Is it only two weeks since my last post?
I've lost track of what day of the week it is, working across multiple time zones, usually until 11pm every night, to turn around the second draft of the book, ready for publication at the end of the month. Even before publication, the beta draft has been read by well over 300 people, which is quite scary.
Suddenly, all those modelling projects I keep putting off seem very attractive distractions, which is an all too familiar pattern.
I have high hopes of next week, though. I want to at least get some baseboards built and some half-built projects into primer.
A penny has also dropped about a possible use for the Tim Horn cameo baseboard, and following my own advice that sometimes a smaller space suits a larger scale.
The baseboard kits for the East Coast based light railway have also arrived. The next thing I need to do is to search out the manual point motors I bought with TAoC in mind. That, needless to say, frees up the baseboards that I originally had in mind for it for another project, possibly even a return to Apa.
Then there are other distractions.
I have one set of bookshelves that are groaning under the weight of books about the smaller vessels of the Royal Navy in WW2, those most associated with the RNVR and the RNR. It is years since I (tried) to build one of the Airfix 1/600th scale kits, but I find myself being drawn to 1/350 scale. This is a cheap and cheerful model of HMS Swale, a River class frigate. There are much more detailed ones available, but this one is primarily intended for wargaming. Even so, it is enlightening to see how much detail is moulded/printed in. In theory it should be a quick build, though I do want to add a few enhancements.
Why this ship? Well, whilst HMS Compass Rose is a well known fictional corvette, Nicholas Monserrat's last two real life commands were a River class and an American-built version, the Colony-class HMS Perim.












































































