Seadyke is trending near you, says Spotify.
Who? – who is doing what?
You
recently listened to Mantovani, says Spotify, why don’t you have a listen to Beethoven?
Well now, I don’t believe I have heard or
even thought about Mantovani in forty years, and any connection with Beethoven
seems a bit – how do you say? – oblique. This is an area where Spotify really
goes to town on being helpful. The links for the suggestions are certainly
lateral – tenuous to the point of blatant stupidity, though it may be
ungracious of me to put it like that.
You
listened to Loudon Wainwright III, it says – you might like Leadbelly.
Well in fact I do like Leadbelly – in
fairly short bursts - but any possible similarity
to LW3 eludes me, apart from the fact that they are/were both men who play
guitar and sing. Just as mystifyingly, I find that Spotify seems to associate
Otis Redding with Louis Armstrong, James Taylor with Richie Havens, Fleetwood
Mac with Mud (that’s a very strange one – does anyone remember Mud?) and Thomas
Newman with Samuel Barber.
My first reaction to this was that it must
be some kind of expert system, something which interprets real marketing data
and makes predictions based on what it has learned, but I have come to doubt
it. I can’t believe that any expert system of this type would be quite so
spectacularly dumb. I have decided (privately, like – for my own amusement)
that these helpful suggestions for improving my quality of life are produced by
a real intelligence – someone who has my best interests at heart. I find that I
have attached a sort of personality to this being – I call him Bernard. No
matter if he is a robot. I have come to spot signs of evidence of the presence
of Bernard with something approaching affection. That he is rather a stupid
robot makes him even more likeable – he even gets a sympathy vote.
Ah – there you are, Bernard, I say as I am
informed that some punter named Jessie has uploaded a personal playlist which
might interest me. How are you this morning? How’s the moonlighting going?
Because, you see, I have become aware that
Bernard works for other online firms as well.
eBay, for a start, informs me that people
who, like me, recently bought a bag of 27 broken lead soldiers from the 1960s
also bought a vintage map of Leeds and a replacement exhaust pipe for a
Vauxhall Astra. That has to be Bernard – you can recognize his style. Nice one,
Bernard – that was good even by your high standards.
On Amazon, he has blossomed into a full
email service.
Since
you recently bought a book from us, says Amazon
[come on, Bernard, that’s a bit broad – you can do better than that], you may be interested in the new
best-selling paperback that Jeffrey Archer is about to dump on us [no – I told
you it was too broad].
Or one of my favourites: We hope you enjoyed your recent purchase of “Campaigning
for Napoleon” by Maurice de Tascher, and thought you might be interested in
“Campaigning for Napoleon” by Maurice de Tascher.
Excellent – that’s really good, Bernard. I
know you’re there – it comforts me, warms my heart, to know that you are still
watching over us in this harsh, cruel world.
Mind you, there are some things that
Bernard does which I haven’t quite got the hang of yet. No doubt I’ll come to
appreciate these as well, but I’m still thinking about them. I just have to
trust in him, I suppose. Recently I was looking in Amazon for books by Alan
Bennett and by Charles J Esdaile (which makes me wonder what Bernard would make
of that for a combo). As it happens, I didn’t buy anything, but within a day or
two my spam filter caught emails from both of these gentlemen, asking me to be
their friend on Facebook. As far as I know, Prof Esdaile is alive and well and
probably writing another six books on the same topic as I sit here, but Alan
Bennett is certainly as dead as the proverbial flightless bird from Mauritius,
east of Madagascar (as opposed to Mauritius, Lancs).
Bernard, was that you? I’m not at all sure
about that one. That maybe wasn’t in the best of taste. And while I’m thinking
about it, was that you that spotted my search for the Conde de Penne Villemur
on Google yesterday, and put adverts for pasta products on the screen when I
visited Amazon later in the day? That was pretty clever, but please don’t do it
again. And what are all these ads on my email browser for mature women in
Thailand? – how am I going to explain those?
It’ll all be fine – I know it will. Bernard
will sort it all out.
Friday, 16 August 2013
Just Like Christmas
Since it would be churlish to comment on the fact that it
took Royal Mail’s guaranteed-next-day Special Delivery service two days to get
the thing here, I shall simply state that I was very pleased to get a parcel this morning from Norfolk . Inside were all sorts of good things – converted Hinton Hunt models, the work of the esteemed
Pete Bateman, and all for my Peninsular War armies.
There is something very pleasing about good conversions
based on Hinton Hunt figures – I don’t have a great many, but they always feel
like the sort of thing a proper
wargames army should have (strong echoes of Peter Gilder), they bring a unique
element and some welcome variety to the forces in The Cupboard, they provide
troop types which otherwise would not be available and – especially if they are
the work of someone with a lot more skill than I have – they are interesting
and good to look at. Also, because this lot are individually converted, heads are all at slightly different angles and each figure is a character in his
own right.
I’ve started basing and organising the new arrivals, and
here’s some early results, which I’m very happy with. I have two new light
cavalry units for the Spanish army, which fill a very prominent gap in the OOB.
[Please note that my artificial light
photos have started washing out red tones again – the paint is much brighter
than this, and the reds are RED.] The horsemen in green are the Voluntarios de Espana, who, despite
their name, are an old-established unit of regular Cazadores a Caballo. The
other fellows are the Husares de
Extremadura, formerly known as the Husares
de Maria Luisa – I have no idea why they changed their name – maybe Maria
Luisa lost them at cards. Both these units fought throughout the war, and they
are presented here with hats which would fit any period from 1810 onwards. They
have no flags yet, but I’m working on it.
There are also some cheerfully eccentric Spanish staff
figures...
...and an interesting custom figure for General Von
Neuenstein, who commanded a Confederation brigade in the Armée du Centre. Von
Neuenstein is, authentically, wearing the uniform of a general officer of the
Duchy of Baden – HH enthusiasts will spot that part of him may have been
Russian in a previous existence!
Tomorrow, time permitting, there are some artillery and
logistics items to sort out, so this is a particularly good parcel. Unpacking
this lot has been just like Christmas...
Tuesday, 13 August 2013
What the Hex That Thing?
Well, since you asked, that's the first instalment of my new Stack-o-Hex scenic plates, manufactured to order and sent to me by Uncle Tony at ERM. They are 7 inches across the flats, same as my table hexes, and are laser-cut from 3mm MDF. They are going to be painted in the regulation baseboard green (Dulux Crested Moss #1) and then will be adorned with various hand-painted sections of road, stream, village and wood bases and so on - whatever else takes my fancy, or is required by whimsical scenarios (what's the plural of scenario - could it be scenariones? - hmmm...).
3mm weight is heavier than I intended, but it makes a neater job, and will help avoid warping - they are also less liable to slide about in moments of stress than thinner ones would be.
This is all a reaction to the embarrassment I felt as the result of deploying some old laminated paper scenic plates at my recent Battle of Nantwich. I'll work away at a few examples of the new type, and once I know what I am doing I'll crack on. The idea is to keep them flat and pretty much flock-free, so they stack in a compact manner and don't get damaged much. There will be some plain green ones, too, so that I can, if I need to, buy myself a little extra level ground to position houses around the edges of a BUA.
The little unit of 20mm French sappers is just to give an idea of what a 7 inch hex looks like. This is, after all, sort of a job for the engineers.
Thursday, 8 August 2013
More Spanish Thoughts - Milicias Urbanas
With thanks to everyone who offered comments and email
advice following my last rambling post, I am pleased to report that I think I
may have made some progress. Perhaps.
The first, and probably most significant, point is that my
Spanish army is a fair size already, so any infantry I add to it is just
organic expansion rather than any major change in the Grand Plan – or it may
just be completing some missing bits from the Grand Plan.
I acquired the unpainted bicorne troops along the way – some NapoleoN,
some Falcata, and I have access to more Falcatas if I need them. My 1812-style
army currently has, I reckon, 11 battalions of troops which would not sit comfortably
with any white-coated 1808 types.
So big idea No.1 was let’s paint up 11 or so battalions of
bicornes, and then I can field an 1808 or an 1812 army by switching the line
infantry. Cool, eh? This is very attractive, but has two downsides:
(1) I would need to get in a lot more bicorne soldiers to
make up this amount – the project just grew arms and legs. A bit like building
a second house to get rid of half a dozen bricks you found in the garden.
(2) There is the issue of inconsistency with the dating of
the other Peninsular armies which I mentioned previously.
So, somewhat reluctantly, I have moved on to not-quite-so-big
idea No.2. This is to identify units which might reasonably have been seen in
bicornes in 1812, and add them to the army I already have. Further research
indicates that the Milicias Urbanas
might be just the boys. The JM Bueno picture at the top, admittedly, shows uniforms from 1808, but it
seems these chaps looked like this for much of the war. There was a variety of
uniforms for the various towns and cities, but all along this general style. We
might debate how far from home some of these units might be deployed, but they
certainly saw plenty of active service. The Milicias Urbanas of Ciudad Rodrigo,
for example (and not unreasonably), were present at the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo
(the French being the besiegers), and were dressed identically to the Madrid soldier pictured
in the last post.
The Milicia Urbana are necessarily going to be poor quality
troops, which frequently adds to their unpredictability and entertainment value
on the tabletop, and they also seem to have had interesting flags. My current
thinking, then, is that I have (or can easily scratch together) enough figures
for about 4 battalions of MU, plus associated skirmishers, and thus I can run up an
extra brigade for Morillo’s Division. If they only do garrison duties, that
should still get them a few outings. I think I’ll go with this.
Strangely, for such a vague decision, I feel quite
comforted. Having made a choice, I don’t actually have to do anything about
it for a while. But at least the things I am not doing will be different
things. I am reminded of the bit in Herman Hesse’s Steppenwolf where the main character decides he will commit
suicide, but that there is no rush – the decision is an end in itself...
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Spanish Thoughts
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| 1812 Spaniards in bicornes? |
As ever, I find myself going about with a head full of
plenty of half-formed ideas, but very little that is clear enough to do much
about. It helps when a particular thread is hit simultaneously from two
different directions – then there is an implication that a bit more focus is
needed.
Napoleonic Spain
is one such area at the moment. I had another friendly poke from Martin by email, asking me when the
solo campaign is going to come out of the freezer and get moving again – which
is a good question, pertinent, even, and I shall come back to this in a moment
– and then I was doing some more clearing of the spares boxes and I came back
to the old question of what am I ever going to do with my 1808-style Spanish
infantry. Let’s have a look at this second bit first, just to be awkward.
I have a fair mound of unpainted Baylen-period Spaniards
with nothing to do. Because my French and Anglo-Portuguese Peninsular armies
are dressed for the later stages of the war (originally because of availability
of figures, but now simply because that is what I have, and the momentum is
established), it made sense to add Spanish forces from the same period, so my
Spanish Nationalist line infantry have the post-1811 British style uniform. Blue
jackets and shakos and all that. A sprinkling of white-clad chaps from 1808, in
bicornes, in what was an old fashioned uniform even in 1808, would not sit
well. They might look nice, but the anachronism would grate with me. Mind you,
they would look nice...
This is how it always goes. This is not helped by the fact
that my existing army contains a good proportion of milicias and voluntarios
in round hats, not to mention guerrilleros,
all of whom could be comfortably wheeled out at any date from 1808 onwards.
Which, in turn, got me thinking that maybe I could make up some 1808 line units
which could be combined with the irregulars to make an alternative Spanish
army, for earlier in the war. Hmmm.
Mind you, they would have to fight Frenchies, some of whom
are wearing distinctly 1812-style uniforms – I could just about live with that.
But then, if they fought alongside the Brits, there are a good few of those who
are straight from Waterloo ,
and that would be upsetting. Worst of all, I would have difficulty combining
the two alternative Spanish armies into one big one for special occasions,
which you can see would be a disappointment at a more childish level.
The alternative approach is to go back to studying the
various books and bits and pieces and see if I can identify any units in
bicornes which could justifiably be added to the existing 1811-12 army. JM
Bueno’s Uniformes Espanoles de la Guerra
de Independencia is always a treasure trove, and I turned up various odd
militia units raised from colleges and academies who seem to have dressed in a
rather outdated style, but they may be a bit rarefied. They might have been
drinking clubs rather than regiments (no – I don’t mean it, I’m sure these guys
fought like heroes).
The two Bueno pictures at the top of this post look more
promising. The soldier on the left is from the Milicia Nacional Urbana de Madrid
of 1812 – apparently, as soon as the French evacuated Madrid following the Battle of Salamanca,
the local movers and shakers raised 8 battalions, no less, of these fine chaps,
plus an attractive-looking unit of cavalry. Now you’re talking. Unfortunately,
JJ Sanudo’s database of service records makes no mention of such a unit (or
maybe I just missed it), so maybe they were disbanded, smartish, when Wellington
went back to Portugal after Burgos . The jury is out
on the Madrid
boys – they are interesting, though.
The other soldier is from the line battalions of the
Voluntarios Distinguidos of Cadiz .
He is in parade dress, but apparently this unit was dressed like this throughout
the war, and they have a very long and worthy record in Sanudo. They look good,
too, eh? Sadly, they were, of course, rather stuck, not to mention besieged, in
Cadiz , and would not be a convincing addition to
an army in Castile .
I am continuing to ponder the matter. There must have been other, similar,
units which I could utilise.
The solo campaign. I have waffled on about how I was
disappointed with some aspects of how the rules worked, and have been
gently accused of putting the campaign on hold in a fit of petulance, which I
would protest is only partly true. The campaign had reached an interesting
phase, and I am determined to get back to it when the Autumn comes (which may
mean when the lawns no longer need cutting). It would certainly be a pity to
abandon it, and I have received an extra boost from the imminent arrival of some
Spanish light cavalry (at last!), and a couple of new general figures, of which
you will hear more. Admittedly, the acquisition of new toy soldiers does not
make a very good reason to fire up the campaign again, but it all helps. Watch
this space.
There you go – another entire blog post which doesn’t quite
say anything.
Thursday, 1 August 2013
Hooptedoodle #92 – With My Little Ukulele in My Hand
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| Everyone's favourite ukulele player - Marilyn Monroe in "Some Like It Hot" |
As part of the rather daunting job of migrating my document
files over to the new iMac desktop, I was ploughing through a load of old stuff,
much of which is just to be deleted, when I found a (sort of) poem. This, I
recall, was a competition entry commissioned by my good wife. The person
submitting the best piece on the subject of Owning a Ukulele (in the opinion of
the judges) would win a concert-quality instrument which would be the envy of all
their friends and neighbours...
Owning a Ukulele
Owning a ukulele, why,
It changed my entire
way of life.
I practised till I was ready,
I practised till I was ready,
And I said cheerio to
the wife.
Then I set off to make
my fortune,
The world’s greatest
one-man band.
Oh, those cheers, all
that adulation –
I was feted throughout
the land.
People would come up
and shake my hand,
Sometimes in groups,
sometimes singly,
But, now that my
Nationwide tour is done,
I’m back outside
Bradford & Bingley.
MSF
You will be reassured to learn that this did not win
anything. It should be recited in a George Formby accent for full effect.
If non-UK readers do not understand the buskers’ joke about UK building
societies, don’t worry about it – not worth explaining. If you do not know who
or what George Formby was then you have my congratulations. Here is a short
YouTube clip to show the man at his peak, revealing why the tradition of British
music-hall is famed and hated the world over.
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