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Wednesday, April 09, 2025

A week in Bucks - my holiday painting project

I decided to take some paints and a couple of Blood Bowl teams on our holiday to Buckinghamshire. 

I used the game box to pack everything I thought I might need.



I've wanted to paint the Black Orc team for a while now. The team will be called The Big Pink Nightmares and I want their uniforms to be bright pink.

I started off with some basing:


I base-coated Varag, my black orc star player, and my two skaven star players on the first night. Unfortunately this was an old pot of paint and had gone goopy. 

I bought some new white paint in High Wycombe, just some Humbrol acrylic. But it worked nicely as a base coat. I also bought bright, light pink paint made by Vallejo. Games Workshop don't seem to do a pink in the shade I was looking for.

I then discovered the "goblin green" I had brought with me was a bit bright. Fortunately I had a more orcish tone with me so I used that on the orcs. The goblins stayed in the brighter shade though.

Eventually I got most of the team mostly painted. I'm not a great painter but badly painted is better than not painted at all...




I also took my wood elf team with me. They weren't attached to bases yet, so that was the first job. Games Workshop don't make it easy with some figures - they have minimal contact with the base!


Speaking of bases, I only managed to get a base coat of paint on them on them so they might have to play as ghost elves for a while!

But still, it felt like a decent amount of progress over the course of the week.


If you were observant, you might have seen I took the Norse team with me as well. They are still boxed and on their sprues, as I didn't have time to build them. Maybe next holiday...

Tuesday, April 08, 2025

A week in Bucks - a selection of selfies

Where possible we took selfies on our holiday in Buckinghamshire. Here are a few of them...

Beaconsfield is the home of the paralympics and so we took a selfie with Mandeville, the mascot for the 2012 Paralympic Games. 


There were lots of selfie opportunities at Legoland


With the Angel!





And at Bekonscot, too.




It's not as easy trying to take one with a real windmill!


We took a train selfie at Beales Wildlife Park.


And another train selfie at Bekonscot.


I took a couple of solo selfies at football matches.



And, of course, we had to take one outside our base for the week!




Monday, April 07, 2025

A week in Bucks - Bekonscot Model Village


This was a real nostalgia trip for me. I vividly remember visiting Bekonscot Model Village sometime in the late 80s when we were visiting family friends who lived near Beaconsfield. It was my first real exposure to puns, as many of the business names in the model village are a play on words. (The one I really remember is Scratchitt & Reckitt, Home Removals.)

As we were on holiday nearby, visiting Bekonscot again was firmly on the to do list for our week in Buckinghamshire. I have learned not to expect too much from revisiting things I remember being great when I was a kid - but this really lived up to the nostalgic memories!






There is a real mix of buildings in the village, with castles and harbours and stately homes alongside little cottages and industry. The buildings are all made by Bekonscot staff, carrying on the traditions of the visionary eccentrics who founded it. One or two buildings have fallen foul of the weather - a bit like in the Miniland part of Legoland that we visited the same week. A difference is that, despite some worn areas needing a touch up, Bekonscot still felt very loved whereas Legoland is a much more corporate venture and the worn exhibits felt more like neglect there. 

The windmill is iconic

Some buildings have scenes inside too


When I was a kid I loved the large model trains that rattle around the village. There were lots of these going around, along with several other moving bits and bobs. 







The village even had a cliff railway!




There is also a large ride on train now. I said to Cathy I didn't remember it from my childhood visits, as we would definitely have ridden on it. I checked with the driver and the railway was added in 2001. I told the driver that I thought it hadn't been here when I visited as a child and he said "Oh, no, that would be long before we got the train." I thought that was a bit cheeky, to be honest. But I suppose he was right.






And finally, I mentioned the puns - here are some of the ones that really made me chuckle.






Overall I felt like this disproved the saying that "you can't go back". Maybe when it's something quirky like a model village, you can!