Despite the fact I've been posting a lot of British vehicles lately, I've started a Chain of Command campaign set in the Hurtgen Forest, so they won't be seeing any action there. This campaign is against a friend who I've been teaching the rules. I won't be posting full game reports of this on the blog, so thought I'd share a few terrain pictures here.
As always with a forest/jungle table the challenge is actually filling the table with appropriate terrain. For Hurtgen I wanted mainly pine trees, but don't really have enough (I made a batch for our Bloody Bucket campaign in the Ardennes, but not near enough to fill a table). I've also wanted to alter those trees I had made to give them bigger trunks and more height (coincidentally also making them much more game friendly). The original trees were based in twos and threes on bases like this:

For our first game in the Hurtgen, I experimented by using wood dowel to make longer tree trunks for some of the trees. I did it with only a few but I liked the effect.

It probably works best with the larger trees and so you won't be surprised to learn I've ordered another batch of them off eBay. Meantime, I've converted the rest of my existing pine trees. What I particularly like is the fact it improves the look of the forest
and makes it much easier to place figures.

And of course, there is no real 'scale' for trees. What is a big tree for a 20mm figure, is a smaller tree for a 28mm figure.....
I can see lots of uses for these be it from the Ardennes to Hurtgen or East Prussia to North America.