I decided to stick the model on a simple base – gave my grandson an opportunity to cover something with brown paint. Flock and gravel is from Koch, Woodland Scenics and Scenic Express. Had ideas of sticking a lot of equipment in the back of the KW, but ran out of time. The kit comes with two bottles of wine – those are going onto a DML Priest – also going to try to scratch a carton of Lucky Strikes: the currency of choice in Europe in 1945.
A short note on the Kubelwagen. It was one of the most widely produced German weapons and served without change throughout the war. Something like it had been from Paris to Stalingrad. Germans were very keen on the cheap and simple creature (and unlike almost every German motorized vehicle it was very stingy on gasoline) and considered it a good off road recon vehicle two wheel drive or no – equal to the Jeep. (Americans and Brits scoffed at that claim. Many chances to compare on both sides. The KW, and Jeep, were the kind of things that were widely used by armies when captured. Why not? Nothing went wrong with either. And as my outdoors-geek brother would say: “the better the four-wheel drive vehicle, the farther you get into the woods before you get stuck.) And this kit is to emulate a Kubelwagen on May 1, 1945. Where? The Ruhr? Maybe a unit bypassed by Patton? Doesn't matter. It did it's job very nicely and was far more efficient than more famous weapons like the King Tiger. Pity those that built and used it were serving history's most wicked regime. But for once history worked as it should, and there's the KubelWagen, sitting on the side of the road, going nowhere and out of gas. Just like the Reich.
Eric
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