I’ve had another one of those projects that went a bit too
far. A couple of years ago I backed a Kickstarter by Baker Company run by Gav
Tyler. Maybe I’ll go into the details another time but let’s for the moment say
it was not a great project. On the other hand I ended up with a large amount of
Finnish infantry in winter clothing, which in the nature of things ended up in
the “to paint” pile with no particular priority.
Then a couple of months ago I got invited to a Bolt Action
campaign. I don’t particularly like BA – I think it compares poorly to Chain of
Command, but I thought, if I paint some of those Finns I will be able to use
them for both – so I started.
One of the available support options is a StuG. The Finns didn’t
have the capacity to build their own tanks, instead relying on captured Soviet
tanks, plus a limited supply of StuG III Gs bought from Germany. I did a bit of
research on-line (if Google can count as research) and I discovered the
excellent Finnish Armour in WW2 website. This has some great photos and details,
including individual histories of some of the StuGs. I’m a sucker for this sort
of thing, so rather than just having a generic StuG, why not have a model of a
real one? Logically it seems a good idea, so I chose Ps 531-10 " Bubi "– which also
happens to be the top scoring Finnish StuG with eleven kills. Bubi still exists
at the Finnish Armour School at Parola, and there are plenty of pics so how
hard can it be?
This seemed like a good idea at the time, so with eyes wide
shut I launched myself. Memo to self – think it through next time!
There are a number of StuG III models available in 28mm, but in the end I chose the Rubicon Models version because it seemed to offer plenty of options.
I have to say this is a superb kit that covers just about everything I needed - at least at first glance.
No comments:
Post a Comment