Grant Hutchison's Blog, page 38
September 6, 2017
Hasegawa 1/48 Hawker Hurricane IIB: Part 2
So I finished the first part of this build log with the model primed for painting. This one wears the desert camouflage scheme, so it got a layer of Azure Blue on the underside, which was then masked off, followed by a layer of Mid Stone on the upper surfaces. Then there’s the tedious business … Continue reading Hasegawa 1/48 Hawker Hurricane IIB: Part 2 →
Published on September 06, 2017 04:00
August 30, 2017
Glen Isla: Caenlochan Circuit
Druim Mor (NO 190771, 961m) Cairn of Claise (NO 185789, 1064m) Glas Maol (NO 166765, 1068m) Little Glas Maol (NO 175759, 973m) Monega Hill (NO 186756, 908m) 25 kilometres 1060m of ascent Embarrassing to admit that, after more than forty years wandering the Angus hills, I’d never walked up to the head of Glen Isla … Continue reading Glen Isla: Caenlochan Circuit →
Published on August 30, 2017 04:00
August 23, 2017
Muriel Gray: The First Fifty
Right, this is a little odd. I’m not actually going to review this one. It comes up purely in the context of something I found on my hard drive that I’d completely forgotten about. First, a bit of background. Muriel Gray had been around as a TV presenter and columnist for quite a while when … Continue reading Muriel Gray: The First Fifty →
Published on August 23, 2017 04:00
August 16, 2017
From The Small Isles To The Shiants
I have lain down in the long grass while the raven honked and flicked above me and the skuas cruised in a milk-blue sky. I have felt at times, and perhaps this is a kind of delirium, no gap between me and the place. I have absorbed it and been absorbed by it, as if … Continue reading From The Small Isles To The Shiants →
Published on August 16, 2017 04:00
August 9, 2017
Perspective Tricks
Okay, one last time. These are small, but the ones out there are far away. Father Ted, “Hell” (1996) Graham Linehan, Arthur Mathews I was recently reminded of Father Ted explaining perspective to Father Dougal (is it really more than twenty years ago?) when I happened on a bit of art under the Tay Road … Continue reading Perspective Tricks →
Published on August 09, 2017 04:00
August 2, 2017
Hasegawa 1/48 Hawker Hurricane IIB: Part 1
So this is my next project. I’m building another aircraft my father might have flown—a Hawker Hurricane IIB that was on the complement of No.71 Operational Training Unit, Ismailia, in the first few months of 1944. It’s actually quite difficult to track down details of aircraft at Operational Training Units. A few pilot’s logbooks have … Continue reading Hasegawa 1/48 Hawker Hurricane IIB: Part 1 →
Published on August 02, 2017 04:00
July 26, 2017
Anti-agathic
ˌæntɪəˈɡæθɪk anti-agathic: serving to prevent death; a drug that has this function This is a science fiction word. It was coined during the 1950s by James Blish as a key concept for his Cities in Flight series of novels, to designate the drugs that his characters took to give them potential immortality, allowing them to … Continue reading Anti-agathic →
Published on July 26, 2017 04:00
July 19, 2017
A Sidlaws Gazetteer
Today, the home page has acquired a new menu item: Sidlaws. This links to a set of pages that I’ve rather grandly entitled a “photographic gazetteer” of the Sidlaw Hills. There’s an introductory page (packed with useful background information, though I say it myself), and then a set of pages dealing with all the Sidlaws … Continue reading A Sidlaws Gazetteer →
Published on July 19, 2017 04:00
July 12, 2017
Sidlaws: Three Unnamed Summits
Unnamed Point 328 (NO 360408, 328m) Unnamed Point 377 (NO 349408, 377m) Unnamed Point 315 (NO 329419, c315m) 14 kilometres 550 metres of ascent Many of the Sidlaw Hills get their names from the farms that work their slopes—with the result that some hills, surrounded by farmland, have several names attached to their various aspects, …
Published on July 12, 2017 04:00
July 5, 2017
Radiation Fog
Radiation fog sounds like something that might occur during a nuclear winter, but it’s not that kind of radiation. The radiation here is heat radiation—infrared wavelengths radiated by the ground during the night, particularly when the skies are clear. Usually, the air temperature gets lower as you get higher—a rising packet of air expands and … Continue reading Radiation Fog →
Published on July 05, 2017 04:00