Sunday, 12 January 2025

Kurassier Regiment Sommariva, Number 5

This is the second, and final, Austrian cuirassier regiment. Formed in 1721, it was variously numbered Cavalry Regiment, 14, 12, 14 again, 9, then finally Cuirassier Regiment, Number 5 in 1805. From 1806 through to 1823 it was under the inhabership of Field Marshal Hannibal Marquis Sommariva.








And now with the two regiments that make up the brigade.


There is just one small unit of chevauxlegere to go in this batch and that will finish the Austrian cavalry for me.

Friday, 10 January 2025

A Milestone Day



Over the last few years I have mentioned from time to time the number of days to retirement. Well today is day zero and I have wrapped up 25 years and five days at Air New Zealand. 

It had been the intention to retire eighteen months ago when I hit 65, but in 2020-21 I voluntarily reduced my hours by one day a week for a year during the pandemic with the intention of preserving someone's job at a time when the Company was downsizing. That 20% of the year's salary had to be made up somehow, so the extra year was required. Then I figured well why not see out 25 years service and added another six months.

My involvement with the airline began in January 2000 in what was originally called the publications section where I started as a desktop publisher, formatting documents for use by pilots, cabin crew and ground staff. Airline documentation is quite niche area, with complex document structures. At that time we were beginning to migrate from paper to digital media. There were some interesting technical challenges to overcome.

In my first year Air New Zealand took over Ansett Australia and attempted to merge the two airlines. The merger ended disastrously with the collapse of Ansett and impending bankruptcy for Air New Zealand, forcing a Government bail out of the national carrier, all of this occurring just as the 9/11 attacks happened. Because much of the management of the airline had been moved to Australia I inherited the management of the section.

In my time I was involved the introduction of three new aircraft types and four sub-types to the airline fleet. In 2004 I oversaw the introduction of  the Electronic Flight Bag, a certified touch screen computer installed in the B777 aircraft that digitally displayed operational documentation and navigation charts allowing the removal of as much as 25Kg of paperwork from every aircraft saving hundreds of thousands of dollars in fuel burn every year. That project then extended to other aircraft types in the fleet. It also saw ended the distribution of individual paper documents to crew and ground stations, slashing the number of individual printed copies in circulation from 96,000 in 2002 to less than 1,000 by 2020.

The move to digital also saw the change from traditional desktop publishing solutions to complex xml authoring environments and the need to rapidly upskill. This provided a strong intellectual stimulus cooperatively resolving complex operational problems on an almost daily basis and working with a wide variety of skilled individuals from across the business. I have also been fortunate over the years to be involved in various industry groups, conferences and training courses that took me to a wide variety of destinations: Seattle, Atlanta, Toulouse, Stockholm, Lisbon, Sydney, Melbourne, Singapore, Hong Kong, Bangkok and Tokyo.

Recent years have seen much of the challenge that had kept things fresh diminish. The COVID years with its the subsequent industry downsizing and loss of institutional knowledge, combined with a higher proportion of people working from home, has seen the workplace dynamics change. Problems that used to be resolved by gathering a few knowledgeable people around a table for a hour, now involve a series of online meetings with a cast of thousands (all of whom have to have their say whether knowledgeable or not) and drag on for weeks if not months to find a resolution.

And so it became time to call time.  I have been immensely privileged to have worked with some highly skilled and dedicated professionals and I will miss that, but escaping the Corporate BS will be a definite relief.

Prior to my involvement with the airline I spent eleven years in the stationery trade and thirteen years in the wargames industry.

And what does retirement hold in store for me? Initially a bunch of chores to be done around the property that I have been putting off for a long time. There probably won't be a lot of figure painting (unless someone wants some contract painting done) but there is some painting and general touch up work to be done around the house. There will be some gaming, some of which you will see on these pages very soon - I expect to be more active on the blog since my recent hand-over activity at work has kept me away from it of late.

But first there is a 2021 single vineyard Otago pinot noir waiting to be poured then I am going to put my feet up and enjoy some summer weather that they tell us will be here next week...if we are lucky.

Monday, 6 January 2025

Twelve years...

Today marks the twelfth anniversary of this blog - has it really been twelve years?

According to Blogger Statistics there have been 969 posts (including this one), 696,279 visitors (although at least half of them are bots or Viagra advertisers) of which 174 have chosen to follow and 12,258 comments have been posted - half of which are, of course, my replies.

For the occasion I have looked through all the posts (yes all 968 of them) and picked out one from each year as a favourite.

Here's to another twelve years of blogging...if blogs still exist in 2037...

Saturday, 4 January 2025

Kurassier Regiment Sachsen-Teschen, Number 3

In my last post I mentioned that while the intention going forward is to not expand the collection apart for the occasional unit. Well this is one of those occasional units.

I decided I needed some Austrian heavy cavalry for my planned 1813 Napoleonic solo campaign, so I bought myself a Christmas present of two boxes and additional command frame of Perry plastic Austrian cavalry to make up two standard size cuirassier regiments and a small chevaux legere unit.

So here is Kurassier Regiment Sachsen-Teschen, Number 3. The regiment was raised in 1768 as Carabiner Regiment Number 5 and was converted to Kurassier Regiment 3 in 1798. From its creation to 1822 the inhabership was held by Albert, Herzog zu Sachsen-Teschen.








Wednesday, 1 January 2025

Year's End Review

So another year has gone.

On the painting front 2024 was the third least productive year since I began keeping records of my efforts in 2014. It wasn't unexpected since I have deliberately called an end to any dramatic increase to my already substantial collection, limiting purchases only to completing existing collections or the occasional new unit.

The year has seen work on five projects: Austrian, French and Ottoman Napoleonics, American Civil War and terrain tiles. The completion of six Swedish generals can't really be called a project. The end result is:


Consolidated Points by Project

%


Item Count by Project

Project

Points


Foot

Mtd

Guns

EQ

Scratch

Swedish Napoleonic

60

1


0

6

0

0


Austrian Napoleonic

350

5


54

8

0

0


Scratch Built Items

2350

36






127

French Napoleonic

2400

37


388

37

4

5


American Civil War

45

1


9

0

0

0


Ottoman

1310

20


138

48

6

8



6515

100


589

99

10

13

127


Or graphically:



On the gaming front there were fourteen games played: four, Napoleonic, two WWII, two AWI, one each of American Civil War, 1920's Afghanistan, War of Spanish Succession, Imjin War, the Sudan and English Civil War.

So with painting dropping away the goal for the year is to play more games.







Monday, 30 December 2024

More Civilians

In the last couple of days I have completed the final set of Napoleonic civilians - the set that I forgot to order last time. This is the women and children set.

There are seven figures in this set, a mix of townspeople...

...and field workers. 

This completes 46 civilian figures. 

Sunday, 29 December 2024

Generals

Fresh off the painting table are two more Swedish Napoleonic generals (converted from Russians)...





And one Russian general.




This completes the Swedish project started in November 2021. Maybe now they will make it to the table.