And It Rains as a Memorial

Today is Pseudo-Memorial Day. I call it that as the real day of memorial was declared to be May 31st but politicians wanted to have a 3 day weekend so they changed tradition and changed the holiday into a meaningless day of sloth and bar-be-ques rather than remembering those who gave their lives for the service of this country. Okay, off of the soapbox lol. By now no one is reading this. lol. We had a bit of a scary and stressful time. Our oldest cat, Mote (age 10) has been losing weight and not acting himself. We feared the worst. We took him to the vet and he was diagnosed with a kidney infection and possible bad kidneys. We have now put him on a diet. This is much better than the cancer which we had feared. I was fully expecting to have to hold him as he crossed over, which I have done in the past for other furbabies. We are so happy that we have more time with him. Now on to more stuff. It is raining today. Very fitting. Friday we went to lunch at the Newville Diner and then activated King’s Gap SP. We made 15 contacts of which 3 were park-to-parks in about 45 minutes. Some people walked past us but no one stopped and asked us anything. Next we stopped off at State Game Lands 169. This is a nice quiet place and we worked 11 of which 6 were park-to-parks. Some of those I went hunting for as the propagation was not the best. We did not do any activations on Saturday but yesterday, Sunday, we went to the ATV lot in Michaux State Forest. We worked a total of 28 contacts and 8 of these were park-to-parks. I have decided that we need to get a sunscreen for the car. I covered the windshield part way with a shirt to screen the radio but my wyfe had to move her cell phone (which she uses to keep time) as it was getting very hot. I also need to keep a pair of gloves in the car as my mag-mount gets very hot. We were discussing on the way home where I could keep these gloves. If only the car manufacturers had designed some compartment in the cars to hold gloves. Maybe someone should suggest it to them. Well enough for now. I am going to stare at the rain and the go ride my stationary bike. Namaste kidlets.

Ptolomey on guard at King’s Gap
Ptolomey at SG169
Tootsie on overwatch at the ATV lot
CQ last call at the ATV lot

It May or May Not Be a Great Day!

Yeah, more activations. Yesterday, Monday May 20th, we had to go to the store to get some cat treats so we grabbed the POTA gear and stopped off at Little Buffalo SP US-1376. While I was getting my antennae out, WA3ENQ, stopped by. He had been walking his dog and saw us pull in. We chatted for a few minutes and then he went off home. Not too much later he gave me a call and just happened by luck to be my 10th contact, making the activation bona fide! Rich is a fellow member of the Perry County Amateur Radio Club (https://perrycountyarc.org) and it was nice to see him and log him. We totaled 25 contacts in less than an hour on 40M and it was so busy I only took one picture! Today, Tuesday the 21st of May we set out early. We started out with breakfast (the most important meal of the day) at the Newville Diner in Newville PA. We then drove down into Maryland into the Catoctin Mountains. We were going to try Catoctin Mountain Park but the road to it was closed due to construction. We later found out there is an alternate route which we will try another time. We ended up at Cunningham Falls State Park US-1566. This was my first chance to use my Golden Age pass which lets us into the park free. We found a nice out of the way place to park and worked 12 contacts (6 park-to-park) on 40 Meters and 1 on 17 Meters before deciding to trollop up to Gettysburg PA US-0027. Now the battlefield in Gettysburg is big … very big and there are lots of places to work from but I chose Culp’s Hill as being a shaded and less travelled hilltop. Yes it does have a tower and is a destination for bus and car tours but is less of a draw than places like the “high-water mark” or Little Roundtop (which is currently closed for cleaning). It being mid-day I started out on 17 Meters and worked 6 stations. I then changed to 40 M and worked 3 more before swapping to 20 Meters. We worked 18 overall there including 2 park-to-parks. Now when I use “we” in my blog I am actually using the first person plural, not the “royal we”. Without the help of my wonderful and long suffering wyfe, these activations would not go so smoothly and also most of the good ideas are hers. Ok, kidlets, cheers for now. Namaste.

Tootsie at Little Buffalo

Zarathustra on Culps Hill

Horses First/The Great Impaled Pig Experiment

This afternoon I beat Satan’s Putting Green back into submission. I admit that I like the pungent aroma of fresh cut garlic mustard filling the air. My neighbor has yet to cut his this year and it is getting long but that is not my issue. He has a riding mower so he really doesn’t have an excuse. There is no contest, just a bit of a contrast. In any event, my cats don’t care. They still get to gaze out the windows and watch life go by. Now for the horses: there is an old troubleshooting credo: when you hear hoofbeats think horses, not zebras. I really need to take my own advice. I found the troublem with my radio and it was so simple that I am slapping my forehead still. It was a menu setting that was causing it to not transmit when I was using the playback on the voice recorder. Well at least the company gave it a clean bill of health. I am thinking of getting a sign made for my shack saying “HORSES FIRST” . Now about the impaled pigs. My wonderful and long suffering wyfe has great ideas. Her latest is to keep as low a profile as possible for activations when we are out of state and in high populated areas such as Gettysburg. I agree and today we were testing out the idea of operating with a “HAMSTICK” antenna on a 4″ magmount. it would be fast to deploy and would be rather circumspect and would not involve anything like putting a wire in a tree or anything such as that. Well, it worked and worked well. This morning we went to Little Buffalo State Park (US-1376) and worked 21 contacts in less than an hour on 40M. This was between 0830 and 0915 EDT and the sun had yet to burn off the cloud cover. After we packed up and left, we went to Big Springs State Park. By the time we arrived the sun had emerged and the clouds were gone. The sky was clear and blue and the temperature was up in the low 30’s Celsius. A very nice day, indeed. I tried a 20M “HAMSTICK” and could not find a vacant spot on the band as the Florida QSO Party was going on. I put the 40M ‘stick back on and worked 14 contacts including 6 park-to-park contacts in less than an hour during the middle of the day when D layer absorbtion was going strong. All in all, I call the great experiment a rousing success! Even Ptolemy was pleased! Well TTFN. Namaste, y’all

A cloudy morning at US-1376 and Ptolomy is looking pleased
Ptolomey looking on at US-4355
Mayapples are out

How to Re-gruntle a Kitty

Been a busy few days off. Yesterday I decided to attack Satan’s Putting Green for the first time this year. I let it go so that the bees would have some fine cuisine until the major flowers started blooming. Well, that might have been an error, no matter how well intentioned. Anyone with Army experience would know the term “significant vegetation”. This refers to an amount of vegetation in which you could provide concealment to troops. That described my yard until yesterday. I attacked it with my industrial strength weed whacker and beat it into submission. Now it no longer looks like a pasture gone wild and sort of resembles a lawn that has been ravaged by a demented greenskeeper. All this allowed me to set out today on an activation at Little Buffalo State Park. Propagation was not the best but we logged 12 contacts including some park-to-parks and had an enjoyable time. We got slow drive bys from the park ranger and had some curious looks from fisher folks but no one approached us. As always, we left no trace of our prescience. All in all a good time was had by all. A father with 2 sons parked next to us did ask me what we were doing as we were packing up. I told him and his son proudly showed me the 2 trout he had caught. I am attaching some pics of our set up along with some cat pics because my cats have positive ions. All cations are positive. Namaste, kidlets.

Still Life With Radio, Owl and Antenna
Mote slightly disgruntled because he can’t go outside and chase birdies.
Foggy trying to blend in.
Marley having a snooze.
Mayhem wondering why I am taking pictures.

Yes, I am shivering

So here we are … waiting in anticipation. I had a phone conversation last Thursday with a tech at Yaesu and it turns out there is nothing wrong with my radio that they could determine. He even had it keyed down for 10 solid minutes at full output (100 watts) and the power did not drop at all. He said the most likely suspect is the powerpole connectors I used. He said the cheap ones can get soft when they warm up and cause problems. He has seen this issue before. I have since ordered some new connectors from a reliable company and will have them on hand soon. In the mean time, when I receive the radio back, I will connect it to the battery without using any connectors, just using the wires on the battery terminals. Now I am waiting on the return shipment.

Now on to other stuff. Spring is getting old. The forsythia bushes have bloomed and the bright yellow of their flowers has evolved to the dusky gold of late autumn goldenrod. Soon trees will be spewing evidence of their sexual exploits all over my car and causing people all over the area to be sneezing and wheezing. The fur-gods (cats) have their butts glued to the window-sills and are enjoying the fresh air from the open windows. My lawn is starting to sprout dandelions and I hate to think that I will soon have to attack it with the mower. As I have stated in previous posts, it is not really a lawn, it is old pasture land that I have to beat into submission every couple of weeks, which is why I refer to it as “Satan’s Putting Green”. Yup, the joys of ownership. I admit I am getting restless and want to do some camping and some activating. I am looking forward to outside activities and more clement weather. Well enough for now. Namaste, kidlets.

“When Owls Cry” or “There ain’t no wind ‘neath my wings”

Terrible. Horrible. Awful. No shit, guys, there I was, trying to activate a park or 2 and realized my radio wasn’t putting out a signal. No one was hearing me. I thought it might be location or bad coax or a problem with my antenna or tuner… any number of things but I narrowed it down to my radio. The fans were not running which causes it to get too hot and this causes the PA circuit to go into protect mode. Not fun. I exchanged a few e-mails with the tech guys at Yaesu and, long story short (too late), I sent my FT-891 to the repair shop today. I am now without the ability to activate until I get it back. I am going to cry myself to sleep until I can get back out there and make some noise in the parks! Actually, me and the owls and the flamingos and the cats will do hunting from the arm chair and log a few in the books on a daily basis. I guess this will give me an excuse to do a few more chores around here. I will have to fire up the implements of destruction and get medieval on the back yard is taking out the wild roses and all the trash brush that is trying to grow up there. As the philosopher once said, Que sera sera. Namaste, kidlets.

A day to remember maybe

Hi all. It was a beautiful day so we went out. We started with breakfast at the Newville Diner in Newville PA. After a filling and hearty breakfast we set out for Gettysburg, PA. Yes, that Gettysburg. We arrived at the first hill overlooking the town from the north. There is a tower here and it is across from the Peace Light. I started to set up and broke my tripod. The tilt control snapped. We took off to the local Walmart and got a new tripod which I resolved to not leave in the car during freezing temps. We got back to the location which I thought might be relatively quiet and set up. There were more cars in and out of the parking area than I had thought there would be but we were in a spot where we were not in the way. I did observe a van pull up next to us at one point and a young man (late teens, early 20s) jump out wearing fake military cammy and carrying an airsoft “assault” style rifle. He and his group went up into the tower and I believe he took some selfies. They departed a short time later. The wind was blowing relatively strong which made it chilly. Even Tootsie didn’t want to leave the car. Between 20 and 40 meters I worked a total of 35 contacts including some park-to-parks. It was a good activation in spite of the broken tripod. SWMBO and I are making a good team on these excursions. 🙂 We left there and went to the ATV lot in Michaux State Forest on Bendersville Road above Pine Grove Furnace. The lot had some ATV riders there along with their vehicles and trailers but we found a good place to park and set up. Yup. then I started making mistakes lol. First I tuned my coax to a perfect 1:1 on 20M. Yup. Tuned the coax without it being attached to the antenna. Luckily my long suffering wyfe pointed that out to me. “Aren’t you going to connect your cable to the antenna?” she asked. After I got it attached, I got on the air. Worked 20M for a while and then went to 40M to let the locals have a chance. Finally when we were ready to go, I looked at my antenna and LO! and Behold! the tilt had loosened and the wind had blown it over. Lesson learned. Always have the antenna in your line of sight. Also, always check the tightness of any and all connections on new equipment. How do you spell duh? Amazing thing was the last few contacts came in just fine and it didn’t seem to affect the SWR. We logged a total of 26 contacts there including some park-to-parks. We got home ok and then got all equipment put away and entered the qso’s into the log. Then had a catastrophe. One of our cats does not get along at all with the 2 younger cats. we try to keep them separated. I was carrying one of the youngsters up from the basement and slipped. He is ok but I am nursing a very sore arm/wrist/ribs/knee. Oh well, as the philosopher said: “you take the good, you take the bad”. Enough for now. Namaste kidlets

Gettysburg was too cold for Tootsie
The view out the windshield at Gettysburg
Tootsie protecting us from ATVers

More from the POD Person

Heidi-Ho. Wow, 2 posts in 2 days. Something must be off with me lol. I decided to activate today because the weather was nice …. for January. The temperature was pretty mild …. about 3.5 C (38.5 F) which was not too bad. First, I tried to go to Fowlers Hollow State Park but there was oo much road construction activity there so I decided to go to Big Springs State Park, my old stand by. We got the POD set up and I got on the air. I put the heater in it and soon was in shirtsleeves. BTW, all my owls declined to make the excursion with us so I was mascot-less. Oh well, their loss. We were set up and on the air in a short period of time and I quickly made the required amount of contacts for a legit activation. After about half an hour I switched from 40 meters to 15 meters and made more contacts. I even made 2 DX contacts: Spain and Canary Islands. Overall I made a total of 45 contacts in an hour on 3 bands, 40, 15 and 20 meters using an inverted Vee antenna and my Yaesu ft891 at 75 Watts. My Wyfe is urging me to try operating from the car as a practice for our vacation so I am going to look at streamlining my setup. I will fill in more about that in later posts. Well the log has been uploaded, I am warm and am drinking coffee and my motional sports cat is by my side so I think it is time to sit back and relax. As always, namaste kidlets until we meet again.

The POD
The Pod from the side

Calling CQ

Co-dependency? Symbiosis?

Since one of my stated purposes of this blog is a study/discussion of the aspects of nature, I am going to start the New Year off with a discussion of the relationship between the POTA Activator and the POTA Hunter. First off, is it a co-dependency? Without the hunters there would be no activators and without the activators there would be no hunters. The existence of either depends on the existence of the other, but a true co-dependence would suggest a one-to-one relationship. Dictionary.com defines co-dependency as: “a state of mutual dependence between two people”. WAIT!!!!! They used a derivative form of the word within its own definition! Naughty, naughty!!  Websters defines it as: “ a psychological condition or a relationship in which a person manifesting low self-esteem and a strong desire for approval has an unhealthy attachment to another often controlling or manipulative person”. This shows that it does not apply at all to the relationship between hunters and activators. 

Let’s look at symbiosis. Webster defines it as: ” 1the living together in more or less intimate association or close union of two dissimilar organisms (as in parasitism or commensalism)” This first definition does not really apply. Though we may make friends through POTA activities, I wouldn’t classify the association as intimate or parasitical. Now lets look at definition number 2 in Webster’s arsenal: ”2 a cooperative relationship (as between two persons or groups)”. There, I think they are onto something! By activating, the activator gives the hunter a purpose and the hunter, by hunting gives the activator a purpose. It is often repeated that without the hunters, there would be no activators. Hmmmm …. something seems to be missing here. 

The group that is overlooked or forgotten is the one that labors in the shadows. The organizers, the administrators, the VOLUNTEERS who run the POTA.APP website and maintain a clearing house of logs, those who track the State Parks and assign numbers to them, those who make the rules for activations and those who watch over the logs and design the awards which mystically and magically appear in our accounts when we pass a threshold. Think of them this year. Maybe donate some time or money to support the effort. 

In any event, continue to support POTA in whichever why your heart tells you to and is within your abilities. If you are a hunter, hunt. If you are an activator, activate. If you do both then do both. Just have fun and POTA on

Namaste, kidlets!

As for Summer, I don’t hear no singing!

It was a beautiful day today and I decided to go activate a park. I went to Big Spring State Park which is located in Tuscarora State Forest, making it a two-fer! All went well. I put my antenna up over a convenient branch with my arborist bag and quickly got on the air. I self spotted on the POTA app and soon was making contacts. I had no real issues until an operator started using AM on a nearby freq. I just moved down the band and started over. I ran for a while more before the heat got to me. Overall a very successful activation. I made 44 contacts including 3 park to parks. I will be back there in the near future as it is a nice park and is nearby. I enjoy working portable and POTA gives me a chance to get outdoors. Yesterday I was out on my lawn and, with the help of my long-suffering wyfe, got my Buddistick tuned up using a 4″ by 20′ length of copper screen as a ground radial. It worked great and I will have to try it at a park next. Now I think I will sit here and stream some shows.

Namaste, y’all