|
Issue
# 113
hfradio.net
Jan. 30 2005
|
Director Bob Cooke VE3BDB retires
(Jan. 26 2005)
 |
It is with sincere regret
that the RAC Board of Directors announces the retirement of Ontario South
Director Bob Cooke VE3BDB. In his letter to President Earle Smith,
Bob expressed, in part, that "my
health being what it is I would
rather look forward to 2005 with pleasure..especially when I plan to retire
from my gainful employment at the end of June." |
During his tenure, Mr. Cooke has
defined in no uncertain terms, the positive aspects of reaching out to
the grass roots level of amateur radio in Ontario South. Through
his efforts and that of his team of Assistant Directors, his leadership
has yielded unqualified success demonstrated by the large number of new
RAC members, membership renewals and the sale of RAC products, all giving
RAC significant sources of new revenue.
As the chair of the Membership Services
Committee Bob was instrumental in the development of new promotional materials;
a solid membership recruitment and retention programme; the finalization
of RAC's Tru-Ca$h affinity programme, and establishing the guidelines for
continued membership recruitment.
The RAC Board and Executive, on behalf
of the RAC membership, extends heartfelt thanks to Bob and his wife Sue,
VE3SUH, with best wishes for a relaxed and happy retirement.
73,
Earle Smith VE6NM
President Radio Amateurs of Canada
&
Chair Board of Directors
(RAC News Service)
|
Atlantic
Maritime Section
|
Atlantic
Regional Correspondent
Howard
Dickson - VE1DHD
 |
Atlantic Region Correspondent
Needs Your Help
PLEASE, if there is something
interesting being planned, currently going on, or has taken place in Amateur
Radio in your location, drop me an email and let me know so I can share
your news with others in the region and across the country.
D. Howard Dickson - VE1DHD
dhdickson@hfx.eastlink.ca |
VE9ND Miscou Island
- NA-068
RSGB IOTA Contest
- July 2003
The following material
was extracted, with permission, from the personal website of Brent Taylor
- VE1JH (http://www3.nbnet.nb.ca/btaylor/ve9nd_miscou.html).
| The initial planning began in late
2002 for several members of the Fredericton Amateur Radio Club to undertake
a DX-pedition to some "exotic" site on a mid-summer weekend in 2003.
The annual Islands on the Air contest
is held in the last weekend in July, and encourages amateurs to activate
islands for others to work, and seemed to be perfectly suited to their
planned adventure.
IOTA has allocated two "official"
island groups to New Brunswick. The Bay of Fundy islands count as one multiplier,
and the northern islands count as the other. Miscou and Portage islands
are included in the northern group, while Campobello, Deer Island and Grand
Manan are part of the southern group. (See map inset)
Miscou Island was picked as the destination
of choice for a couple of reasons. First, it had not been activated for
quite some time. Second, it was relatively easy to reach - especially since
a bridge was built to the island in the early 1990s. |
|
 |
Another positive factor
in favour of Miscou Island was the fact that it reached into a rare Maidenhead
grid square, FN78. VHF operators collect grid squares and they felt that
the opportunity to activate this rare area bight be enticing.
Although VHF operations would not
be part of the IOTA contest, the opportunity to combine two types of operation
made Miscou Island the destination of choice.
Three members of FARC made the journey
to Miscou - Tim VE9XA; George VE1ACU; and Brent VE1JH.
Their "antenna farm" consisted of
a 3-element beam for HF, a 2-element 6-meter beam, Cushcraft R7 vertical,
80-meter dipole and a Windom for 40. |
| Tim brought a nice large
tent as well as the travel trailer as potential operating locations, but
it was Mother Nature who made the decision for them by sending swarms of
mosquitoes to attack at every turn. Soon it was clear that they had to
operate all of their gear from inside the trailer. Two tents were put up
to add to the sleeping accommodations, and the radios were set up on the
two tables provided in the trailer.
By noon on Friday they had the vertical
antenna up and running, and set up the operating positions in the trailer.
Tim VE9XA brought his FT-1000 for
phone work, while George set up for CW. There was only one logging laptop,
so it was rotated from side to side as each operator took his turn.
|
|
For 6-meter operation Brent brought
along his TS-680S and set it up on another small table at the front of
the trailer.
 |
Brent's role was to spell
off the HF operators, and work any openings that 6-meters provide. For
an antenna they used Brent's homemade Moxon wire beam, which had seen use
in two Field Day operators for VE9ND and had performed well.
The TA33 beam tuned up well on 20
and 10 meters, but did not work well on 15 at all. Unfortunately, the vertical
was not the best on 15 either, so VE9ND was handicapped to an extent. Luckily,
20 meters was quite hot throughout the contest and served as the main band. |
By sunset on Friday the station was
in place and ready to go for 9 AM local time the next morning. The strong
breezes on Miscou were refreshing, but still not sufficient to blow the
mosquitos off course, and consequently the operators spent most of their
time in the trailer.
HF Operations
 |
The team started the contest off
on schedule with the 20-meter antenna beamed towards Europe. Twenty held
up most of the day, and was usually open in every direction. The beam even
performed well off the back, maybe even better than the front. Brent and
Tim worked some phone pileups on 20 through the day, and George took care
of CW.
Miscou, because it is a multiplier
island, was needed by other operators to boost their score. And while VE9ND
was not DX for most operators, the multiplier gave the club station lots
of business. A few highlights of the VE9ND operation were the working of
VP2MX on several bands and modes for multipliers, and working one of amateur
radio's most respected members, John, ON4UN in Belgium.
Probably the comical highlight of
the day was when Brent worked FARC Past President Stu Morehouse, who was
vacationing in southern New England and dropped in to the Ham Radio Outlet
store in Salem, NH. Stu broke Brent's pileup and put N1HRO into the log
for VE9ND.
Twenty meters remained open well
after dark, and only reluctantly did VE9ND move to a noise-filled 80 and
40. |
The QSO rate went way down once the
low bands were fired up. QRN was impressive, as thunderstorms in the area
generated huge noise crashes on 40 and 80. VE9ND was forced to shut down
for a while in the middle of the night as a thunderstorm moved over Miscou.
By the close of the contest period
at 9 AM local time Sunday, VE9ND had worked 499 HF QSOs.
| The club station did not win the
contest, certainly, as some of the "big gun" stations recorded three and
four times as many contacts, but the operators had lots of fun and were
happy to hand out NA-068 to the IOTA members who needed the multiplier.
VHF Operations
While not an intended focus of the
trip, VHF provided an opportunity for the participants to have a little
fun and to activate a rare grid square.
Six meters opened up on Friday evening,
and the Sporadic E opening lasted over an hour, with 20 stations being
worked QRP, mainly in the U.S. Midwest and Great Lakes area.
|
|
The highlight of that opening saw some
double-hop E-skip, netting contacts on Friday night with Wyoming and Nebraska.On
Saturday morning the band opened again briefly to the US mid-Atlantic states.
Three additional contacts were made into Maryland and Virginia. All of
the E-skip openings were worked with only 10 watts.
The highlight of 6-metres was Saturday
night's Auroral opening. Tim's IC-706 was put into operation, as it had
100 watts instead of Brent's 10-watt Kenwood. While many signals were heard,
only five were worked, including CY9A on St.Paul Island, another IOTA DX-pedition.
Later in the evening the VE8BY beacon in Iqaluit was heard for several
hours, although nobody from that direction was on the air.
Brent packed his satellite antenna
almost as an afterthought before the trip, and on Saturday evening decided
to assemble it for a pass of UO-14. Several satellite QSOs were made from
FN78, including YV5SAT/6 in FK70, Venezuela. Not bad for a 500 milli-Watt
HT!
Conclusion
VE9ND's excursion to Miscou was
lots of fun. The station recorded 500 QSOs (if you want to count VE9ND's
6 meter contact with CY9A) and the operators enjoyed themselves immensely.
The mosquitoes also enjoyed themselves, as they drank several pints of
blood from the exposed flesh of the VE9ND crew.
George's vocabulary was rich with
commentary on what he thought of the mosquitoes. He was clearly impressed
with their veracity.
In the above photo the versatile
Tim, VE9XA, works DX on the stove with his headset attached, while George
logs and dupes on the computer.
Miscou Participants: George VE1ACU,
Tim VE9XA, Brent VE1JH
FARC Executive, support and planning
meetings: Gary VE9AI, Stu VE9STU, Laurie VE9IBM, Dave VE9AV and others.
Thank you!
Fredericton
Amateur Radio Club VE9ND home page
Brent,
VE1JH, home page
Dartmouth Amateur
Radio Club (DARC)
2005 Executive
A new executive for 2005 was elected
at the Annual General meeting of the Dartmouth Amateur Radio Club on January
8, 2005.
Dartmouth Amateur Radio Club Executive
2005
President: Leo - VE1LS
Vice President: ALAN- VE1KAO
Secretary: George- VE1BZF
Treasurer: John- VE1WZ
Director at Large- Don VE1CAF
Technical Advisor On Call: Bill
VE1MR
Leo VE1LS -Amateur Advanced-CW-15
years. 35 years Communications
Operations- RCAF and DND Military
Communications
Alan VE1KAO-Amateur Advanced-CW--Employed
with the Provincial Government-Bridge Inspector. 12 years as an Amateur |
|
John VE1WZ-Amateur Advanced-CW-RCN-Refinery
Operations Foreman- 39 years as an Amateur
George VE1BZF-Amateur Advanced-CW-Cdn
Armed Forces-Naval Electronics Technician (Maintenance). 26 years as an
Amateur
Don VE1CAF-Amateur Advanced-CW-Signal
Corps-Dept of Transport-Communications - 53 years as an Amateur.
Dartmouth Amateur
Radio Club (DARC)
Club Profile
The Dartmouth Amateur Radio Club
is located in the City of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia on the Eastern side of
Halifax Harbour. The Club was founded in 1953 and the Club callsign
- VE1YO - was the callsign of one of the founding members.
The Club is located in the Eric Spicer
Building at 21 Mt Hope Avenue in Dartmouth, which is also the home of the
Emergency Measures Organization (EMO) for Metro Halifax and the Province
of Nova Scotia
The Club "hamshack" is located within
the EMO building, adjacent to the Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) and
is equipped with has HF,VHF/UHF, Clover and Packet equipment.
The Club radio equipment is used by Club members mostly for recreational
purposes such as SSB, CW, SSTV, PSK31 and other Digital Modes, and occasionally
for Emergency purposes under the umbrella of the EMO.
The Club also has Repeater and Autopatch
facilities located on Mt. Edward Road, Dartmouth. The callsign is
VE1DAR - 147.15(+) MHz & 444.6 MHz Voice; 144.91 MHz Packet.
The Club facilities are open every
Saturday morning from 9AM to 12PM for coffee and conversation. Everyone
is welcome.
Involvement in Emergency
Communication
The Dartmouth Amateur Radio Club
has a close working relationship with the Metro Halifax Emergency measures
Organization. Because the Club station is located adjacent to the
Emergency Operations Centre (EOC), Club members are able to ensure that
the radios and antennas used in the EOC Communications Room are checked
on a weekly basis, ready for use during an emergency.
Club members also participate in
all EMO Exercises, as well, they attend monthly meetings with EMO staff.
In the event of a real Emergency, some DARC members are on the first responders
callout list to man the Communications Centre. Others are ready and
prepared to take up positions at sites where they are needed such as, the
incident site, hospitals, radio stations, and comfort stations. There
they are able to assist police and fire departments and the Red Cross.
The Halifax Emergency Operations
Centre is unique in Canada, in that three levels of
Government - Municipal, Provincial
and Federal are able to come together to staff the Centre during an Emergency
of National proportions such as 9/11. The close physical proximity enables
all level of government to quickly assess situations and make necessary
plans to assist those in need.
Hams in the Dartmouth Amateur Radio
Club have assisted with a number of recent events such as: the crash of
Swiss Air flight #911 off of Peggy's Cove; 9/11 when thousands of unexpected
visitors were forced to land and spend time in the Halifax area; Hurricane
Juan; Ice Storms etc. and will continue to do so in the future.
Leo VE1LS - President (DARC)
S&R Volunteers
become Victims of Crime
The Halifax Regional Municipality
Ground Search & Rescue volunteers had 6 radios stolen from their command
vehicle. That represents $5,000 worth of fund raising efforts. If you have
any information which could help in the recovery of the radios or apprehension
of the individual or individuals responsible for the theft please pass
it on to the police or "Crime Stoppers".
Maritime Contest
Calendar
Maritime (80-metre HF) Contest
Phone and CW
Planned dates:
Janurary 30th 2005 - CW section
(VE1BBL Memorial Contest)
February 13th 2005 - SSB section
(VE1ALB
Memorial Contest)
Operating Times & Frequency:
Both
sections are on 80M, open to hams in the three Maritime provinces
only and run from 7 -11 am and 2 - 6 pm local time (AST).
Exchange: Call, Name, RST,
County, Province, Serial #.
Scoring: 6 points / QSO (1
point per correct exchange item).
Multipliers: Counties and
Memorial station will count as multipliers.
Awards: A plaque will be awarded
for first place in each section and certificates will be awarded for 25+
CW contacts and 50+ SSB contacts
Submission of Entries within 30
days to:
Avery Crowell ve1hs@rac.ca
PO Box 82
Digby, NS B0V 1A0
As of now we are not 100% sure that
we have a CW Op for the BBL section, but will keep everyone advised. We
are recommending that the CW section operation be kept to 3.700 kHz and
below.
73 Avery - VE1HS
White Cane 80-Metre
Contest
Planned Date: February 6,
2005.
Participants: Open to all
three Maritimes Provinces, Newfoundland & Labrador, Quebec, Ontario,
as well as the State of Maine. ALL are welcome, indeed encouraged,
to participate in order to make this an interesting and challenging contest.
Operating Time & Frequency:
between 7am &10am AST, and from 4pm to 6pm AST on the 80 metre band
only.
Exchange: Call sign; Name
(personal); White-cane status (White Cane or not)
Scoring: two points for a
White Cane contact; one point for a non-white cane contact.
Multipliers: there are no
multipliers
Awards: will be two Certificates
- one for a White Caner and one for a non-White Caner.
Log Submission: no later than
February 28, 2005. Late submissions will NOT be counted.
Format - Logs will
be accepted in ANY format (i.e. Brail, audio tape; email and direct mail.
Totals - Logs should show
at the bottom the total number on white cane contacts and the total number
of non-white cane contacts.
Log sheets to be sent to:
Postal Address:
David Vail - VE1GM
50 Porter Street,
Yarmouth, N.S.
B5A 2Y9
E-Mail: mdvail@hotmail.com.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Mark your Calendar Now
DOWN-EAST FLEA MARKET
Saturday, June 11, 2005
Halifax, N.S.
The Down-East Flea Market is the
largest Ham Fest in Atlantic Canada. Details on Commercial Suppliers and
associated Flea Market events will be published over the next couple of
months.
Location: Halifax Forum Complex
at the corner of Young and Windsor Sts. in Halifax
Time: Doors open for sellers
at 0630 and at 0900 for buyers
Entry Fee: $3.00 per person
Tables: free and can be reserved
by contacting David Nimmo at ve1nn@rac.ca
Talk in Frequency: VE1PSR
147.270(+)
Associated Social Events:
Friday 10th Evening - 1900
at The Jolly Mug - for info contact Hugh ve1pq@rac.ca
Saturday 11th Breakfast -
at the Steak and Stein - 6061 Young St, Halifax
Talk by Wayne-VE1WPH on the ISS set
up
Hope to see you there
73's -- VE1EGG -- Ed Grace
ve1egg@rac.ca
Maritime Swap Shop
The Maritime Swap Shop is held every
Tuesday at 2330z or 7:30 local time on 3.750 MHz. All station are invited
to checkin and post their wants and items for sale. The Maritime Swap Shop
list can be found on many places on the internet, here are just a few:
The
Loyalist City Amateur Radio Club , hfradio.net
, VE1AIC's
Home Page and Truro
Amateur Radio Club
Notice: Amateurs in the Atlantic
Region are asked to submit their news items for 'The Canadian Amateur
Radio Bulletin' to our 'Atlantic Regional Correspondent'.
D. Howard Dickson - VE1DHD
dhdickson@hfx.eastlink.ca
History shouldn't
repeat itself, but it does.
by
Charles Leggatt VE3CFL
Charles Leggatt - VE3CFL
is the President of the Toronto Marine Amateur Radio Club
|
This article is about
the importance of having "long-range" communication facilities onboard
sailing vessels.
On November 16, 1982 South
Bound II under skipper Herb Hilgenberg (VE3LML & VP9LM) set
sail from Beaufort, NC, with Herb, his wife and two young children aged
6 and 14. Herb had no long-range communication facility such as Marine
or Ham SSB onboard his vessel. During the passage, they were hit by one
violent storm after another, and in the process Herb broke his arm (1).
Fearing not only for his own life, but also for his wife and children,
he struggled on in great pain. Six days later they arrived in the Virgin
Islands. Thankful for his life, he decided then and there that he would
never go blue-water sailing again without having SSB capabilities onboard.
Secondly, realizing the poor weather reporting systems that existed in
those days, he would study weather and all it variations, and start a weather
network for sailors at sea. Those of you who have used Herb's daily SSB
network know how terribly important this life saving facility has been
over the years(2). He had decided that "History",
as far as he and his family were concerned, would not be "repeated"! |
| Moving forward in time,
it was late fall of 1988. As I sat at home one Sunday morning the
telephone rang with a request from a group of sailing pals. They
had earlier gotten together and had taken a Blue-Water Sailing Program.
It involved, as I remember, a professionally supervised sail-training program
from Toronto to Bermuda and back. It covered celestial navigation, chart
work and of course vessel handling under all situations. The vessel had
a SSB receiver on board but no transmitter. In short, they had no "long-range
communication capability". Off the coast of Bermuda they were hit
by a tremendous storm. They could hear other vessels calling for help but
they were too far offshore for VHF communication. They were alone with
the very real possibility of losing their lives. The memory of that fear
and the concern they had at the time for their families was understandably
high as they talked to me that Sunday morning.
Their request was simple. As a group,
they had collectively agreed that they would never go blue-water sailing
without SSB/Ham or SSB/Marine transceiver equipment onboard. They now wanted
to know how to obtain a course of instruction that would give them that
SSB capability. For them, there would be no repeat of History. |
Herb Hilgenberg (VE3LML &
VP9LM)
|
The call had been made from the Toronto
Sailing and Canoe Club, and I joined them to discuss the problem. The outcome
of that meeting was the formation of the Toronto Marine Amateur Radio Club,
and we would teach them. That was fifteen years ago, and in the intervening
years, close to 380 members of the sailing community have taken the course
of instruction and gained their Amateur Licence.
In 2003, at a meeting of the World
Cruising Association, held at Ashbridges Bay Yacht Club, Herb Hilgenberg
was asked how many lives he thought he had saved over the years.
He answered " We gave up counting at 25!". Had those 25 plus sailors not
had "long-range communication facility" they would in all probability have
lost their lives.
| What choices are available
in 2005 for long-distance communication at sea? Cellular Phone; the GMDSS
(Global Marine Distress Safety System), which is not to be used in the
Great Lakes, but only off the coasts; and of course, Marine and/or Ham
Single Side Band (SSB) radio. If you are planning blue-water sailing, check
www.tormarc.com
(via Google) for more information on the "what and where" of Long-Range
Communication and the How" to get it.
Charles Leggatt VE3CFL - President
and founder:
The Toronto Marine Amateur Radio
Club.
Tel: 416 486 6025
Fax: 416 486 0417
Email: charles.di@sympatico.ca |
Schooner on St. Margaret's Bay in
Nova Scotia - Summer 2000 - by Howard Dickson - VE1DHD
|
For more information on the fascinating
story and history of Herb (VE3LML & VP9LM) the following may be of
interest:
(1)
A Voice from the North
Canadian sailing enthusiast Herb Hilgenberg
helps mariners by providing weather forecasts and has assisted the Coast
Guard during Search and Rescue cases
Story by PA3 David Schuerholz
US Coast Guard Atlantic Area Public
Affairs
Go to: http://www3.sympatico.ca/hehilgen/uscg.htm
And
(2)
SHIP-ROUTING / WEATHER FORECASTING for the ATLANTIC
"A dedicated hobby"
(SINCE 1987)
Go to: http://hometown.aol.com/hehilgen/myhomepage/vacation.html
Big Event 27
Sponsored by: The Niagara
Peninsula Amateur Radio Club
Start date: Saturday, February
5, 2005
Location:
Canadian Auto Workers Hall
124 Bunting Rd St. Catharines Ont.
Opens: Vendors 7:00 am --
Public 9:00 am till 1:00pm
Costs: Admission $6.00 Tables
$20 (includes one admission)
Talkin: VE3NRS 147.240 +
Tone 107.2
Notes:
New This Year --- VE Testing on
Site NO CW --- More vendor tables --- New dealer draw --- Improved Food
Menu
Radioworld --- Durham Radio ---
Maple Leaf Communications and other vendors.
Door Prizes -- CanWarn -- Ares --OSLBureau
-- RAC
Don't forget your GRAND PRIZE TICKET
$1000.00 Gift Certificate from Radioworld.
Beef on a Bun -- Sandwiches -- Pop
-- FREE COFFEE
For more info visit: www.nparc.on.ca
Scarborough Amateur Radio Club
 |
The Scarborough Amateur
Radio Club was founded in 1946 and became Incorporated in 1977 as a non
profit organization with the following objectives: |
-
The advancement of Amateur Radio as
a hobby by providing, to Club Members aspiring to participate in that hobby,
training in basic radio theory and the International Morse Code.
-
The Active support of Radio Amateurs
of Canada, Inc.
-
The active support of Government and
local community authorities when such support is in the best interests
of our community and our Club.
Our meeting location is 2467 Eglinton
Ave. E., (south side) near the Kennedy / Eglinton Subway Station, just
east of Kennedy Rd. We meet in the Seniors Lounge in the upper area of
the Mid-Scarborough Recreation Centre Complex. We meet on the 2nd and 4th
Monday of the month. Meeting starts at 8:00 PM. If you live in the Toronto
area or plan on visiting our fair city please drop into one of our meetings,
all Amateurs are welcome to attend our activities.
Our club has been active in Public
Service Communications.
At present many of our members are
active in ARES. (Amateur Radio Emergency Services). Scarborough Club Past
President, Bob Chrysler, VE3IEL is ARES EC for Scarborough. In the past
we have participated in varous Community Communications Activities such
as the Warrior's Day Parade and the Labour Day parade in 2004. We have
also provided communications for various "Walks", "Fun Runs", "Bike-athons",
& "Horse Trials". In association with ARES many of our members participated
in assisting community authorities during the recent power blackout.
For more information about our club
visit our website at: www.ve3we.ca
|
Looking for that special piece of
radio gear to finish off your ham station? Do you have extra radio gear
you'd like to turn into some cash? |
Well the place to visit is the 'Ontario
Swap Shop' held every Sunday at 12 noon on 7055 kHz and 7:00pm on 3755
kHz. Nick VE3NJG and Ken VE3YK host the hour long program and all amateurs
are invited.
The Swap Shop list is posted every
Monday on the Trans Provincial Net website, Ontario
Swap Shop Listings , the swap shop list can also be found on packet
by calling up VE3DID
(Nick VE3NJG)
RAC Amateur Radio Emergency Service,
Ontario Section
ARES Amherstburg Amateurs on alert
and ready to roll (Jan 25. 2005)
The Story:
Fermi
nuclear power plant shut down after coolant plant (Jan. 24, 2005,
10:20 PM)
FRENCHTOWN
TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) -- The reactor at the Fermi 2 nuclear power plant
was shut down
Monday
afternoon after a coolant leak was detected, officials said.
Officials
with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and DTE Energy, which operates the
plant, said the Monroe
County
plant about 30 miles south of Detroit was not evacuated and the leak posed
no danger to the health or
safety
of plant workers or the public.
Viktoria
Mitlyng, public affairs officer for the NRC in Chicago, said the plant
was shut down without
complications
and nonessential workers were allowed to leave for the day.
Plant officials
determined the cause of the leak Monday night and fixed it, said Len Singer,
a spokesman for DTE.
The power
company was working with the NRC to determine a timeframe for getting the
plant restarted, he said.
Singer said
officials have confirmed the leaked material was water from a non-radioactive
cooling system. No
radioactive
water was leaked, he said.
Michigan
State Police officials said they were monitoring the situation through
their Lansing State Emergency
Operations
Center as a precaution.
On a typical
day, the Fermi plant supplies about 15 percent of the power for the southeast
Michigan grid. Singer
said officials
have increased output at the region's other power plants and power service
isn't expected to be
affected.
(Freepress)
________________
This
from the Amherstburg Group: (recieved Jan. 25 2005)
Last night
we had a level 2 alert from the local Nuclear Generating Plant at Monroe
Mich. The incident occurred
at 4:20Pm.
I heard it on the Detroit TV at 5:15Pm.
I immediately
called the club president Dan (VA3DYF), and vice-president
John (VE3UDK), and the club
ARES
EC Joe (VA3TRL) , and gave them a "Heads Up " notice until the local
authorities would contact us .
As it turned
out , the alert was downgraded and we were not alerted buy the higher-ups.
I called the Fire Chief
this
morning to tell him that ee were on standby , if needed He said "Good !.
Thanks very much. It's Good to
know That."
That's it
from here ..De VA3SWO.....Dave in Amherstburg.......<73>
Western Provinces
Correspondent
Anthony Rodgers
VA7IRL
Hello from Red Deer
For the past 34 years our club has
sponsored a picnic and hamfest on the Father's Day weekend. We have moved
the picnic last year from Burbank to the Agricultural Society Campground
at Pine Lake, S.E. of Red Deer. Please let any amateurs in your area know
of the changes and we look forward to seeing you at this year's picnic.
Thank you.
Central Alberta Amateur Radio
Club (Formerly Central Alberta Radio League) 35th Annual
Picnic and Hamfest
Sponsored by the Central Alberta
Amateur Radio Club
Date: June 17,18 and 19,
2005
Place: Pine Lake Agricultural
Campground, Pine Lake, AB.
Directions: Go south of Red
Deer to highway #42, go east to secondary highway #816, turn south 1 km
to Crossroads Ag Society and Hub Community Center
Time: Registration starts
Friday afternoon June 17th.
Talk-in: VE6QE 147.150 +600
and 146.52 Simplex
Information: Brian Davies
VE6CKC, (403)- 227-4409, bcdavies@telusplanet.net,
Jack VE6JRH (H) (403) 556-6775
(W) 556-3839 amateurradio@shaw.ca
Website: www.caarc.ca
73 de VE6JRH
John R. (Jack) Humphries
ve6jrh@rac.ca
403-556-3839
BC QSO Challenge, a
new provincial contest sponsored by the Delta Amateur Radio Society.
Participation is encouraged from
everyone, Canadian and DX alike. It's a 24 hour contest, starting on Saturday,
Feb. 12 at 1800z.
For rules and information,
please visit the DARS website at: www.deltaamateurradio.com/bcqsochallenge.html
Notice: Amateurs in the Western
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