Airsoft Action 01 - Oct 2011 | Page 18

GROUND ZERO WOODLAND WALK-ON DAY H Ground Zero is a very popular site, just outside Ringwood in Hampshire – but as this was Father’s Day it was surely going to be a quiet one. How wrong can you be? 018 October 2011 ailstones! That’s what it sounded like - millions of them hammering on the roof and walls around me. A staccato barrage of sound assaulting my senses, pounding my eardrums and muffling all other noise as I tried to squeeze myself even further into the corner of the hut… Welcome to a Ground Zero walk-on day! For those of you who don’t know Ground Zero Woodland, the site is about a mile off the main road, down a well-maintained gravel track leading to the car park, a large open area which, despite the rain from previous days, was dry and firm. Bounded on one side by a firing range and with a camping area set further back, they are obviously used to running big games here and this was confirmed when we met up with Neal and Dan Collins, the father and son team that own Zero One Airsoft and operate Ground Zero. “About 150, was Neal’s estimate ” for the number of expected players, although as it was Father’s Day it could be less but, being the kind of people they are, they had brought enough supplies for considerably more, just in case… Also in evidence was a good number of hi-vis-jacketed marshals, who were already busy getting the site prepared, the on-site shop stocked and (most importantly) the catering van fired up. Headed up by H, the site manager, it is easy to see why the marshals know what they’ve got to do. H’s enthusiasm and passion for the game is obvious. “There is a right way and a wrong way to do things” he said, “and we haven’t been doing what we do, for as long as we have been doing it, by doing it the wrong way. ” As the clock ticked past 10:00 the car park looked much fuller and, as