I suppose it was inevitable that the Summer of Colourful Stuff for BRM should result in modelling a beach!
Asked to model a gravel/shingle beach, using some supplied sand and gravel packs, I turned for inspiration to a favourite spot in West Wales, Criccieth...
This place is about perfect for a railway modeller needing a seaside location; trains actually running pretty much along the shoreline. The railway passes the shingle to the south, then a bit of headland with rockpools, then behind the more formal promenade and sand.
There's always a lot of interesting stuff washed up on the shingle, it being a wrecking-coast with the direction the tides roll in. OK it's bad that it's rubbish, but still interesting (in a morbid kind of way) to see what's out there in the sea.
I don't just model kitsch, I photograph the real thing :) Family holiday a few years ago. TBH about the point The Childs were aging-out of being happy chucking a ball around on the beach (as opposed to moping and watching things on their phones).
If there's a downside to the real place, it's the lack of variety with the trains. Not so long ago there were excursions and regular summer steam, then someone chose the Cambrian route to test the new digital ERTMS signalling system, so it went down to just class 158's and a few upgraded 37's. The 158's are now doomed, in favour of fewer, smaller, class 197's (produced with all the comfort, rideability, and design aesthetic associated with the phrase 'Department of Transport Specification). Still, at least the occasional railtour makes its way up here, when there's a gap in the timetable on this rationalised line.
The project was doing double-duty with an article in the Hornby Collectors Club, so needed to be large enough to serve as a photo plank. That in turn meant it needed to be able to fold-over for storage in a large plastic box, against the day I ever find time to clear-out and organise the workshop.
Groynes from scrap ply and some I-section plasticard.
Papier-Mache, filler, and paint.
A mix of sand and shingle, using things like reptile sand and aquarium gravel alongside the supplied modelling materials.
The set; the promenade space on the end would be getting developed later...
Yellow Train (Wins The Game)
Trying to make it look bigger than it really is.
View from the train.
Very overscale Hornby/Triang track, but then like I said, it was doing double-duty with the Collectors Club.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaand in print.
































































