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Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscape. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

6mm scenery - hedges

I tried out making some hedges for the upcoming Crisis Point 6 mega-game at Broughton in September.  I used wooden tongue depressors, sanded and painted brown with a Cinnamon match pot from Wilkinsons, dry brushed Vallejo Iraqi Sand.  The bushes are Woodland Scenics clump foliage in olive, light and medium green with a few cork chips.  All were stuck down with PVA glue and sprayed with Woodland Scenics PVA sealer.  Static grass was applied around the edges of the bases.


They make some cool looking field systems and seem to be pretty well stuck down.  Now I'll have to get a production line going and maybe add some trees for variation.

Thanks for looking.

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Siberian landscapes

 Irtysh River - Khanty Mansiysk is built on a set of low sandy hills - this is the view of one of the main rivers - it's navigable by relatively large ships, but only because they work at it constantly with dredgers, otherwise flat bottomed barges and rafts would be the norm.
 Large expanses of fir woodland cover most of the areas with any topography.
 An artists impression of the local wildlife c. 10,000 years ago.
 Wooded sandy hills, only open areas are man made or the cut banks of rivers.
 Birch forest - these are really tall, but spindly.
 Really nice Eastern Orthodox church on the edge of town
 Even big monuments like this prospect tower are lost in the trees more than a 100m or so.
The town itself - the old part by the docks and river wharfs.

Unfortunately, I couldn't photograph much on the lowlands (i.e. everything the other side of the river).  When we flew over it it comprised roughly circular lakes up to a few kilometers across surrounded by marshes with standing pools, crossed by anastomosing stream/small river channels, lined by small trees and scrub.  Any road or rail lines crossing the area were ruler straight and most looked to have been embanked or piled to raise them above the marsh.

https://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=khanty+mansiysk&hl=en&ll=60.915749,69.049072&spn=0.712954,2.705383&safe=off&client=firefox-a&channel=np&hnear=Khanty-Mansiysk,+Khanty-Mansiysky+District,+Khanty-Mansi+Autonomous+Okrug,+Russia&t=h&z=9

If the link works it takes you to a googlemaps image of the area which gives a good impression.


Just to give you some idea of what the Siberian landscape is like.  Of course, a couple of weeks after these pictures were taken the temperature was -20C on average, dropping to -49C in extremes.