In a roundabout way, this particular element of wargaming terrain is the main contributing factor to why I started creating a blog. Fair warning- there's a bit of autobiography before getting to the pictures on this post... ;D
A few years ago, I returned to tabletop wargaming, model making and painting after many years away from a much-loved hobby. Life, work and children had all contributed to the gradual decline and then my eventual departure from all things hobby related. As years passed and children grew, the world carried on turning and circumstances changed, I found myself able to revisit wargaming and model-making again, and discovered a (then) new ruleset for WW2 called Bolt Action. Wheels were set in motion and my decades of fantasy and science fiction gaming shifted firmly into a historical setting which has always been of enormous interest to me.
My armies grew, and then my gaming table started to take shape. Trees, hedges, fences and walls are all early purchases/ builds. Roads are easy to build or buy. A couple of buildings grew into several and I started to feel like I had enough 'stuff' to fill a small table and battle across it. Seeing all of these elements grow and take shape was enormously pleasing. Since I'd been a boy of ten or eleven, I'd always looked in awe at pictures in Wargames Illustrated and White Dwarf and dreamed about having a beautiful scenery-laden gaming table, I was starting to get there, but there was one feature I was struggling to get hold of. I'd always wanted to have some rivers...
I don't like any of the professionally manufactured versions on the market. They can look very artificial (which is a bizarre thing to say about a fake wooden/ plastic/ resin water feature) and often come in garish bright blue colours that really put me off. I decided I wanted to try and make my own, but my next problem was finding a technique or method that I felt represented what I wanted my rivers to look like.
It wasn't easy. Youtube and Google gave me plenty of suggestions, but none fit what I wanted exactly, until I came across a talented gamer and model-maker from Australia called John Bond. His blog was massively eye-opening. I first discovered it after a Google search for 'making wargames rivers'. That's what I was given and that's all I've ever needed. And, to add to the bargain, I was introduced to the world of wargaming blogs and the excellent work of John and many others like him. The rest, as they say, is history...
So here they are, my rivers:
In his tutorial, John Bond bases his river sections in MDF, but I chose to try something different. These sections are based on waterproof tablecloth- the stuff you throw over the dining table before the kids get their poster paints out or you see covering primary school tables. I've got several that my kids used to use- it's flexible, can be cut easily and is lightweight. Plus, I don't have any wood...
The short river section below with the bull-rushes was my tester. I used the techniques from John's tutorial- small stones for the banks, Vallejo colours for the water, and coated with Vallejo Still Water that I'd bought for another project. Sand, flock, grass and shrubbery around the edges tied everything in to my particular basing style, but underneath, this is 90%+ John's technique, and I am very happy with it too!
The bends and smaller sections came along after doing several longer sections and being happy with the results. The stepping stones and the stony ford added a bit of variety to the mix. (I allow infantry and bicycle troops to move over the stepping stones on an Advance move, and both of the above plus cavalry and motorbikes to cross the ford on an Advance. Vehicles need to use the bridge.)
The bridge is a resin cast from Hovels. I like the level of detail with resin compared to the MDF bridges I've seen. This particular one has long been a favourite which I had marked down as a possibility once I finally get around to making rivers. I cut a base for the bridge and its sections of water from the same waterproof cloth I'd been using and added grass, stones and tufts as per my usual techniques. The bull-rushes are paint brush bristles cut to length and glued into place.