My students and family can tell you that I could give Noel a run for his money on verbosity, but hopefully I keep this within everyone attention span.
Love the Sutton Hoo helmet and the Draco. |
Back in September 1980 I started University and a new FLGS opened up in Halifax, in a location that was at least not too far off my walk home. The FLGS turned out to be run by Ross McFarland of the Battle Game of the Month blog, With MacDuff to the Frontier rules and servant to the world's most superior looking wargaming cat. Ross' store was short lived, my university career lasted 5 years as a student and 20 years as an instructor (with a 15 plus year interlude in between) and we still keep in touch. We have gamed in the past on my visits back to Nova Scotia, and were hoping to do so again at Christmas, but Omicron put the boots to that idea. We should try a Zoom game.
The chap on the left is from a Pictish command pack but fits in with the unit. |
One of Ross' projects at the time was Late Roman/Sub Roman Britain, a project which I've returned to in my recent Beowulf gaming. I have another 6 figures from a Sub-Roman rulers comitatus. These are Gripping Beast 28mm figures and most are from their Arthurian range. Some of the facial details has gone soft, but it's kinda like painting old minifigs which is pleasant nostalgia in its own right. As is my way I freehanded some noble headed shields and bodged together a flag using Celtic clip art and MS Word.
I'm quite happy with the cloaks. I think that the Pictish fellow is supposed to have a mail coif but it works as ringlets. |
In digging through the family photos recently, I found some pictures from a Convention game that Ross ran at Dalhousie in 1987 or 1988, which I am sharing below.
Struggle for the Goldbach crossings. We achieved an impressively historical log jam. Those are my white and green coated Italians masquerading as French on the defence and my Russian infrantry. |
I still think that it was a great achievement and I have fond memories of those big games are played with small figures in the 80s, as well as the small games that we played with big figures (54mms) in the 90s and 2000s.
Points wise that 6 28mm figures for 30 points and I hope the yarn ents me another 20 for Noel's Comet.
Cue music: "Those .... were... the... days my friend, we thought they'd never end..." etc
ReplyDeleteDavid's cardboard houses now reside with Les, some of the 15's live in the valley and I get to play with them now and again, the rest have spread their wings and flown off via ebay air a decade ago. Those were good days indeed!
(and that's without mentioning Pyrrhus or the Spartans! )
I sold off my French a while ago. Still have my 15mm buildings and (I think) the Russians. Pyrrhus and the Spartans are still here and have seen the table top in the last decade.
Delete