Earlier today I received photos from Chris The Model Maker showing the just completed three Charasiab villages with four watermills, a set of man-made irrigation canals, three modest bridges for crossing them, a larger bridge which won’t be part of the Charasiab layout (since no such bridge played a part in the actual battle) but which I’ll happily use to cross my carved-out terrain-board rivers for other scenarios, and to top it all off, Chris’s version of the Sang-i-Nawishta — or “Carved in Stone” — monument which gave its name to the Gorge through which in the mid-17th Century, Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan ordered a passable road to be built through the mountains that separate Charsiab from the city of Kabul to the North…
The three villages combined into one, complete with all 4 watermills:
(the place-name Charasiab means “Four Watermills”)

                         Split up into three seperate villages, two with one watermill
                         each, the third — larger size village — with two watermills*:
(*each watermill connects to the canal system)

Irrigation canal system:
Canal caps/end-pieces (always useful to have on hand!):
Three canal bridges:

The Sang-i-Nawishta (“Carved in Stone”) monument:

Finally, one larger, more elaborate bridge to
span the rivers carved into my terrain-boards:

Not too shabby, eh???

On a related front, in the past week my 15 year-old daughter started working with Photoshop.  She used some of her new skills on a Panorama pic of the WIP version of my Charasiab layout on view here below, which I think turned out pretty awesome*:

*And hopefully bodes well for future images on this blog — at least
until high school Varsity basketball season starts again in the Fall!