Continuing with the nature theme from yesterdays post, some more green stuff has been added along with a fence to my Last Great Project Layout. Now although not being a particular knowledgeable person on plants and shrubs, as I do tell Mrs. Woody when she puts gardening jobs on the chore list for me, I do know that they are generally not just green but actually they are in many shades of green - possibly fifty or more or maybe less but a lot of shades of green. Looking at a real country landscape you will see many shades of green and that is what I am trying to recreate on my layout at the moment. Whether that is successful is open to debate as with many of my projects but I am quite pleased with the way things are going at the moment. Maybe the photos illustrate that ?
Recording my progress, or usually the lack of it, in building kits, creating model railways and other related and sometimes unrelated matters!
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Tuesday, January 21, 2025
50 shades of green - well almost!
Monday, January 20, 2025
Nature is rarely tidy!
It is all very good having a nice level grass effect on your model railway scenery and it certainly changes the look of a layout as I talked about yesterday. However, nature is rarely tidy and where left to its own devices it will do all sorts of things. Mrs. Woody has never let me experiment with letting the garden go wild so my chore list from her includes a number of jobs that in effect keep nature in check within the garden confines. But, when it comes to my model railway I am in sole charge of what happens on that so Mrs. W has informed me! With this independence established I am aware that parts of my series of scenic bases are areas that would have little interference from maintenance operations and so would be left to nature to do what it wanted. How you recreate that on a model is something that has many methods developed by skilled modellers over the years, but being Woody I do have my preferred ones.
The WMD Stores have, over the years, built up a stock of scenic materials suitable for recreating the wilds that nature creates. Most of these are things that are glued down with neat PVA or dilute PVA spread from above using an old syringe.
Sunday, January 19, 2025
I'm impressed by how things are going despite my involvement!
Still with my Last Great Project 00 gauge layout and having cut the cutting and put it back together again it was time to repair the damage to the plaster work with another mix of plaster, PVA glue and brown paint. I left it all on the floor to set and remarkably I didn't step on it at any stage!
Once dry it was time to apply a brown wash to the rock face as done with the other scenic sub-bases. As this sub base is in two parts the first one went on the layout whilst the second was drying.
Next up was more greenery with the mixed mix of static grasses applied and with that done all the scenic sub-bases were om the layout and things are looking, err - well scenic! And to be honest I'm impressed by how things are going despite my involvement!
Saturday, January 18, 2025
Cutting back a cutting!
When I built the scenic sub-base for the cutting I knew that it would be close to the tracks and indeed it was! A mix of trying to keep some structural integrity to the sub-base and under-estimating the thickness of the finished surface however, made it closer then I liked.
Friday, January 17, 2025
The search for rock continues!
As a Museum dealing with the iron stone quarrying industry, Rocks by Rail has remarkably little rock which when you are filling Gabion baskets/cages is somewhat frustrating! The Gabions form the supporting structure for a new viewing platform that will bring visitors closer to the action in the quarry on operating days. However, if you know where to look, there are pockets of suitable material available and I have previously posted about the ten tons of hardened cement bags that are spread around the site. The trouble is that most of what is left is covered by things - usually those things are particularly heavy in nature!
However, we also have a CAT! A big CAT!
There was a slight problem in as much as these very heavy steel plates were straddled over two pallets and we decided that the likelihood of moving those without a major calamity was next to zero so we left them in place.
Although far from idea, there was sufficient clearance to get under the pallets and mine the loose cement bags which is something that the others decided I should do for some reason!
Then the rather laborious task of getting the rocks from the other end f the line and pushing them up to site using the platelayers trolley started followed by actually getting them into the Gabion.
By the end of the day the Gabion is about half full, which is good going and David and Alex are obviously pleased and no doubt ready for a rest - just like me! We still need to find some more rock though but that is something for next week.
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Greenish - mainly!
This is where things suddenly move on - getting some more colour on the scenic sub-bases which in this case is greenish - mainly! I tend to use static grass for most grass areas on models. Static grass is made up of short fibers, usually between 2 and 8mm long, which are deposited onto a glue spread on the area to be grassed using a static grass applicator. What this does is to give the fibers a charge as they leave the applicator and as the applicator has a connection to the glued area the idea is that the fibers land upright imitating grass. First thing to do was spread some glue. This is special glue which is supposed to be conductive to electricity - well that is what it says on the bottle!
I also ' planted' the barn and created a mud track and apron around it using acrylic mud of all things - that was the bit which was not green!
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
Tree repairs!
Tree repairs? Before you wonder if I have become some form of arboriculturalist this was a model tree that was repaired! I bought these Woodland Scenic Silver Birch trees some time ago. They were second hand and I paid £20 for the four of them which is well under half the new price. Always worth having a look in the boxes under traders stalls at exhibitions where these less glamourous items are usually kept. The only problem was that one of the trees had a brken stub at the end of the trunk that pushes into the tree base.


















































