Thank you very much. I'll include some photos showing the whole base in the next weekly update on Monday. It has been kind of a slow week on the building front due to an extra busy week on the work front so adding some 'overview' photos may be a good addition.

I get Sculptamold from a local hobby shop which sells model railroad supplies and remote control cars/planes. I also mentioned a link to it on Amazon in my previous post, but have never actually bought it from there. It is fairly easy to use actually other than the physical effort needed to 'sculpt' it after it has dried. It is really easy to work with before it starts to dry (after about 15 minutes after adding water). You can mix it to various consistencies and doesn't require an exact mix of water vs material. It isn't something you can sculpt a lot of detail into while it is wet, but it works great for rock formations and filling in gaps between bricks. It also works really well to add some undulations to otherwise flat ground. You can just mix a small batch up and glop it onto a base then spread it out a little. Paint the base brown/green, flock, and you now have a much more visually appealing base for your building that miniatures can still stand on without tipping over.

Let me know if you have any other specific questions on Sculptamold or if you have any ideas in mind for what you'd use it for. I'll do my best to answer them and give my opinion on how well it may or may not work for a particular application.