PACIFICON cont’d (25/25)

I do believe a fun time was had by all present on both sides of the table, though as I said earlier, perhaps a bit more fun for myself and my two fellow British players!Hearty thanks and sincere compliments to NICK STERN, a great friend and thoughtful game-master and...

PACIFICON cont’d (24/25)

The table is set, the Anglo-Indian brigade in place but the Afghans — so many, MANY Afghans — will take a bit longer to lay out…The gentleman at the lower left corner of the table (whose name I sadly can’t remember!) was my cavalry...

PACIFICON cont’d (23/25)

The RHA battery, flanked on the right by 1st Bombay Grenadiers……and on the left by the Bombay Sappers & Miners…The horse gunners pound away at the approaching Afghan regulars… Throughout the game the British artillery fared better than they...

PACIFICON cont’d (22/25)

Early in the battle the smoothbore battery comes into action behind the center nullah, which is filled with Jacob’s Rifles and, to the right (North) the 66th Regiment (Berkshire). To the left of the guns is the detachment (in reality a half-company but in the...

PACIFICON cont’d (21/25)

The villages of Mundabad in the foreground and Khig with its trademark walled gardens in the background…Villagers watch from the South side of the karez (a manmade waterway fed by an underground mountain stream further South) as the battle unfolds on the far...