After our practice game we started on Jutland proper, having selected some optional and advanced rules, namely U-boats and British sweep. I was in favour of the latter as it seemed in keeping with the actual battle. The U-boats was more a balancing exercise.
I started the sweep late. U-boats started early and so our initial moves found nothing. As 30 May 1916 progressed the Germans quickly discovered that the Grand Fleet had combined into one Task Force. There was then a race and chase back to the German home port.
Richard, who commanded the High Seas Fleet provided the following descriptive text:
It was late afternoon on Tuesday, May 30th 1916. The sun was low in the western sky as strands of light stabbed at the grey sea below through the scattered clouds which danced in the last glorious days and hours of Spring.
At 1800, precisely, Fähnrich zur See Steinhoff had taken his position as officer of the watch in his uncomfortable nest that would be his world for the next 8 hours. Steinhoff had clambered into his watch position with a strange enthusiasm that evening. They had been at sea for a couple of days now and the crew had become used to the relentless monotony of watch and sleep, but today was different somehow. He felt a knot in his stomach as he scanned the horizon. Something was up, he could feel it.
A gentle swell splashed at sides of their sea monster and the Imperial Ensign fluttered proudly in the wind, but there was a squall, nay a storm, brewing on the horizon.
Steinhoff thumbed his pocket watch, it was 1900, scanning the horizon, he strained to see through the spray. He felt the weight of duty on his young shoulders that day for he was literally the eyes of the fleet. As he wiped the salty spray from face, Steinhoff gripped his binoculars once more and stared into that eternal sea. Suddenly a wisp of smoke! He held his breath and started to count, first one, then two and then many grey ghosts which now loomed into view.
"ENEMY FLEET SIGHTED BEARING 315!" he roared, "BATTLE STATIONS!"
However, battle there was not.
So that everything was not wasted, we just set up the battlecruisers and had a game.
I would go with 1/6000th if you can still buy the ships in that scale, Simon
ReplyDelete3D prints seem to be scale independent, or rather any scale you wish. Currently painting Lord Nelson (last battleship before the Dreadnoughts) as a test case re size. Karl has worked 3D magic!
DeleteI think something 3D would add something to the visual appeal. One of the reasons for my really small home-built battlefleets, with their exaggerated design, is that I find them more appealing than my 1:4800 scale metal WW2 ships (Yamato is 55mm long). Although I painted those latter vessels (a zillion years ago) I never based or labelled them. I doubt I could identify more than half of them (although the 9 merchants I regarded as generic anyhow). I seem to have 15 destroyers, though I can't think why. Maybe they are flotillas of 5.
ReplyDeleteI think I bought examples from the Royal Navy, Japanese and Germans. Never got around to American - probably because my enthusiasm for the project 40-odd years ago didn't last long enough. This even though I seem to have plenty of kit for reasonable sized naval action - including 1 Japanese (Kaga) and a British fleet (Furious) and escort carrier, and some cruisers, battlecruisers and battleships as well.
Every now and then I hoik out the little box that houses these ships, look at them, and then put them away again.
Cheers,
Ion
I am well advanced with painting a 1/1800th Lord Nelson preDreadnought battleship. It is 75mm in length. It will have optional basing, but I am yet to work that out. Current step is smoke!
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