Porter And A Park To Start The Month Off Right

Hi kidlets. I know it has only been about 4 days since my last post but here we are.

On February 1st, I brewed a porter. Now it is in the fermenter with the yeast doing their thing. What is a porter, you might ask? Well, that may or may not be easy to answer. Porters were the first “industrial” beer, originating in the 17th century and becoming a staple in Great Britain. The actual origin of porter is lost in myth and anecdote, but it has its roots in brown ales. It was the drink of the laborers and was aged in huge vats. On 17 October 1814, Meux & Co’s Horse Shoe Brewery in London had a 22 foot high vat burst open, knock out the back wall of the brewery and flood the surrounding neighborhood. There were injuries and a few deaths as a result. After this they started using smaller vats to age beer. Stout beer is a direct offshoot of porter. Back in 1986 when my brother got me into brewing my first batch was a porter. I remember fondly using a 2.5 Kg can of malt extract and a 5lb bag of corn sugar. It came out good and started my interest in brewing.

So this batch is fermenting. Fermentation of beer goes through some stages. First the yeast prepares itself by absorbing nutrients and minerals that it needs to work. The second stage is when yeast is metabolizing the sugars in the wort (raw beer) and producing carbon dioxide, alcohol and flavor compounds which complement the flavor of the beer. The final stage is when the yeast re-absorbs some of the byproducts of the process and starts to go dormant. Below I have provided some videos I have uploaded to show these stages.

Today, I had some time, so I went back to Little Buffalo State Park US-1376 and activated. It is close to here and a nice park. It was a beautiful day, nice and sunny but the temperature was around -2C so SWMBO stayed home. I started out on 40M and soon had 10 contacts: enough to be a legitimate activation. I worked 3 more on 40M and then changed band to 17M which seemed to be open. I worked 12 more stations including some dx (Venezuela, Puerto Rico and Finland) along with Washington State, Oregon and other US states. Overall, I logged 25 contacts.

I think I have satisfied my need to blog for today so I will bid you all adieu and namaste.

Moxie, Missy and Zarathustra keeping me company. It looks a bit washed out because I was facing the sun.

Another Entry And I Scratched An Itch

Hi kidlets. This afternoon after SWMBO and I finished lunch; she suggested that I go do an activation. She decided to let me out on my own as she wasn’t feeling that activation glow today. I packed up my gear and headed out to Big Spring State Park US-4355.

I just checked and it was 2 August the last time I activated Big Spring. The park itself is nice and cozy. Not very big but a good park to go to when you want some undisturbed POTA time. It sits in the West end of Perry County PA and the traffic is minimal.

I got set up and got on the air a short time after arriving at the park. 40 meters was not in the best of shape but I worked 10 contacts after about 20 minutes. I moved to 17 meters and was able to work a few more and then finished back on 40 M with a total of 23 contacts. It was mostly sunny when I arrived with a temperature of 12.7 C but after a while it clouded over and the temp dropped to 10.5 C. Still quite warm for January. There were no birds heard today. It did not take too long to tear down.

All in all it was a fine day. The only low point was when I heard a couple of sad hams trying to interrupt an activator in progress because they were on a net owned freq. Rather than take the high road these individuals just kept talking over the activator and folks calling him (malicious interference). The activator moved to another freq and the 2 sad hams were free to discuss liver spots and other afflictions as they do every day. It takes all kinds. I guess manners have gone out the window. Ok rant off. 🙂

Well I am going to sit here, drink coffee and decide what to do about supper. As always, namaste kids!

Ollie, Moxie and Missie at Big Spring SP
The path to the restrooms at Big Spring SP
Some of the pavilions at Big Spring SP

‘Nother Activation; New Year, Old Park And A Pool Noodle

It has been the new year for 3 days. Is that getting old for you yet? Christmas is 355 days away and some people have their decorations up already!

Today we are at perihelion (the closest we get to the sun) and it is farging cold. Currently the temperature is holding steady at -1C.

Last night I turned my hf radio on and nothing happened. I tried my 2m radio and same thing: no power. I figured my power supply had gone south and got out my spare, then I observed the light on the supply was on. I started checking over everything and discovered that the neutral wire from the power cord had come out of the ring connector where it attaches to the power supply. No problem, I thought. I got out my handy-dandy box of connectors and, Lo! And Behold! my crimpers were nowhere to be found! I was able to crimp the connectors on with a pair of needle-nose pliers but I do prefer to use the proper tool for the job at hand. As for how that wire came loose, I blame the cats. They get behind my desk and pull things.

Today SWMBO and I decided to activate. We went to the ATV lot in Michaux State Forest up on the hill above Pine Grove Furnace State Park. It is one of our favorite spots. Today there were a bunch of hunters (it is antler-less deer season) there but we had a parking spot off to the side away from the ruckus. The temperature was about -3C and the sky was overcast. We got set up quickly and got on the air around 0940EST (1440 UTC). I used a pool noodle with a slit as a cable pass-through and the car stayed nice and warm. We worked 40 contacts in 1/2 hour. Sometimes the calls were coming in so quick that I didn’t have time to post spots. We even worked some local stations: Carlisle and York PA. The band was busy, this being Saturday. After we finished we went to breakfast at the Dickenson Restaurant in Carlisle.

Now I am drinking coffee and am about to go to my daily exorcise on the stationary bike. I wish all a happy and prosperous New Year. Namaste and Tally-Ho!!

Missie, Tootsie and Moxie at the ATV lot again.

End Of The Year Activation

Ok, I hope every had a good Christmas; whether or not you celebrate it. There is nothing wrong with having a good day. It is 2 days prior to New Years Day and I hope everyone has a safe and happy New Year.

Now the greetings are over, the past few days have been … different. Sunday night I am sitting in my chair at work. I had just logged into the system and was settled in for a night of keeping the place safe from democracy when, lo and behold, the guy who was filling in for me came in. I had forgotten that I had requested a night off so that I could use a PTO day before I lost it. I tucked my pride in and headed home. Yesterday we stopped at Sam’s, KB3DNZ and dropped off something for him. Then we did some errands followed by a quiet evening.

Today, SWMBO and I loaded up the radio, antennae and gnomes and set out for Gettysburg US-0027, one of my favorite activation sites. We got set up in the -2C weather with 22 KPH wind under clear skies and got on the air. I started operating on 40M and had 10 contacts within a short time. It only took 5 minutes. After that the calls slowed down a bit but were still going well. When I reached 35 contacts I changed bands to 10M. It seems the band was open to Europe and I was getting strong signals from Greece, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and Poland. I also worked an English station. All told I worked 43 contacts in 45 minutes. A pretty good activation.

After we packed up the gear, SWMBO wanted to go to a monument that she wanted to take some fresh pictures of. Afterwards we headed to the Lincoln Diner in Gettysburg proper. A bit of advice: if you go there and order the “country-fried steak and eggs” you better be hungry. The steak completely covers an entire plate. In fact, it needs its own zip code!

So tonight I am hoping for a quiet night. I do not drink and drive as in my youth I used up all my luck in that respect. I do have to work tomorrow night (I double checked the schedule) so I am going to take it easy. Sitting by the pellet stove and enjoying my coffee and maybe a beer sounds like a good plan to me. I wish my readers a safe and wonderful New Year and as Red Green says “Keep your stick on the ice”. Namaste to y’all. See you in 2026

Scout the radio cat.
Kalamazoo: one of our pocket panthers
Missie and Moxie at Culps Hill

Pre-Christmas Getting Gnomes Out And Making My 50th Activation

You know, I was reviewing some of my earlier posts and discovered that I had said that I would post something about VE teams and activities. Prior to 1983, to test for your amateur license, you had to go to a FCC field office. In 1983, due to budget and other restraints, the Federal Government stepped back from test administration and the VECs were born. VECs are Volunteer Examiner Coordinators. They are the management for test administration. There are a few around the country. They oversee the VE (Volunteer Examiners) teams and determine which questions are in the test question pools. For a valid examination there must be 3 VEs (minimum) proctoring the exam session. The VE’s must hold a license class higher than the individuals being tested. The tests are graded and checked by the three VEs and then submitted to the FCC for award of the license. I currently belong to 2 VECs: Laurel VEC and W5YI which means I can proctor for either of those organizations.

Now to my activation. We (SWMBO and I) went down to Gambrill State Park US-1573 in Maryland, just north of Frederick. We went to the High Knob section of the park which has an overlook of the valley where Frederick is. It also has the Maryland CCC Monument and several plaques detailing the activities of the CCC. There were few people there. I think the reason was that even though the temperature as about 7C, the wind chill factor was around -275C. It was cozy in the car but my hands got very cold very fast when we went walking around taking pictures. In about 1/2 hour we worked 16 contacts which qualified me for the Diamond Activator award, having activated 50 unique parks. My next award comes at 75 parks. I was able to work KE8UTX and KE8QJV, 2 ham friends from Ohio who were at another park. They were my 10th and 11th contacts, making my activation bonafide! Thanks Sandy and Craig! For details of the POTA awards, go to https://docs.pota.app/docs/awards.html

Now I am going to end this entry and enjoy some coffee, the company of my cats and the pleasure of getting on the radio doing some park hunting. Namaste and Merry Christmas, y’all.

Missie, Ptolomey and Moxie at Gambrill State Park
The Nature Center at Gambrill SP
The CCC Monument at Gambrill SP
Here is the overlook at High Knob in Gambrill SP
A large rock covered in moss and lichen
Scout helping me on the radio

A Day Without Gnomes

Here it is, Dec 16th 2025 and I am sitting in the shack enjoying coffee and watching Scout, my motional sports cat, run around and cause mischief.

I activated Little Buffalo State Park US-1376 today. I did it without SWMBO who was feeling a bit under the weather. I had asked my friend, Mike, if he wanted to come along but he had an appointment. So I was alone logging. I didn’t put my gnomes on the dashboard (no real reason).

I arrived at the park at around 16:45 UTC and got on the air by 16:50 UTC. The temperature had warmed up to 1C and there was no wind. I had decided to operate on 17 M as propagation seemed good. I spotted myself on the POTA page and also on DXSummit.fi. Things flowed along rather smoothly. I was sitting in the passenger seat as it made it easier to use the board I put my log on. Actually my log is in a notebook that I put on the board, to clarify the issue. In about 35 minutes I was able to log 30 contacts ranging from California to Spain. The band seemed to be in good shape. The majority of the contacts were from Florida. I had no sad-hams telling me to get off the band, so that was a good thing.

One really cool website I can recommend is https://potaparkpics.com/ It is an online repository where hams can post pictures of the parks they activate. It is interesting to browse through. Earlier I had mentioned DXSummit.fi This is a page which has spots from around the world and where you can spot yourself or another ham.

Well enough for now. Gnomes or no gnomes, I had a good day. Namaste y’all.

Zarathustra watching my 6 at Little Buffalo SP
Some of my hermit crabs having a snack

And The Sky Looks Like It Wants To Weather

The sky looks mean. I am saying it has the mottled gray colour the precedes some foul weather. This time of year, late Autumn, that usually means snow. Sigh. At least it gives me some exercise.

This afternoon I suggested to SWMBO a quick activation followed by a trip to the store. We drove to a place I hadn’t activated yet: State Game Land #88. PA has State Game Lands which are tracks of land held in the public trust and provided for hunting, fishing, range shooting and general wildlife/outdoor enjoyment. Right now it is antlered ruminant season so you need to be careful of where you go. The main parking lot for SGL#88 (US-8787) is located on top of a ridge overlooking 2 valleys in 2 different counties. We parked and I decided to use 17M due to the time of day: 1930 UTC . The sky was/is overcast and the temperature was around 5C; not too cold. We got set up and were able to make 32 contacts in less than 1/2 hour. I had started out by hunting 2 park-to-parks and then found an empty frequency. We made it out to California and as far north as Montreal QC. They were coming in so fast that I had trouble self-spotting. Alas, somebody who probably didn’t hear us started using the frequency so we went off the air.

Now, I am sitting here drinking coffee and enjoying the heat from our pellet stove. It is looking like it will be a nice evening. I guess I will cut this short. Thanks for reading and as always: namaste kiddos.

Missie and Moxie at SGL#88
A shot along the road home

Waiting For Krampus Or Somebody Like Him

First off, December 4th is the Feast Day Of St Barbara. She is the patron saint of armourers; architects; artillerymenfiremenfirework makers; mathematicians; miners; tunnelers; lightning; chemical engineers; and prisoners. I think I might fit in there somewhere. Secondly, December 5th is the Feast Day Of St Krampus. St Krampus would accompany St Nicholas and punish all bad children and evildoers with switches and other torments.

Yesterday, December 1st, SWMBO and I took a drive down to VA for the purpose of activating a couple parks and to make a trip to Buc-ee’s.

The first park we activated was Shenandoah River State Park US-1316. It is a nice small park located along the Shenandoah River (hence its name). We scouted out the park first before setting up. There were ruminants everywhere in the park. Anyway we settled on setting up at Cullers Outlook, a vista located at the top of the park and over the river. The view there is pretty spectacular. We were the only ones there in the parking lot, though we had a drive-by inspection from one of the rangers. It took 27 minutes to work 33 contacts of which 7 were Park-To-Parks. I stopped in at the Visitors center after and the staff there were very friendly. They have a large aquarium filled with native fishes and a display of stuffed native wildlife.

The next park was about 1 hour away by the roads we took. Seven Bends State Park US-1315 is located in a remote area accessed by a gravel road. There are 2 places to access the park: one off of Hollingsworth Road and the other off of Lupton Road. We opted for the Hollingsworth Road end which is located behind and adjacent to the Muse Winery. It was a small area with a playground and trail access. It only took us 7 minutes to make 14 contacts which made us bonafide. I think next time we are in this area we will try the other end of the park. In any event, propagation was on our side.

We heard the following birds: Carolina Wrens, White-Throated Sparrows, and Eastern Bluebirds.

We continued about 40 miles along US-81 to Mount Crawford VA where the Buc-ee’s is located. For those not familiar, Buc-ee’s is a HUGE truck stop/travel plaza. The franchise is based out of Texas and is common through the South. This one has 120 gas pumps so there is no waiting. The food there is made fresh and is quite good, though we can only speak for the Brisket BBQ Sandwiches, the Turkey BBQ Sandwiches and the Chicken and fries which is what we have tried so far. The Beaver Chips are good also and make a nice snack on a long drive.

That is how SWMBO and I spent the first day of December. I hope all my readers are well and for now, namaste, kidlets.

Missie, Ollie and Moxie at Cullers Overlook in Shenandoah River SP
Looking South from Cullers Overlook
Looking North from Cullers Overlook
Cullers Overlook Sign
Aquarium in Visitors Center
Wildlife Exhibit
Buc-ee’s Yes, it’s that big

November? No Wonder!

Wow, time is fun when you are having flies (my favorite frog quote). A lot has happened since the 4th of November. I worked some extra days due to people taking off for various reasons. A 12 hour day isn’t too bad until you are doing 4 or more in a row. I did have 4 days off in a row but couldn’t go much of anywhere due to both SWMBO and I having massive colds. Mostly we hung around suffering.

Scout is doing good. He is getting bigger every day though he has a skin condition that we are treating. We had to take the clippers to him so his coat is rather ragged and patchy. lol He does like hanging around me, sleeping on my chest and following me whenever I walk about. I refer to him as my “motional sports cat”. He is getting on well with the rest of the tribe for the most part. Our oldest girl, the Dowager Mayhem, does her best to ignore him. Her brother, Foggy, plays with him a bit. Calamity and him seem to be getting on the best though he does play rough. I often find them sleeping next to each other. The pocket panthers, Kalamazoo and Dipper do like to play tag with him, chasing back and forth around the downstairs.

Today I used my antenna case for the first time. I got a fishing rod case and put my ham-sticks in it along with my mag mount. It is a lot easier to tote around and the antennae don’t bang around as much as they did in the PVC pipe.

So we went out today and activated the ATV lot in Michaux State Forest US-5471. It is a good spot to activate and the elevation really helps. It sits on the ridge above Pine Grove Furnace State Park though it is not part of the park. We were getting good reports for the most part. We did have to change frequency once as a net moved in above us but there is plenty of room on the bands for everybody. Mostly the folks running the nets are cordial and let you know that they are starting up. It was a bit chilly when we started with a temp of 3C but we were only there for about 40 minutes. In that time we were able to work 40 stations.

After we finished with the activation SWMBO wanted to go for a ride. We got on the back roads in Adams County and drove around for about an hour.

Well enough for now. As always, namaste kiddos.

Scout having a snooze
My antennae case loaded up with antennae and mag mount
Moxie, Missie and Tootsie at the ATV lot

Are Tuesdays Full Of Woe Or Whoa

10 days since my last update. Not a record but there has been stuff going on.

We had to keep within reach of home for a few days until Scout got acclimated and the other kittehs got used to his presence. He is a lively little thing, now the medicine has kicked in. He enjoys running around and even wrestles with Calamity and Foggy though he doesn’t win … yet. He is still a little pig when it comes to food but he was used to having to scavenge for his meals prior to us adopting him so it is understandable. It is hard to believe we have had him for 11 days.

Today I was going to skip activating as SWMBO isn’t feeling the best. She has a cold. I figured we would take it easy this afternoon after we got groceries. On the way home from the store she suggested that we do a short activation and then take a ride as it is/was a beautiful day. We got home, put the groceries away and then set out.

We decided on 3 Square Hollow Vista in Tuscarora State Forest US-5479. The bands were somewhat quiet but we managed to make 11 contacts in 1/2 hour on 40M and 10M. We even worked a station from Colombia. Our closest contact was right down in the valley below us. I am happy with the contacts we made. Some days are better than others. So we ventured off from the vista and went to the airplane crash site that I have mentioned before. We then took a leisurely ride home.

For supper we made a low carb lasagna that SWMBO had found a recipe for online. It came out really good and we both enjoyed it. In place of the noodles we used egg-wraps.

Last night I participated in the NWS class on Winter weather reporting. I have been a spotter for the SKYWARN program for years but it is good to take these classes as a refresher. Last week I took the basic spotting class. Smart phones and the internet have made spotting a lot easier. You can use an app called “MPING” to report instead of calling a phone number.

Today I made an improvement to my POTA equipment assemblage. I had read online of people using fishing pole cases to store and carry their HamStick antennae and also to carry a mag mount. I had been using a piece of PVC pipe with end caps but this seemed so much more convenient. I ordered one on EBAY and received it today. The cost was only 22$ and it seems well made. I will show a picture below. Now my antennae will not get shaken around and I won’t hear them rattling over bumps.

Well enough for now. I am going to sit here, drink coffee and participate in a couple of nets. Namaste, fellow travelers.

The view from 3 Square Hollow Vista
Yes, a selfie
Missie, Moxie and Ptolomey at 3 Square Hollow Vista
Scout ignoring me