Wednesday, May 22, 2013

May Club Meeting at GVS

The May meeting was a good mix of Rapid Fire ww2, Maurice 7yw and two Impetus games.

I have a few Images to share of the games

Rapid Fire Polish s Russians 1939, My Polish got a run and the Russians ended up with a minor victory. Played by Ian, Leigh, Greg, Matt C, and myself.




A full report and scenario of the WW2 Polish vs Russians Rapid fire game
http://kampfgruppewillow.blogspot.com.au/2013/05/battle-of-kodziowce-sopockinie-22-sept.html

7YW Maurice game, played by the two Daves




Rex and Rhino played a blood thirtsy Dark Ages Impetus game, Rhino broke at 50% cas, Rex had 48%

Tartty, Ralph and Richard played a supurb Impetus Renaissance game.


Cheers
Matt



Saturday, May 18, 2013

RIP Frederick Funcken


On Thursday, May 16th 2013, Fred Funcken passed away at the age of 91 years leaving a legacy and fond memories for many wargamers and Comic readers on my generation. Fred was born in Belgium in on October 5th,1921, he published his first comic at the age of 12, then learnt his trade duing the war, first print making and then  working as a comic illustrator. After the war he joined his friend Fernand Cheneval at  Heroic Albums and later met his wife Lillianne, they started thier wonderful working relationship and the fantastic Tintin comics series. In the 60s Lilliane and Fred started the Uniformology Military Uniforms series covering all periods of history, which are still held in high esteem today, by wargamers and historians today.

His historical comic series included Tintin, White Knight, Harald the Viking, Jack Diamond, Lt Burton, Captian and the Saint Preux .

As a fellow red nut I was excited to get my tintin comics as a young kid, (and will now activly source all of this series) and at the age of Ten my mother bought me the two part series Arms and  Uniforms of the Napoleonic wars and I was hooked for life, 35 years later I now own probaly 8 of his uniformology books and always on the lookout for more of them.






Fare the well Fred


cheers
Matt


Monday, May 13, 2013

"Bloody April" Club Meet

Last month at the club we played a 7 player mini campaign for the day, lots of laughs and lots of dakka dakka carry on, we played using WOW rules which works well in large numbers of planes on the table. WOW is now called Wings of Glory. WOG now brings a few guffaws at the club, as in Australia it actually means anyone from Mediterranean heritage, our Italian club member bought this to our attenion when they made the name change to the rules.

I played as a german pilot,  as usual I still mix up my left and right turns so even I do not know where I am flying some times!!!!!

Game 1
The Valiant allies on patrol.

The aggressive German circus, led by the Baron Rhino.



The first allied plane suffers some damage by Hapt Willow, and the Baron



down he goes, he managed to walk away with a broken arm only....... first game over

Game 2
plucky Aussie RE8 takes on the circus, aggresively flying straight into the storm.....


the RE8 manages to fly through breaking up the german circus, the follwing camels pounce on the opportunity.....The RE8 finishes his recon and returns to his lines



Hapt Willow ges down in flames after a bodgey turn (left instead of right) turns me into the path of two aircraft.....I

 do manage to survive with broken ribs and concussion.
the fight continues



The Baron manages to shoot down one and damage another, Hapt Boydelli finishes him off.



Then is promptly shot down himself, the remaining allied plane flys off the table....

Game 3



Two rumplers are on a bombing mission and are pounced upon by camels and a French Spad from the clouds


The Spad gets a engine fire from a long range shot before camels start tailing the rumplers



The Baron and Rumplers team up for a kill, the pilot does not walk away, the spad suffers fataly and falls out of the sky, another win for the Germans.

Game 4


A close start , Lothar von Willow dies in the initial clash...........


The Baron gets one on, but gets hit in the effort


mid air explosion finishes off Cardinal Biggles


but the Baron is down, but walks away



The three allies pounce on the remaining Fokker

and finish him off!

Maurice at the club


And the Spanish Civil War game

cheers
Matt

Monday, April 22, 2013

Absent........

My apologies that I have not posted for over a month, my Father Albert (Bertie) Willamson passed away in March at the age of 77, his funeral was very large with over 450 people attending and over 1000 sympathy cards arriving over the last four weeks.

Dad was a well known Australian Stock Horse, race horse breeder and Hereford cattle farmer. Dad was involved with a lot of rural organisations during his life, he was a Former President of the New England Rural Lands Protection Board, former President of the Pinkett Sports Society (a rodeo held on our propety for 25 years, before being moved to its current location where it is in its 44th year), Life member of the Glen Innes Show Society, a member of the Royal Sydney Show Society, The Australian Stock Horse Society accredited Horse Judge, Australian Bushmans, Campdraft and Rodeo Association accredited judge, Captain Pinkett-Yarrow Creek Volunteer Firefighters, Glen Innes Pony Club selector and member, Glen Valley Polo X club, coach , umpire and selector,  Glen Innes Tentpegging Club and a number of other rural organisations around Glen Innes and the New England region.

During his life he loved to spend time on his beloved stock horses on our propety's and lease hold country, roaming and mustering cattle in the wild eastern fall country of Upper New England. Some horses come to mind "Bushboy" (a famous flat racehorse and campdrafter), "Rusty Robin", "Robin", "Penny", "Pigeon" "Silver", "Banjo", "Rachel", "Pepsi", "Cilia" and "Buster". At times we would spend two weeks mustering the back country with pack horses moving from mustering hut to mustering hut,  bringing in the cattle after a winter in the back country. A good walker was important to cover long distances of up to 40klms in a day, faster than a vehicle in most cases along the bush tracks. In his younger days he loved flat racing (horse sprints two furlongs or less long) and would ride to events up to 35 klms, race, perhaps even campdraft with the same horse and then ride home again.

A picture of Dad in 1996, riding Pepsi (one of my favourites), a unknown Packhorse behind, not sure of the dogs names (but the black dog on the right is "Black Barb" a cross between a Kelpie and Dingo, they don't bark and are good lead dogs and will bite, very nasty to strangers and protective of the owner)

He was a great believer in good horse breeding and had a good eye for horses, as children we were always set up on great horses and for most of the summer we travelled to shows, rodeos and campdrafting events in the New England, and in the winter Polo x was our chosen sport.

He was also a keen cattle breeder and we had at times up too 1000 cattle on the various property's, what I remember though is the mustering of the cows and calves from the lease contry (which is now mostly National parks) to our land for branding etc. This country is some of the "wildest in NSW" (remarked upon by the famous Layland Brothers) all of it falls from the tablelands to the coast some areas included Henry River valley, the Sara river valley, London bridge, Baileys, the Seven Mile, Paddys Land, and Chaelundi (New South Wales, Australia)to view this country just search on google maps and you will see just how wild it is!

Dad was also fond of the a good sirlion, t-bone, roasted lamb, bagpipes, bush poetry, telling rippings yarns, fine spirits (scotch and rum) and stout!

 He will be missed by  Mum, my two Sisters, Deanna, Cate, Tom, and myself, our partners, his 9 grandchildren, his 7 surviving brothers and sisters and all of his mates.

cheers
Matt

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Primae Legio Armeniaca

Another  pseudocomitatensis Legio, possibly founded in the third century by  Diocletian. Under the command of Magister Militum per Orientem per Pontica.

  I have only found one reference to garrison of the Primae Legio Armeniaca, the coastal city of Anemurium (on the tip of Cape Anamur, opposite Cyprus)  the city was sacked by the the Sassanids in 260 AD. The unit was raised to the Field Army status to take part in Julian's' campaign of 363, and was still part of the feild army in 395AD (ND).

The figures are from the Crusader Late Roman range, the shields are hand painted, and this is my second last infantry unit in this army.





Cheers
Matt 

Friday, March 8, 2013

I Parthica Severiana Antoniniana

One of the three Parthian Legions (raised in Thrace and Macedonia), by the Emperor Lucius Spetimius Severus for his successful campaign against the Sassanids in 197AD (sacking Ctesiphon). After the campaign I Parthica was then posted to the fortress city of Singara (Sinjar, Iraq)controlling the road between Edessa and Nisibis for the next 150 years. 

 From Inscriptions we also know that the Legio was at one time in Lycia and Cyrenaica. The First Parthian were all but destroyed in the siege of Singara in 360AD, sub units retired  to Bezbade (modern Cizre, Turkey) but this also fell to the Sassanids. Some must of escaped these disasters and the Legion was reformed and  transferred to Constantina (Tella, on the road between Edessa and Nisibis) and later Cepha where they remained until the 5th century.



Gordian III & Tranquillina. 238-244 AD. Ã† 33mm (26.18 gm). Singara mint.Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust of Gordian, right, facing diademed and draped bust of Tranquillina left Tyche seated left on rock, holding small branch over river god swimming left; above Centaur Sagittarius shooting arrow from bow.

The units emblem was a Centaur, the figures are from the crusader range, the shields are hand painted and are copied from a tile mosaic which is attributed to a Parthian Legio. 



cheers
matt

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Cuneus Equitum Secundorum Clibanariorum Palmirenorum

Next unit off the table for my is my last unit of heavy cavalry for my Romans, the Cuneus Equitum Secundorum Clibanariorum Palmirenorum, this unit was stationed in Antioch under the command of the Comitatus Orientis.  

The Units name has caused a lot of confusion among historians for some time, Cuneus means wedge in latin, so did the Palmirenorum fight in a blunt wedge, or were they a small part of the whole unit, the Secundorum is the second; the second Clibanariorum Palmirenorum, where is the first, was it destroyed, disbanded? And finally who raised it? Is it a unit that was raised by the Lion of Palmyra and did not take part in Zenobia's rebellion?

I wanted to do a unit that was a little different from my first unit, with a mix of open faces. I have not found out yet if they campaigned with any of the Roman campaigns in the east, but I suspect that they may have. The Miniatures are all A & A except two horses (face armour) which are Gripping Beast, the colours are all conjectural.




cheers
Matt