As I've written in this blog earlier; Neither Wargaming or Model Railways are particularly 'big hobbies' in Norway. Perhaps that's why there are no 'toy soldier shows' and just a few Model Railway exhibitions. The autumn is usually the time for such exhibitions and even if they are few I can't attend to them all as some are arranged on the same weekends (!) and others on weekends I am coincidentally working. But I've managed to join a couple of Model Railway exhibitions and a day out in a friend's garden for a running-session. Here are some brief impressions:
The Norwegian Railway society's exhibition at Mysen
This was a very small exhibition with few layouts. This Norwegian Gauge 1 (1:32 scale) layout deserves honorable mention though:
On this layout there were running trains from the nearby private railway 'Solbergfossbanen', which was closed many years ago.And in the engine-shed where the exhibition was held, one of the prototypes was undergoing preservation too:
A day out at Erik's awesome Garden Railway
Even if it's autumn and the weather is usually not so good anymore (actually it hasn't been all summer), we were quite lucky when Erik invited the club-members to a running-session on his garden railway:This Rhätische Bahn locomotive is hauling a very long and very heavy rake:
Erik's petite French narrow gauge:
It was heavy traffic on Erik's garden railway during the day out:
I wonder...
...whats read while spending time here? -Something about Simplex narrow gauge locomotives (military) obviously:
This is on the very social end of the hobby. Thank you for your hospitality Erik!
The Model Railway exhibition at Skedsmo
This weekend I managed to visit another model railway exhibition located just some hour away by car. There were some few layouts that caught my attention there.The winter layout below is a N-scale (1:160 scale) ready made layout by Noch, customised into a Norwegian railway during winter:
A modular Norwegian H0 layout:
N-scale permitts running long trains on a modest area:
The fellow who exhibited this winter layout also displayed a module in H0e (1:87 scale narrow gauge running on 9mm track) of the Norwegian Aurskog - Høland line:
The layout in this old television was made in Z-scale (1:220 scale). Even if the railbus was German, the scenery and buildings looked 'Norwegian'. Very cool with the old railway magazines on the shelf below:This was not a very big H0 (1:87 scale) layout but built to very high standards:
All the trams are scratchbuilt after Norwegian prototypes:
And even if this layout was still under construction I immediately recognized this street and buildings as I walked by them daily to my earlier job located on the next block:A modular Norwegian H0 layout:
N-scale permitts running long trains on a modest area:
Another Z-scale layout:
Hi Roger, have occasionally thought it might be fun to pick up a cheap 1/32 die cast VW Beetle and see if a bit of work and a paint job could convert it into a ww2 ambulance, or something wargame useful. Spotted Erik's two.
ReplyDeleteMichael (Wargaming with...)