Monday, 25 May 2026

German WWII warbirds at La Ferté-Alais 2026


'Red12' calling in at Headcorn on Sunday evening for a first stop in the UK. Louis Prebble photos.


Displays representing the wartime Luftwaffe featured at Le Temps des Hélices 2026, including the traditional three-ship of Junkers Ju-52/3M, Pilatus P-2* and MS-505 Criquet**, and a solo display by Charlie Brown in Bf 109 E-4 "Red 12". The P-2 is not an authentic German WWII type, but was commonly used to represent the Luftwaffe in war films before genuine Luftwaffe aircraft became available, hence its inclusion here. The MS-505 is the French version of the Fi 156 Storch.

 

Fw 190 A-8, WNr.732197, Fw. Rudolf Artner JG 5

 


Fw 190 A-8 'White 10' WNr.732197, Herdla. Photos dated 8 March 1945, after Fw. Artner (standing on the wing and then seated on the stabiliser with his 'Abschussstock') had scored his 20th victory, a Beaufighter (RD 132) of 455 Sqn.  'White 10' features the JG 5 yellow/black 'Bauchbinde' RVT fuselage bands, the 'new' setting-sun 'Eismeer' cowl emblem and the typical 9. Staffel white-painted armoured ring protecting the oil cooler. Ago-built WNr.732197 was scrapped in Norway at the end of the war. Also in the images are Uffz. Siegfried Ballerstädt and Uffz. Martin Ullman of 9./JG 5. Previously published in Rodeike's 'Jagdflugzeug 190', decals for 'white 10' are available via EagleCals.








Also on this blog;

Hptm. Theo Weißenberger's I./JG 5 on the Invasionsfront

Hptm. Horst Carganico's Bf 109 G-6/AS Kommandeur I./JG 5


Friday, 22 May 2026

Fw 190 Jabos - archive photo scan #52

 


Two armourers preparing to mount an SC 250 bomb on the belly rack of Fw 190 A-2/U1 WNr. 2081, ‘Blue 3’ of 10.(Jabo)/JG 2 at Saint-André-de-l’Eure in the summer of 1942.


Below; III./SKG 10 Fw 190 A-4 in Tunisia, La Fauconnerie, March-April 1943. Gruppenkommandeur was Oblt. Fritz Schröter. Schröter departed the front early in April to get married. His A-4 (WNr. 0142327) displaying command chevrons was lost on 8 April, shot down by ground fire with Gruppe Ia (operations officer) Lt. Clemens Graf von und zu Westerholt und Gysenberg at the controls.


An Fw 190 F-8 of III./SG 3 takes off on a mission from Tilsit airfield in July 1944.  The gear retraction sequence is underway. Note the yellow wingtips. The SC 250 bomb is fitted with a steel 'tip' to prevent it from ricocheting on impact. (ECPAD - PK Doege)

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Establishment of II./JG 77 - Oberfeldwebel Georg Ries (Stabskompanie JG 77) - archive photo scan #52

 

Ofw. Georg Ries seen in Norway during 1940 with II./JG 77


 In 1934, the Kriegsmarine had formed a Staffel in Kiel to protect the German Bight (Deutsche Bucht) region: 1./JG 136. This naval air unit was subsequently split in two, and the unit became a Gruppe with a third and even a fourth Staffel. The Gruppe, based mainly at Jever, was taken over by the Luftwaffe. Its Kommandeur was Major Carl Schumacher, a former artilleryman from the Great War who had joined the navy and then, in 1934, the Luftwaffe. In 1938, the Gruppe abandoned its He 51s to fly Bf 109 Bs. Leaving Jever for Fürth and Weiden, the unit, now stripped of its fourth Staffel, was renamed II./JG 333. Like the future I./JG 77, II./JG 333 was based for a time in the Sudetenland, being stationed in Pilsen in 1939. In May of that year, II./333 was renamed II./JG 77 and received Bf 109 Es. At the end of August 1939, the Luftwaffe High Command transferred the Gruppe to Nordholz on the Baltic Sea, an area well known to many of its pilots. Its Staffelkapitäne at the time were Oblt. Helmut Henz (4./JG 77), Hptm. Alfred von Loijeswski (5./JG 77), both Legion Condor veterans, and Hptm. Franz-Heinz Lange (6./JG 77). 

Below; II./JG 333 (renamed II./JG 77 in 1939) received its first Bf 109 Es in May 1939. Well camouflaged under netting and foliage, the Gruppe Adjutant’s aircraft is seen with its engine covered with a tarpaulin bearing the aircraft’s WNr. (609). 



Click on the image for a full-screen view.

Georg Ries had joined the Kriegsmarine in 1930 and served on the cruisers Leipzig and Köln before taking a position on Göring's 'yacht' 'Carin I'. For 'personal reasons' he decided to leave the navy and trained as an aircraft mechanic before being posted to Jever as an Unterfeldwebel and joining the Stabskompanie of JG 77 via a spell in Spain with the Legion Condor.  By the time of the invasion of Norway during 1940 Ries was - in his own words - " ..responsible for all of II./JG 77's aircraft." This Gruppe was the only single-engine Luftwaffe fighter unit sent to Norway. Ries served as Werkstattzugführer in Stavanger and Trondheim. 

His Gruppe initially assembled on Norwegian soil at Kristiansand/Kjevik. The first few days were quiet: the outgunned Norwegian fighter forces mainly flew Gladiators, which were vastly outclassed by the Bf 109s. But the RAF soon appeared in Norwegian skies. On 12 April, in poor weather, twelve Hampdens from No. 44 (Rhodesian) and No. 50 Squadrons made an incursion in search of German ships, appearing at around midday over the port of Kristiansand. German anti-aircraft guns opened up and downed two Hampdens. Several II./JG 77 Bf 109s managed to get airborne and caught up with the bombers. A fierce dogfight ensued in which six RAF bombers were claimed by the fighters - among the victorious pilots were Staffelkapitän Lange and Fw. Robert Menge – the latter had recently been transferred to 5./JG 77 from 6./Tr.Gr.186. British records partially confirm these losses: two twin-engine aircraft from No. 50 Sq. were shot down by anti-aircraft fire; three others (one from No. 50 Sq. and two from No. 44 Sq.) were shot down by Bf 109s. Below; wreckage from one of the Hampdens shot down over Kristiansand/Kjevik on 12 April 1940.


Above, a II./JG 77 Emil following a 'Kopfstand'. A good view of the 'classic' 1940 scheme.

Ries departed Norway in late 1940 for Brest, II./JG 77 covering those Channel front fighter units returning to the Reich for rest and refit as the 'Luftschlacht um England' petered out. The advance detachment of II./JG 77 left Norway on 10 November, passing through Kiel, Charleroi-Gosselies and Paris before reaching Brest. Bad luck was to mark the transfer: on the 16th, one of the two Ju 52s carrying ground crew crashed near Brest, killing around ten men. The ground crews were accommodated in buildings on the airfield at Guivapas. 

Ries participated in all of JG 77's early campaigns including the Balkanfeldzug and Barbarossa. He departed the Eastern Front in March 1942 posted to a training school as 'technischer Leiter'. In his correspondence dated 1989 he mentions that much of his documentation was lost at the end of the war, but that he still had a few photos from Norway and the pre-war period.  Some of these show Ries (below, centre) supervising the dismantling and loading of Me 109s onto trucks for recovery back to Germany and/or onward rail transfer to Brest in France.






Ries' 'Bestallung' document appointing him to the rank of 'Feldwebel' (below). Note that 'Unterfeldwebel' was an NCO rank in the Wehrmacht, admittedly not a common one. Many or most in the Luftwaffe - especially flying personnel - went from Unteroffizier directly to Feldwebel, skipping Unterfeldwebel, a rank that seems to have been reserved for 'specialist' technical personnel. (a reviewer on amazon.com mentioned in his 'review' of my 'Day Fighters Aces of the Luftwaffe' (Casemate, 2021) that he had read all of Caldwell's books and had never encountered this rank before, suggesting somehow that this author must have made an error. Well, no.)

Monday, 18 May 2026

"On Freedom's Wings " - life-size Lancaster memorial sculpture opens to the public

 




" Aviation enthusiast Gary Lewis travels to Lincolnshire to take a sneak (but totally above board) preview of the incredible installation of a full size Lancaster bomber memorial sculpture - known as "On Freedoms Wings' - at Norton Disney, close to the A46 between Lincoln and Newark. .."

Eight years in the planning and installation, the Bomber County Gateway Trust have created a stunning tribute to all those Bomber Command crews who made the ultimate sacrifice so we can enjoy the freedom we have today. Standing taller than the 'Angel of The North' and weighing in at around 100 tonnes it is certain to create a lot of attention. Kudos and admiration for those who designed and assembled it ... many congratulations to Charlie White and the team for their dedication and determination to see the project through to completion. More of Claire Hartley's photos can be seen currently on the BBC news website..







 Bomber County Gateway Trust website: https://www.bombergatewaytrust.co.uk/
A single click on the 'red triangle' to view here
 



Also on this blog


Friday, 15 May 2026

Nachtjagd Ost - Heinz de Fries " Wir waren Nachtjäger - Kriegserlebnisse der Besatzung de Fries an der Ostfront"



AWP have a new book on Eastern Front night fighters due soon. From the recent posts on the TOCH  forum it seems that not much is generally known about the subject but it is of particular fascination to this blogger and I shall hopefully order the book as soon as it becomes available on the AWP site. (see link, right)

One of the first to present his research on the Eastern Front night fighters of the Luftwaffe was Theo Boiten. Published in 2022, his "Nachtjagd Combat Archive - Eastern Front and The Med" (Red Kite) was 144 pages covering  German night fighter operations on both the Eastern and Mediterranean fronts. 

Theo's book is excellent, ground-breaking. This blogger translated Günther Bertram's recollections for the book. Bertram flew He 111s in KG 4. Here are a couple of paragraphs that did not feature but which explain some of the early ad-hoc beginnings of an Eastern Front night fighter force in the Luftwaffe.

"....I was born on 2 November 1920 in Hamburg. In 1939 I sat my Abitur school leaving certificate and in November 1939 enlisted in the Luftwaffe. After the usual period of induction for new recruits I went to flying school in Guben in January 1940. Flight training for the A+B Scheine took six months to complete. Those cadets displaying officer potential went on to C-Schüle at Lömeritz for a furthur six months training. It was during this period that I was promoted to Leutnant. As I had applied to the bomber arm I completed four weeks blind flying training in Copenhagen before being posted to the large bomber training school at Tutow near Demmin in Mecklenburg. From here I was assigned to KG 4 based at Fassberg, situated between Hamburg and Hannover. This Geschwader was tasked with mining harbours and ports along the British coast. After a further period of blind flying training on the He 111 in France, some thirteen crews were transferred to Riga on the Eastern Front, assigned to fly supply dropping sorties for units encircled on the ground. As these flights were flown at low level there was always a great risk of taking hits from ground fire. After thirteen sorties we were withdrawn to fly mine-laying sorties from Königsberg over the bay of Kronstadt, which was the mission being carried out at that time by our Geschwader. After some twenty sorties the situation on the Eastern Front had become precarious and accordingly our Geschwader was shifted to Sestchinskaya on the central sector of the front in order to support our hard-pressed ground forces. I flew some eighty sorties over this sector. It was at this point that the first steps were taken to establish what would become the so-called Nachtjagdschwärme Ost. A single crew - flying the He 111- was selected from each Kampfgeschwader. A crew was also made available from the Fernaufklärer (long-range reconnaissance) under Oberleutnant Schneeweiss. As the first Schwarm only comprised three machines (two He 111s and a single Ju 88), fuel and munitions replenishment, along with maintenance and servicing requirements for the aircraft were always undertaken at the airfield of whichever larger unit we happened to be operating from. As luck would have it, in Sestchinskaya this happened to be my old unit KG 4, while later in Smolensk we were based on the field used by a Nachtaufklärungsstaffel and later still in Orsha we came under the umbrella of the Fernaufklärungsstaffel, with which our Schwarmführer Oblt. Schneeweiss had previously seen service..."

Bertram's unit was tasked with hunting and engaging the small Russian aircraft, mostly U2 and R5 biplanes, that operated every night supplying partisan groups located behind the front lines. The large and ponderous Heinkel He 111 was hardly suited to this form of aerial interdiction but there were no other available aircraft. While slow, the Russian machines were even slower - they could only manage speeds of between 150-180 kph, while the Heinkel had to maintain 200 kph at least. Bertram's favoured method of attack was to close from astern then sweep past presenting the Bordfunker with the opportunity to unleash a long salvo from his MG. Nor were the Heinkels fitted with AI radar so they could only effectively operate on clear nights. As Bertram put it, '..achieving a downing was always very much down to good fortune..' Later on, an additional MG was mounted in the forward fuselage, operated by the Bordschütze, firing through a side window. This weapon was particularly suited to strafing aircraft on the ground..

Following re-equipment with the Ju 88 the Nachtjagd Ost was put on a more organised footing. NJG 100 was formed at Brjansk from IV./NJG 5 which had shifted to the Russian Front in early 1943. Heinrich Prinz zu Sayn Wittgenstein was appointed Kommandeur of I./NJG 100 during the summer of 1943.

Boiten's book also exploits another unpublished memoir, Heinz de Fries " Wir waren Nachtjäger - Kriegserlebnisse der Besatzung de Fries an der Ostfront"   -    or 'We were night fighters  - war stories of the de Fries crew on the Eastern Front'.

Along with eight other crews, Heinz de Fries and his crew departed Berlin in early November 1943, destination Orscha in the central sector of the Eastern Front. They were posted to NJG 100 where they were assigned to 1. Staffel under Staffelkapitän Hptm. Lechner, ".. ein alter Hase mit 42 Abschüssen.." De Fries had passed through his A/B Schule, the C-Schule, the Blindflugschule and finally the Nachtjagdschule in Lechfeld. At that time de Fries and his crew knew little about the 'Eisenbahnnachtjagd' or 'rail night fighting' - but soon grew to know it well - and appreciate it. 'Mobile' night fighting on the Eastern Front meant living and operating from 'night-fighting trains'. These comprised some 18-20 wagons fitted out with living accommodation - with 'creature comforts' such as hot-water central heating, a 'mess' and a 'wash room' -  a Gefechtsstand, radar tracking stations and anti-aircraft positions. The Eastern front night-fighters moved from airfield to airfield operating more or less independently. They had to be to even hope to cover the vast expanse of the Russian front where there could be little in the way of 'permanent' infrastructure. 

There is more on Eastern Front night fighting in a recent Casemate volume, 'Night Fighter Aces of the Luftwaffe 1943-45' (Roba/Page, Casemate, 2025) which features some decent material on NJG 100, profiles of aces such as Lechner, Scheer, and August Fischer, along with Claes Sundin's artwork. August Fischer was a Staffelkapitän in I./NJG 100 and the last Kommandeur of the Gruppe.

This blogger's "Nachtjagd Ost - Eastern Front night fighters of the Luftwaffe" is a 20-page article in 'Luftwaffe fighters -Combat on all Fronts 2' (Mortons, 2023). Page view shown covers IV./NJG 6, a night fighter Gruppe established to defend the Ploesti oilfields in Romania...

 

  
See also "Gustav Francsi: Nightfighter Ace" [leading night fighter ace on the Eastern Front] Axis Wings vol. 2 by Sven Carlsen pages 106-111  


Also on this blog;





Friday, 8 May 2026

1/48 Luftwaffe Modelling Workbook by Oliver Peissl

 


Oliver Peissl has a new book - "1/48 Luftwaffe Modelling Workbook" was published at the end of 2025 and is a superb modelling 'how-to' volume focused on Luftwaffe subjects released by Dai Nippon Kaiga. Details according to their 'blurb';

For all aircraft modellers — from beginners to experts:
• Step-by-step builds of 15 Luftwaffe aircraft (including a Bundesluftwaffe F-104)
• Detailed guides on tools, materials, and techniques
• Construction, Painting, weathering, and finishing tutorials
• Over 500 full-color in-progress photos. Text is dual Japanese/English

The book is available officially in three countries beside Japan - Canada, Cyprus and Slovakia - links to these sellers can be found on Oliver's Facebook page, Erla's Werke.  In Europe Oliver's Slovakian partner is 77propeller.com

Oliver tells me that Dai Nippon sent a photographer from Tokyo to photograph the 15 subjects featured in the book; 

 " the first contact I had with Dai Nippon was a request for one article but the conditions were not so good - I had to send my finished model to Japan for the pictures. So I said no thanks! Then they came back and asked for a whole book with 15 models. My answer: when I won’t send you one, I surely won’t send 15 models. They replied that for fifteen models they would send the photographer to me. Noah came all the way from Tokyo, spent two days with me, took 7000 images and then left..!"

 Looking through the book ,the results are stunning - with Oliver's okay, here are a few page views ...






The Franco-German modeller also features on the cover of this month's Air Modeller magazine with his superb GWH Fw 189 and his work has been published by Modell Fan, Wingmasters, Cocardes, Modelâr, Tamiya Model Magazine, Ammo and Model Airplane International. Having just written a blog post in praise of AK Real Colors, I asked Oliver about his preferred paints; 

".. Yes, I use a number of different brands. ATOM by Ammo are for me the best acrylics. Mr.Paint are for me the best lacquers. Also I like HATAKA and AK-RC of course. But Mr. Paint do the best RLM references. You should try them! "

Oliver (middle) and Noah (right)


Not featured in the book - Oliver's recently completed Eduard K-4. While the 109 is one of Oliver's  preferred modelling subjects (natch!), Oliver's recent completion of the MiniArt P-47 is superlative. And I can see an Eduard P-40 in his future! Thank you, Oliver..