The adventures of an 18th century imagination, located in Northern Europe formerly ruled over by joint rulers Duke Karl Frederick and Duchess Liv.Not to mention the American colony of Ny Tradgardland the 17th century Colony of New Tradgardstadt and the newly restored territory of the Shetland Isles.
Featuring a supporting bill of gaming in a diversity of times,places and scales.Hopefully something to interest all who pop by...
Friday 6 May 2022
Penedredfel Light Railway
Work today has begun on the line between Portharthur and Penedredfel. Much undergrowth had to be removed and digging of the land. Surveying is to happen soon to see if these villages can be linked by railway…
The blog here started solely as an 18th Century imagination then went more general Wargames wise. It has gone even wider since. The garden railway project is one that was started in the first lockdown I think but stalled. This is an attempt to rebrand and renew it… Alan
Tradgardmastare,
ReplyDeleteI do love a garden railway … especially if it can be used for garden wargaming!
All the best,
Bob
We shall see what happens re gaming, need to get it built first!
DeleteAlan
This seems like a completely new hobby....or have you been a model railwayer previously?
ReplyDeleteThe blog here started solely as an 18th Century imagination then went more general Wargames wise. It has gone even wider since. The garden railway project is one that was started in the first lockdown I think but stalled. This is an attempt to rebrand and renew it…
DeleteAlan
Cool - I've always thought garden railways are fun to look at.
ReplyDeleteQuite agree!
DeleteLooking forward to seeing this .
ReplyDeleteSo am I , fingers crossed…
DeleteI look forward to seeing the (tiny and large) track gangs busy with this branch line.
ReplyDeleteLittle by little,moving forward…
ReplyDeleteActually found my old train set a while back, really must set it up sometime...
ReplyDeleteA good start - preparing the ground. I seemed to spend a lot of time digging and laying track but it was worth it in the end
ReplyDeleteWould the original Welsh spelling be Pen-y-dredffel ?
ReplyDelete