Geoff
Western Thunderer
Cowpats? I’d try neat brown acrylic paint dripped from a plastic dropper.
Perhaps Modelu could scan the real thing and market them in different scales, I'll get me coat

Geoff
Cowpats? I’d try neat brown acrylic paint dripped from a plastic dropper.

GeoffI have a few ideas Richard, but I couldn't possibly share them with you here.......
Martin,
Thanks ever so much for your interesting post, which is very much appreciated. I certainly won't be ignoring your advice, that's for sure, in fact I'm going to leave things as they are, and forget all about wildflowers.
Geoff
That’s a really good idea Phil.Or excess solder, thrown from a hot tip,usually on to a concrete floor or similar, it saves grief from the domestic authorities, plus it doesn't come out of the carpet, without surgery.
Oh you’ve not put me off Martin, but you’ve certainly given me plenty of useful food forGeoff
Sorry! I didn’t mean to put you off.
Your vegetation looks like ‘high summer’. So there would be some flowers (including grasses in flower).
Let’s say it’s August or September.
A few hardheads flowering at the base of the hedge or alongside the fence. In the short grass immediately adjacent to the track or in the four-foot in the siding, common cat’s ear or autumnal hawk bit. There would be daisies and dandelions too, but not flowering. These species are all so common in these types of habitats you would expect to see them.
I took them to be a Willowherb (rosebay willowherb probably). A very common plant to be found exactly where they have been placed on the layout. They could do with being a bit more purple (less of the green) but they look right to me.I have done quite a bit of botanical survey work in my time and I don’t recognise them!
Sorry, no, not the right shape at all. Rosebay would have flowers only at the top and a long, single, upright and un-branched stem with widely spaced leaves. Like these on our access track photographed just now:I took them to be a Willowherb (rosebay willowherb probably). A very common plant to be found exactly where they have been placed on the layout. They could do with being a bit more purple (less of the green) but they look right to me.

Geoff, you are to the model railway world what John Constable was to English landscape painting! Fantastic work ;-)
I took them to be a Willowherb (rosebay willowherb probably). A very common plant to be found exactly where they have been placed on the layout. They could do with being a bit more purple (less of the green) but they look right to me.
Sorry, no, not the right shape at all. Rosebay would have flowers only at the top and a long, single, upright and un-branched stem with widely spaced leaves. Like these on our access track photographed just now:
Thanks Simon, but the superb scenic work created by Neil (podartist) is more worthy of being described as that.
threads/scenery-dioramas.11658/
My plants were indeed meant to be rosebay willow herb Paxton, but I fell into the trap of modelling someone else's interpretation of what they looked like. Secondly, I didn't have the correct coloured flock to hand, so just experimented with other materials to see what I could come up with.
Thanks for the photo Martin, my wife has a copy of Collins British Wildlife, which shows the same plant in flower. Whilst it's going to be rather difficult to model them accurately in 7mm scale, I'm hopeful of coming up with something more realistic. I really appreciate the information that you have provided, thank you.
Geoff

That’s very kind Geoff.Thanks Simon, but the superb scenic work created by Neil (podartist) is more worthy of being described as that.





Geoff, your pictures paint a thousand words, love the new angles....
.....and I'll leave with a line from a certain magazine, You'll remember those Black and white days....
Gary
Cheers Mark.Inspiring, utterly amazing modelling!
Mark
Hi Geoff, I am just old enough to remember Trains illustrated, and have about 30 issues purchased second hand. I was 8 when steam finished on BR, I was lucky to have spent many (unofficial) happy hours in the various signal boxes round Normanton Station, until my uncle who was a signalman, left the railways for pastures new.That certain magazine with branch lines in it leads me astray Gary, I certainly remember those black and white days. How funny that way back then most of us longed for colour photos in our copies of Trains Illustrated, are you old enough to remember that title?
Cheers Mark.
Geoff
I'm always looking for fresh angles and ideas, so took these tail end shots.........
Hi Geoff, I am just old enough to remember Trains illustrated, and have about 30 issues purchased second hand. I was 8 when steam finished on BR, I was lucky to have spent many (unofficial) happy hours in the various signal boxes round Normanton Station, until my uncle who was a signalman, left the railways for pastures new.
Gary
I was watching a critique of music in film, in the context of the cemetry scene in 'The Good, the Bad and the Ugly'. There are three actors, and the director repeatedly rearranges them so they visually work together to create pictures. Maybe this is possible at Bleddfa Road (on a smaller scale!) using three trains. Perhaps, a light engine, a loco with a train, and a wagon.
