View Log - Log of all contacts made
I operated the 2001 Adventure Radio Society BumbleBee contest from
the top of a huge granite outcropping about 2
miles
from my house. This is the 2nd time operating from there, the first
was the 1999 bumblebee contest. This spot is hard to get to but makes
a great operating spot
because there are
several hundred feet drop offs on all four sides of you. Basically,
you're sitting on top of a huge tower. I left the house on foot at
about 8:30 AM and was on location by about 10:00 AM leaving a full hour to
put the station together!
Equipment this year was my new K2, a ZM2 tuner, bulldog paddle and... this
year I'd constructed a 3 band vertical to be supported by a 20 foot black
widow pole. The radiator is made of 300 ohm twin lead. One side
of the twin lead is cut for twenty meters. The other side I cut for
15 meters. Then I constructed a loading coil that I insert on the end
of the 15 meter element, also tying in the remainder of the ribbon on that
side above the loading
coil
for a stinger. If working only 15 & 20 I leave the loading coil
out. If working all three bands I put in the coil and use a ZM1 tuner
to load the antenna for 40. There is no where on top of the
rock to drive stakes so the pole had to be supported by tying it to a large
boulder. Then the radials are just draped along the top of rocks and
over the sides of the dropoffs. Anyway... I had the antenna in place
by about 10:30 and was on the air. I worked a little warm up qso with
WY1W, Butch, in New London, CT to make sure things were working. Butch
was also getting ready for the BB test. Unfortunately, we never hooked
up during the contest.
My operating
position was a little precarious, sitting within a few feet of a large dropoff,
but I was eagerly waiting for the contest at 11:00AM and hit the air at the
starting bell. 15 meters was open and I spent the first 30 minutes or so
there and then switched to the bread and butter band, 20 meters. I
went back and forth between 20 and 15 several times during the contest and
finished up with about 10 minutes on 40 meters.
I had been operating about 90 minutes when I looked up to see a swarm of
gnats (or some kind of small, winged varmit) about 10 feet away (if
you look carefully at the photo that looks like clouds with a wire running
through it, you MAY be able to see the gnats flying and clinging to one of
my radials). When I say swarm, I mean a small cloud. Colorado,
in general, is
a pretty bug free area. Throw in that I was perched on a huge rock
with almost no vegetation of any kind, and I was amazed that these little
fellas were up here! Naturally, with nothing else in the area, big
sweaty man looked pretty good to these guys . For the rest of the contest
I operated from the middle of a cloud. More bugs than I have ever had
to fight with! I think that I can say, without exagerating, that for
the rest of the contest I never had fewer then 10 bugs on me at any time.
Most of the time you could double or triple that. Face, arms,
legs, sunglasses! I generally was looking around bugs to see the log!
Luckily for me, they weren't biting bugs. But crawling bugs can
be pretty darn annoying!
I hung in till the end of the contest. I ended up with 103 contacts:
22 on 15, 77 on 20 and 4 on 40. My best effort in 3
bumblebees. At
the end, being accustomed to bugs by now, I did a short qso with one of my
contest contacts: WB4IEA, Bob in KY. I whined to him just a little
about the
bugs....
showing a bunch of sympathy he whined back that he was in his air conditioned
ham shack (hi hi). I cut him off and tore down the station. A
few scrapes later I was at the bottom of the granite hilll and hiking home.
I was on my front deck by 5:30 PM, beer in hand and much satisfied
with the day.