• Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2409 for Friday December 29th, 2023

    From Amateur Radio Newsline@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 29 08:00:13 2023
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    Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2409 for Friday December 29th, 2023

    Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2409 with a release date of Friday December 29th, 2023 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

    The following is a QST. Set your sights on some most-wanted DX
    contacts. Straight Key Month gets under way - and listen to the winning
    Ham Radio Haiku for 2023. All this and more as Amateur Radio Newsline
    Report Number 2409 comes your way right now.

    **

    BILLBOARD CART

    **
    PLANNING BEGINS FOR DXPEDITION TO PETER THE 1ST ISLAND

    DON/ANCHOR: As the new year dawns, we bring you a top story that looks
    to the future: We tell you about two big DXpeditions happening Down
    Under -- and both take plenty of planning and resources. We hear the
    details from Graham Kemp VK4BB.

    GRAHAM: The year 2024 is a big year of planning for a DXpedition to
    Peter I Island, which ranks eighth in ClubLog's most-wanted DXCC list.
    Like Bouvet Island, this remote volcanic island is one of three
    Norwegian territories in the subAntarctic and Antarctic region. The
    DXpedition of 19 operators is being led by Ken LA7GIA, Cezar VE3LYC,
    Dave WD5COV and Adrian KO8SCA. It's planned for 14 days in February
    of2026.

    Dave and Ken are also part of another high-profile DXpedition taking
    place a year before Peter I Island: that is the 3Y0K DXpedition in
    January 2025 for Bouvet Island, the 11th most wanted on the ClubLog
    list. This expedition will reuse much of the equipment from the
    previous year's trip to Bouvet and is also sharing the website being
    used by 3Y0K.

    As fundraising for Peter I Island gets under way in just a few weeks,
    the group is concentrating on securing a landing permit from the
    Norwegian Polar Institute. The team has reported that it has found a
    ship and it has two on-board helicopters. In addition to being a
    coveted DX, Peter I Island carries the IOTA designation of AN-004.

    This is Graham Kemp VK4BB

    (M0OXO WEBSITE)

    **
    CQ MAGAZINE SUSPENDS PUBLICATION

    DON/ANCHOR: CQ Magazine, which has been a resource for the active
    amateur radio community for seven decades, has suspended publication
    until sometime in 2024. CQ has been a valuable supporter of Newsline's
    Bill Pasternak WA6ITF Memorial Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the
    Year Award. It is renowned for its CQ World Wide array of contests and operating awards and for its hall of fame.

    The magazine's editor, Richard Moseson W2VU, told Newsline in a recent
    email: [quote] "As all of our loyal readers know, 2023 has been a very challenging year for us. We continue to pursue all options for getting
    things moving again. At this moment, the November and December issues
    are delayed but we plan to get them out to the readership as soon as circumstances permit. We appreciate everyone's patience and
    understanding." [endquote]

    The widely read magazine, which produces both a print and digital
    edition, has been a staple in amateur radio shacks, starting with its
    first issue in January 1945.

    **
    STRAIGHT KEY MONTH CELEBRATES A TRADITION

    DON/ANCHOR: This year marks the 18th year for Straight Key Month, a
    celebration of traditional communication from the Straight Key Century
    Club. Don't have a straight key? You can get in on the action anyway.
    Kevin Trotman N5PRE tells us how.

    KEVIN: Just as some CW operators think they can rest their fists
    following the conclusion of the ARRL's Straight Key Night on the 1st of January, others are preparing for Straight Key Month. The popular event
    from the Straight Key Century Club is a leisurely and friendly
    activity. The goal is to contact as many other operators as you can via
    CW, not just throughout the United States but around the world. There
    are various categories in which operators can set their goals.

    You don't need to be an SKCC club member to participate. In fact, you
    don't even need to use a Straight Key. Will you get a basic sweep, a
    full sweep or a grand sweep? See the SKCC website at skccgroup dot com (skccgroup.com) and click on the link for SKCC Straight Key Month,
    which appears under the heading of "Activities."

    Each year club members compete to produce a design for the event's
    official QSL card. This year's winning card will also mark the 18th
    anniversary of the SKCC.

    This is Kevin Trotman N5PRE.

    (SKCC)

    **
    ARIZONA DESERT COMES ALIVE WITH QUARTZFEST

    DON/ANCHOR: The next big thing in ham radio in the US is the first big convention of 2024. It's known as Quartzfest and it is one of its kind
    in Arizona's Sonoran desert. It features recreational vehicles,
    portable and mobile EMCOM systems and off-the-grid living all near
    Quartzsite. Activities and seminars are all free. Operators will also
    have a special event station W7Q throughout the week. Other hams will
    be participating in an HF Distance Challenge, Pico Balloon Launches and
    POTA activations and hikes. Quartzfest takes place between the 21st and
    the 27th of January. For a schedule of seminars and activities visit
    quartzfest dot org (quartzfest.org)

    (QUARTZFEST, AMATEUR RADIO DAILY)

    **
    HAMSCI ADVISOR BECOMES DIRECTOR OF HAYSTACK OBSERVATORY

    DON/ANCHOR: A noted observatory in New England has just chosen its new
    director - an amateur radio operator who is also an advisor to HamSCI
    and its various projects. We hear more from Sel Embee KB3TZD.

    SEL: Congratulations to Philip Erickson, W1PJE, a member of the
    advisory board of the citizens science group HamSCI, who is starting an important new role in January as director of the Haystack Observatory
    at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he has been on staff
    in various capacities since 1995. His most recent role has been as
    associate director.

    The observatory has been involved in a number of projects that share
    some of HamSCI's own priorities, conducting studies of the ionosphere
    and other parts of the atmosphere with the use of electromagnetic
    frequencies. Philip notes on his QRZ.com page that Haystack has been
    involved since the late 1950s in remote-sensing research into the
    properties of the ionosphere, neutral atmosphere, overlying
    plasmasphere, and magnetosphere.

    Philip belongs to the Nashoba Valley Amateur Radio Club, which often
    conducts activities in collaboration with the Haystack Observatory. He
    is also a big fan of working with vintage radios.

    This is Sel Embee KB3TZD.

    (HAMSCI, QRZ.COM)

    **
    GET READY FOR HAM RADIO KIDS' DAY

    DON/ANCHOR: Just as Youth on the Air month ends on the last day of
    December, Ham Radio Kids Day is just getting warmed up. The annual ARRL
    event takes place on Saturday the 6th of January as a way of showing
    youngsters the kind of fun they can have on the air - and to interest
    them in science and technology. Plans are already being made across the country: One such group, The New Providence Amateur Radio Club in New
    Jersey. is operating the event with the youngsters at the Salt Brook
    School on Saturday, January 6, 2024 from 1:30 PM to 4:30 PM.

    During the event, youngsters will be on the air under the supervision
    of licensed hams. Kids will be calling "CQ Kids Day" and the
    kid-friendly exchange will be name, age, location and favorite color.

    (ARRL, PATCH.COM)

    **
    FRENCH AMATEUR'S SPECIAL EVENT HONORS POLISH MARTYR

    DON/ANCHOR: Several special event stations go on the air from around
    the world each year in August, coinciding with the anniversary of the
    death of St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe. He was born, however, in January
    and an event is coming up to mark the 130th anniversary of that day.
    Here's Randy Sly W4XJ with the details.

    RANDY: The Polish priest, Maximilian Maria Kolbe, was martyred in
    Auschwitz during World War II. Hams often hold special event stations
    in August to mark the date of his death. One ham in France -- Jeff,
    F4IIQ (F 4 EYE EYE Q) -- has chosen to mark his birth on January 8th.
    He will be going on the air with the callsign TM130SMK from the 5th to
    the 9th of January. The Franciscan priest, who was canonized in 1982,
    is considered the patron saint of amateur radio for having founded a
    monastery in Poland dedicated to communications. The monastery housed a short-wave radio station with the callsign SP3RN. When the monastery
    was shut by the Nazis in 1941, Maximilian Maria Kolbe was arrested and
    sent to Auschwitz where he volunteered to take the place of another man
    who was marked to die. The priest was executed by lethal injection
    after having been placed in a starvation bunker.

    Father Kolbe is also the inspiration for the Saint Maximilian Kolbe
    Net, which was founded by two amateurs in the US in 1998. It meets on
    80 metres and 20 metres on Sundays.

    This is Randy Sly W4XJ.

    (QRZ.COM)

    **
    BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur
    Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including
    the W4HPL repeater in Cookeville, Tennessee on Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m.
    local time.

    **

    SOTA ACTIVATORS PREPARE FOR YEAR-LONG 10M CHALLENGE

    DON/ANCHOR: SOTA activators, get ready to aim high in the new year.
    It's already a fact that SOTA ops aim high or they wouldn't be climbing
    all those summits to make contacts, but now the awards scheme is asking everyone to aim high on the band and accept a year-long 10-meter
    challenge. This event is timed to coincide with what is expected to be
    the peak of Solar Cycle 25.

    The SOTA 10m Challenge is not a contest, but the organisers do plan to
    post results on its challenge page and hope the activity will encourage
    as many ops as possible to make use of the b and. In announcing the
    activity, Andy, MM0FMF, compared this challenge to the event conducted
    on the 12m band in 2013 and 2014. Unlike 12m, 10m is open to all
    classes of amateurs in most countries and so this event is considered
    more inclusive.

    (AMATEUR RADIO DAILY, EI7GL BLOG)

    **
    ARISS CONFERENCE TO CELEBRATE 40 YEARS OF HAM RADIO

    DON/ANCHOR: Amateur Radio on the ISS is collecting stories and videos
    that help tell the story of ham radio in space during the past four
    decades. Dave Parks WB8ODF brings us that report.

    DAVE: If you've ever had contact with Amateur Radio on the
    International Space Station, get ready for Florida in February. The
    ARISS organization is reaching out to educators and former students and
    asking them to send in stories and videos explaining the impact that
    important QSO with the orbiting astronauts has had on their lives.

    The stories will become a part of the 40th anniversary Educational
    Contact conference taking place at the Center for Space Education near
    the Kennedy Space Center's Visitors' Center from February 22nd to the
    24th. Both educators and former students are being asked to fill out a
    form online providing details.

    ARISS is celebrating the occasion, which marks 40 years since astronaut
    Owen Garriott, W5LFL, made the first amateur radio contact from space
    on board the Space Shuttle Columbia. ARISS writes on its website
    [quote] "The historic 40th anniversary conference will be a
    retrospective of what has been accomplished and will highlight our
    exciting amateur radio human spaceflight plans on the horizon."
    [endquote]

    To share your story, follow the link that appears in the text version
    of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    This is Dave Parks WB8ODF.

    [DO NOT READ: http://tinyurl.com/2p87y7f9 ]

    (ARISS, YOUTH ON THE AIR)

    **
    WORLD OF DX

    In the World of DX, there's still time to get a coveted DX for your
    logbook: The Rebel DX Group's T32TT operation from Kiritimati/Christmas
    Island, IOTA number OC-024 in East Kiribati will be extended until the
    12th of January. See QRZ.com for QSL and other details.

    Be listening for special event station AT24GSM from West Bengal, India,
    between January 9th through to the 16th. Members of the West Bengal
    Radio Club will be activating Sagar Island, IOTA Number AS-153 and the Gangasagar Island Beach, BOTA Number 60572. The activation will also
    include the Sagar Island Lighthouse, World Lighthouse Number 2262. The
    occasion for the activation is the annual pilgrimage known as the Ganga
    Saga Mela. See QRZ.com for details.

    Members of ARI Padova will be on the air with the callsign II3PUP from
    the 7th to the 14th of January. The suffix of the callsign is an
    acronym for the Latin words connoting Padua the Painted City. This is a reference to the series of 14th-century frescoes that are on the UNESCO
    World Heritage list, where they were added in 2021. QSL via IQ3WW. Find
    other QSL information on QRZ.com.

    If you are planning ahead for February, be listening for VK5MAV
    operating as VK5MAV/4 from Magnetic Island, IOTA number OC-171. They
    will be on the air from the 6th to the 11th of February. He will be
    using mainly CW but may include some SSB. Listen on 40, 20, 15, and 10
    metres. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

    (425 DX BULLETIN)

    **
    KICKER: A TREASURED TRANSMITTER'S ENDURING MESSAGE

    DON/ANCHOR: As we leave December and step across the threshold of a new
    year, it's a comfort to know that some things endure. They were built
    to last - and in fact, they DO last. One example is the tradition of a
    message of Christmas peace, transmitted from a historic transmitter in
    Sweden. Jeremy Boot G4NJH concludes this newscast with this report.

    JEREMY: On Christmas Eve morning, the World Heritage Grimeton Radio
    station carried a message to the world that is older than the
    100-year-old transmitter itself. It was a message of peace sent via
    Morse Code. Hams and non-hams alike from around the wor ld tuned in via
    SDR or other means to hear the code being sent via the Alexanderson
    Alternator SAQ signal on 17.2 kHz long wave. Others simply witnessed
    the event on YouTube, where spectators from Poland, Belgium, Colombia,
    Brazil and Australia left words of support and appreciation in many
    languages.

    The history behind this transmitter is as cherished as the message it
    carries several times each year: With every transmission it underscores
    the progress we have made over the years in wireless communication
    --while affirming the progress the world still needs to make in so many
    other areas.

    This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.

    (YOUTUBE)


    DON/ANCHOR: You can see this year's December 24th event in Grimeton by following the link in the text version of this week's newscast at arnewsline.org

    [DO NOT READ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33B5j7rnBnI ]

    **
    SEND US NEWS - AND HERE'S OUR HAIKU WINNER

    DON/ANCHOR: If you have a piece of Amateur Radio News that you think
    Newsline would be interested in, send it on! We are not talking about advertising your club's upcoming hamfest or field day participation,
    but something that is out of the ordinary. If so, send us a brief
    overview via the contact page at arnewsline.org. If it's newsworthy and
    we would like to cover it, we'll get back to you for more details.
    Meanwhile, if you're feeling even a little bit poetic, visit our
    website to learn more about the Amateur Radio Newsline haiku challenge
    in 2024.

    Speaking of all things poetic, as promised, our crew has chosen the
    Newsline Haiku of 2023 from all of this year's weekly top entries. We
    are proud of this winner, who received 43% of the vote. We were
    unfortunately unable to contact the author in time for him to read it
    for inclusion in this newscast. So it's my honor to present the winning
    haiku, submitted by Greg Smith, N6NYX, that was featured on December
    8. It was a touching and poetic comment on the potential future of
    amateur radio. It reads:

    The past is prologue, When the radio captures, The love of youngsters

    We congratulate Greg Smith for his winning haiku and encourage all of
    our listeners to submit their own creations at the website. Look for
    the "Ham Radio Haiku" link at the top right portion of the menu on the
    website. We look forward to another year of you flexing your poetic
    license as well as your ham radio license.


    **

    NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to Amateur Radio Daily; ARRL; ARISS; CQ
    Magazine; David Behar K7DB; 425DXNews; HamSCI; M0OXO website;
    Patch.com; QRZ.com; Quartzfest; Radio World; shortwaveradio.de;
    Straight Key Century Club; Wireless Institute of Australia; YouTube;
    Youth on the Air; and you our listeners, that's all from the Amateur
    Radio Newsline. We remind our listeners that Amateur Radio Newsline is
    an all-volunteer non-profit organization that incurs expenses for its
    continued operation. If you wish to support us, please visit our
    website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you all. We also
    remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please leave us a
    5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn Eve
    Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our news team
    worldwide, I'm Don Wilbanks AE5DW in Picayune, Mississippi saying 73
    and wishing you all the very best in 2024. As always we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2023. All rights
    reserved.

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