Attack by Dahara on Fuddland. Heat affects commanders.

 Ah, what could have been......

The table was dressed, the armies laid out, the card decks and dice piles arranged. Morale chips stacked up, folding chairs allocated, cold water poured into glasses.  Just under 400 troops for Fuddland and 500 for Dahara  ready to go.

Alas, after two hours battling the heat (90 degrees F in an open shed) we gave into reality, common sense and all that blather.  Called the game.  Too damn hot. The Fuddland Garde Jagers in the woods fell back into the shade of the forest.  The gunners on the Dahara artillery line breathed a sigh of relief when the order to cease fire and limber up was received. 

My friend Roger and I are both over 70, too old for the weather but too proud to not try. We packed up the castings and moved to the dining room table to kriegspiele the remainder of the encounter.  We also worked on some ideas to make the campaign a little more colorful when armies clash.  

The ideas included using some of the Picquet 'extra' cards for uncontrolled charges or crushing volleys; introducing the use of the 'hand of cards' mechanic to adjudicate movement and special events during the strategic turn. I am sure the campaign players will share thoughts and even solutions in some of these areas.

In campaign terms, the attack on the village took all day, the Fuddland troops falling back into other possible positions.  After all,  it is a big country.

Comments

rross said…
Its a sign of the times I think Joe - there is an official term in cricket - "rain stopped play" but not "sun/heat stopped play" - never happens - but maybe one day soon it might!

Shame the weather was so good, it interfered with gaming - you might need to look at aircon in that shed of yours!
pancerni said…
No chance of AC in the garage. No insulation and too many holes in what is really a shed in the most primitive of definitions. When we get heat, we also get humidity, 75% to 85% on the day in question. That is really is what makes it uncomfortable.

However inside is a paradise, AC, heat, fridge all present. In the service we could have 'red flag days' which meant low to no activity.
James Fisher said…
You gave it a red hot go (literally). Retiring to cool, drinks and kriegspiel sounds like a beaut result!!
We regularly get 40ºC plus, but dry heat. Far lower temps with humidity are much more challenging...
Regards, James
pancerni said…
James, yeah, we came, we played, we retreated. Dry heat is not something we get here. Luckily we have frequent changes due to frontal weather always passing through.
Gonsalvo said…
We haven't had weather as hot as it was around and after Labor Day for quite a few years; spent a good part of those days out at the pool!

Compared to most of the rest of the US, we had a relatively cool summer, until then!

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