Standby activation for Marathon

Hello to all…

On Monday, April 21st, the Boston Marathon will be held again this year, with the race starting at 1200. Additionally, for the second consecutive year, all public safety efforts will be coordinated by the Unified Command Center (UCC), which will be hosted in the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC), Framingham. SEOC operations will be supported by RACES radio operations there, and I will be located there all day as well. My contact information for the day appears at the end of this message.I am requesting that all RACES/ARES nets in the EMa Section be activated on a standby basis fromapproximately 0800 to 1800. The sole purpose of the activation is to provide support communications for any incidents to the community at large (outside of the race course) that may occur during the event day, either as a result of an incident within the race, or independent of it.

1. FOR DEC’s: Please coordinate a sked of net control stations (NCS)’s for the day on RACES sector nets in your districts. This is a great opportunity for those members needing training and experience. Please monitor any SKYWARN mobilization to determine who on your list may also be a SKYWARN NCS.

2. FOR NCS’s: Please assume net control in STANDBY mode. This means that you announce your presence periodically, while allowing normal QSO’s. However, during your announcements, you should remind users to leave gaps between participant transmissions, keep transmissions shorter to allow breaks, and be ready to move to other repeaters as needed. Please also take the opportunity to practice communications with stations in your area, as well as with NCS’s of neighboring RACES repeaters. Obviously, playing out any scenarios during your practice comms would be risking confusion to anyone monitoring our frequencies.

3. Should an incident take place, proceed as we have practiced. Assume positive control of the net. Move QSO traffic to other repeaters. Take in checkins, prioritizing those with traffic. Move traffic stations off to secondary liaison repeaters (or simplex freqs) as needed. It is very important that you relay information to the SEOC RACES desk as it develops in your area.

4. I suggest “watch” periods of about 5 hours for the day.

My contact information (for the day only) on Monday is as follows:

Landline: 508-820-1428
Email: massraces@yahoo.com
Radio: 53.31, 147.15, 146.64, in addition to other liaison frequencies to the race course

Thank you in advance for your participation on Monday. 73,

s/Michael P. Neilsen
Michael P. Neilsen, W1MPN
EMa SEC
978.562.5662 Admin
978.389.0558 FAX/Secondary

MMSSTV on Bristol Co. RA Repeater

BCRAN1PMB writes on bcra-club@yahoogroups.com:

“We will be holdin a SSTV-Net on the 145.150 repeater on Sunday evenings @ 7:30pm. Please feel free to join us and have some fun if your not sure how to do SSTV not a problem you can be up and running all you need is a computer and sound card the program a lot of us are using is MMSSTV which can be gotten at http://www.qsl.net/mmhamsoft/ so download the program and join us on Sunday Evening @ 7:30 will be April 20, 2003.

MVARG Meeting April 13

Mystic Valley ARGN1VQY writes:

“The April meeting of the Mystic Valley Amateur Radio Group will be held this Sunday, April 13th, at the Tufts University Police Station, 419 Boston Av, Medford, Mass.

“Our speaker will be our own Nick Magliano, KC1MA who will be speaking on “Miracle Whip Applications to Ham Radio”. [He] will also have information on eQSL, the e-mail approach to confirming ham radio contacts. Nick sure has my curiousity peaked as I’m sure yours is also.

“Please park within the posted area of 419 Boston Ave, Police Station. There is a limited amount of inside parking available on prior request to Nick, KC1MA who can be contacted at KC1MA@arrl.net.”

HossTraders Hamfest Confirmed

HosstradersDates for the two Hosstraders Hamfests in Hopkinton, NH have been confirmed: May 2-3, and October 3-4, 2003.

This, according to the official HossTraders website at http://www.qsl.net/k1rqg/.

The organizers are still seeking any information leading to the resolution/restitution of the
transformers that were taken from the Hopkinton Fairgrounds during the Spring hamfest. If you have such information, you should contact K1RQG or WA1IVB through their website, or you can contact Alan Hardy, General Manager, of the fairground. All sources will be kept in the strictest confidence.

The disappearance of the transformers had threatened the cancellation of future Hosstraders Hamfests.

FLEA at MIT seasons first Sunday April 20th 2003 Cambridge MA

MIT

Date: Sat, 05 Apr 2003 17:36:01 -0500
From: finberg@mk6vx1.draper.com
Subject: FLEA at MIT  seasons first  Sunday April 20th 2003  Cambridge MA

Dispite today's ice storm... Spring has sprung and the seasons first 
	FLEA at MIT is just a couple weeks away.....

*******************************************************************************
*******************************************************************************

Summary: Buy Sell SWAP    Ham Radio    Electronics Computers    9AM - 2PM


*** !!!!  In our Traditional GARAGE and lot  !!!!  ****
         so come rain or shine or super heat the Flea is on !!!

*********  $1  buyers discount with hardcopy of this notice ********

COMPUTERS - ELECTRONICS - HAM RADIO - COMPUTERS - ELECTRONICS - HAM RADIO

                    FLEA all SUMMER at MIT
                    Sunday April 20th 2003
                          9AM-2PM

Come to the city for a great flea - plenty of free parking.
        MIT's  electronics and ham radio flea will take 
        place on the third Sunday of each month this summer, 
        April thru October.
       
        There is tailgate space for over 600 sellers and
        free, off-street parking for>2000 cars!

        Buyers admission is $5  (you get $1 off if
        you're lucky enough to have a copy of our ad)
        and sellers spaces are $20 for the first and 
        $15 for each additional at the gate.

        The flea will be held at the corner of Albany and
        Main streets in Cambridge; right in the Kendall
        Square area from 9AM to 2PM, with sellers set-up
        time starting at 7AM.  

        SEASON PASS + Advance Discounts

        A sellers discount season pass is available untill
        April 20th which offers a 33 0iscount.  See the 
        registration form below for full seller info.

        *** Attention Sellers *** 
                Prepaid vendors.. Season Pass or monthly,
                will be admitted FIRST.
                Separate lines will form prior to gate opening
                for prepaid and nonprepaid vendors


        !! RAIN or SHINE !!  Have no fear of rain, a covered 
        well illuminated tailgate area is available for all 
        sellers (6'8" clearance).

        Talk-in: 145.23- (PL 88.5) W1BOS/R  and
                 W1XM/R-449.725/444.725 (PL 114.8/2A).           

        Sponsors: MIT Electronics Research Society
                  MIT UHF Repeater Association (W1XM)
                  MIT Radio Society (W1MX)
                  Harvard Wireless Club (W1AF)

        For more info / advanced reservations 617 253 3776

********** $1  buyers discount with hard copy of this notice ************



Mail the coupon below by the 10th of the month to be a Prepaid Vendor.

           FLEA at MIT     2003 Rates

SELLERS 

This year each vendor must have a Cambridge Vendor License. 
We will do all the paperwork to get the one day Cambridge licenses.
To keep the spaces affordable we are discounting your first space.
To use your spaces the named vendor MUST be present.
Rates include one admission per space.

Season Pass     $99 First Space - includes $70 for Cambridge Vendor Licenses
                  $70 Each additional space

Advance         $17 First space - includes $10 Cambridge Vendor License
                  $12 Additional Spaces
                        Must be received by the 5th of the month.
         
Gate Admission  $20 First Space - includes $10 Cambridge Vendor License
                  $15 Additional Spaces
                      Admission is after the prepaid vendors
  
Early Bird Buyer -Admission after the prepaid vendor line is admitted. ~ 7:15AM
                ** You may not sell. **
                $15 per person at the gate.   
                $70 Season Early Bird Buyer  
             

   cut and return 
**************************************************************************
FLEA at MIT   2003       Advance Space Application

   _____ 1st Season Pass @ $99   _____ Additional Season Spaces @ $70
       
   ____April    ____May    ____June   ____ July  ____Aug   ___Sept   ____Oct
          @ $17  for the first each month  + $12 each additional
            
   _____ Season Early Bird Buyer   @ $70   ** NB You may not sell. **

Name    ________________________     Call  __________        $ Included______

Address ________________________     Phone  __________     Make Check to
                                                         The MIT Radio Society
City  ____________________ State  _______  Zip  _______    PO Box 397082     
                                                           Cambridge MA 02139
E-mail  _____________________________________________        
                                                



*******************************************************************************
Steve Finberg                       W1GSL                      w1gsl@mit.edu
PO Box 82 MIT Br           Cambridge MA  02139-7082             617 258 3754
*******************************************************************************



ARECC, Level I, Registration Starts Early Monday Morning

certification program logo

Registration opens Monday, April 7, 12:01 AM Eastern Time (0500 UTC), for the on-line Level I Emergency Communications course (EC-001). Registration remains open through the April 12-13 weekend or until all available seats have been filled–whichever comes first. Class begins Tuesday, April 22.

Thanks to the federal homeland security grant from the Corporation for National and Community Service, the $45 registration fee paid upon enrollment will be reimbursed after successful completion of the course. During this registration period, approximately 200 seats are being offered to ARRL members on a first-come, first-served basis.

Senior amateurs are strongly encouraged to take advantage of this opportunity. To learn more, visit the ARRL Certification and Continuing Education Web page and the C-CE Links found there. For more information, contact Emergency Communications Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG, dmiller@arrl.org; 860-594-0340.

Please Stand Down from Possible Activation

Good Morning all…

It appears that the risk of significant damage has passed, and so I am withdrawing the notification for a possible standby activation today. Small pockets of problems are still a possibility, but we should be OK from this point on.

Thank you for your preparation and standing ready to help today. There are still reports of some slick secondary roads in our area.

Thanks again, and have a good weekend.

Michael P. Neilsen, W1MPN
EMa SEC
978.562.5662 Admin
978.389.0558 FAX/Secondary—– Original Message —–
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2003 1:48 PM
Subject: Fw: Possible Standby Activation for EMa ARES

***** Possible Standby Activation for EMa ARES *****
***** Minor/Moderate Infrastructure Damage May Occur *****

Hello to all…

I am writing this while I look at flowers in my garden…go figure, but yes, a significant freezing rain event may develop for parts of our section roughly north of the 42-00 latitude line (excluding Cape Cod). This includes all of Norfolk county and some the Bristol/South Shore (Plymouth) districts. In view of possible infrastructure damage that could result from this type of weather event, please be ready to mobilize in standby mode starting as early as 0600 EST tomorrow Sat 4/5. DEC’s please ensure that qualified NCS’s are ready to assume that role as needed tomorrow.

ARES Mobilization in standby mode may be needed where damage is expected or where minor damage has already occurred, AND RACES has not been mobilized. During standby mode, the net control station would announce his/her presence on the RACES repeater, while allowing QSO’s to continue as long as stations agree to: leave gaps between transmissions, yield to break traffic, and vacate the frequency when requested by the NCS. Additionally, similar to SKYWARN’s “self-activation” procedure, if the NCS feels that more formal action is warranted, they should proceed without prior request and then report that mobilization to EC/DEC who will in turn relay to the SEC. If events move severely and swiftly, then any ARES team member should assume NCS until relieved by a designated station.

Our initial role will be to provide fill in communications as necessary to support RACES operations (if they are mobilized), or to assume that role ourselves if they are not. Remember, that in accordance with our current doctrine, we will mobilize from home stations first, then respond to local needs as requested by Public Safety or EMa or Service Agencies (Red Cross, etc.) and approved by your EC/DEC. One important collateral role in these trying times will be to insure current/correct information is disseminated, and rumors about anything else not applicable to the storm (war, terrorism, SARS) event are controlled.

Please take time this evening to insure your home stations are ready to operate and that you have emergency power ready. If and when requests are received for any post disaster assistance during the day Saturday, Saturday night, or even Sunday, we will conduct a callout by email, phone, or radio to reach you. Remember, please guard your RACES repeater (or SKYWARN repeater if you can’t raise RACES), but remember to move off to other local frequencies to do follow up communications. Please contact your EC and/or DEC to obtain the latest frequency plan. A directory of RACES repeaters can be viewed by pressing the “Where Am I” button on our website, http://ares.ema.arrl.org .

Since bordering counties of NH will be significantly affected, we will set up the PART (146.955 PL 74.4) and Haverill (146.625 PL 156.8) repeaters for NH ARES to reach us if they need to. Move traffic off to one of their ARES repeaters, such as Manchester etc, and follow NCS instructions there.

Thank you in advance for your preparations and availability for tomorrow.

Think Spring!

s/Michael P. Neilsen
Michael P. Neilsen, W1MPN
EMa SEC
978.562.5662 Admin
978.389.0558 FAX/Secondary

K1ARC American Red Cross Emergency Training Net

—–Original Message—–
From: William D’Agostino

The K1ARC American Red Cross Emergency Training
Net was held this past Wednesday, April 2nd, at 8 PM (EST) on 3.915 MHz plus/minus 5 kHz LSB Voice. This net is open to everyone who has a sincere interest in Emergency Radio Communications.

In addition, two announcements follows:Announcement #1 — If you haven’t seen the new public safety brochure concerning emergency food and water developed jointly by the American Red Cross and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), then I highly recommend that you download this document today from:

http://www.fema.gov/pdf/rrr/fwe-all.pdf

This brochure offers clear guidance on how to prepare and store food and water for emergency use.

Announcement #2 — American Red Cross Emergency
Communications Training Day. The Red Cross is
offering a free Emergency Training Course to be held at the South Central Connecticut (New Haven) Red Cross Chapter on May 10 from 9 AM to 1 PM.

The topic will concern Emergency Communications with a focus on response to Terrorism and/or Weapons of Mass Destruction incidents.

Red Cross Emergency Communications Training Day
South Central Connecticut Red Cross Chapter
703 Whitney Avenue New Haven, CT

Simplex Frequency for those en-route: 147.42 MHz

Space is limited (Around 50 people will be accepted). Breakfast and refreshments will be provided. The Training will be free.

To sign-up for this class, please email or call
Jennifer Winslow at WinslowJ@usa.redcross.org or
860-678-2794

End of Announcements

SEC Speech to BostonARC (3/20) and FrARA (4/26)

The SEC’s Power Point presentation to the BostonARC (3/20) and FrARA (4/26) is available for viewing by pressing the button to the left. Please note that it will take about a minute to load with Broadband, and much longer with a dial up connection. To show the presentation properly, please press the scroll down arrow instead of the page arrow on the right side of the window.

MVARG Seeks Volunteers for MDA Bike Race June 7, 2003

N1VQY writes:

“[Mystic Valley Amateur Radio Group] has been contacted by the Boston Fire Department asking for our assistance in helping out with the MDA Bike Race again this year. They will need our help on Saturday. I believe it’s June 7th for the last leg of their bike race which is from Marlboro to Boston’s Fanuel Hall.

“Paul, N1OIL, Buddy, N1ZMB, and Terry, N1IWF have volunteered their services besides Greg and myself. If anyone else is interested please let me know.”

Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Workshop Saturday March 29th, 2003

There is still time to sign up!

There will be an Emergency Communications Workshop on Saturday March 29th, 2003 from 8:45 AM-3:00 PM at the Oak Ridge Elementary School in East Sandwich, Massachusetts. This session is being put on by the ARES Section Staff and Frank Laughlin, WQ1O, District Emergnecy Coordinator for Cape Cod ARES. Many thanks to W1RBF, for his assistance in securing the location.This Emergency Communications Workshop will provide the background and information to serve Amateur Radio Operators when they need to respond to a communications emergency. It will feature an Introduction and Conclusion to Emergency Communications, and five 1-hour training sessions ontopics including:

Overview of Eastern Massachusetts ARES-RACES-SKYWARN Programs
Net Operations
NTS Traffic Message Handling
Basic ICS
Go Kits
Interactive Exercises on Field Operations

This training will also feature a 1 hour lunch that will be provided at no coerced cost to any Amateur who attends the session.

The presentations will be given by other Amateur Operators well versed in the topics listed above. The training will be a worthwhile endeavor not just for emergency communicators but for anyone who is an amateur radio operator, and wants to learn more about the hobby.

Preregistration is requested but is not required in case anyone would like to attend at the last minute. We will, however, accept any preregistrations after that day or any walk-ins as long as space permits.

Directions to the Oak Ridge Elementrary School:

Take Route 6 Eastbound and Get off at Exit 3. Go South on Quaker Meeting House Road. The school is less than a 1/2 mile on your left. Press the “Directions to Workshop” button to the left for a map to the location.

For any additional information and to preregister for the workshop, please contact:

W1MPN, Mike Neilsen by email w1mpn@arrl.net
W3EVE, Steve Schwarm by email w3eve@amsat.org
WQ1O, Frank Laughlin by email wq1o@attbi.com
KD1CY, Rob Macedo by email rmacedo@rcn.com

This training should be a worthwhile endeavor for anyone interested in learning more about emergency communications and amateur radio in general.

Frequencies for Monitoring the Iraq War

From Rob, KD1CY…

Many people are watching, listening and monitoring the Iraq War. Below are some additional freqeuncies thatpeople with Shortwave Radios can monitor. This includes military freqeuncies to monitor war operations and Arab Shortwave Radio Broadcasters. Also, I’ve found that the BBC World Service on 5975 KHz which is on during the evening hours from around 6 PM EST [2300Z] on is also an excellent source of information. Below is an email provided by Terry Stader, KA8SCP through the Popular Communications Email list. This email was resent over the Billerica Amateur Radio Society email list.Monitoring The Iraq War

As the world waits and watches Iraq, if you’ve got a shortwave receiver with sideband mode (USB and LSB) you can hear certain military communications related to the conflict including many long-distance GHFS (Global HF System) stations including Emergency Action Messages (EAMs) and Skyking messages which are high-priority messages for air and ground stations.

Frequencies to monitor (in the USB mode) include: 4709, 4724, 6712, 6739, 8992, 11175, 11271, 15038 (11175 is a very active frequency most of the time)

Shortwave broadcasts from the Middle East that you can hear with a reasonable antenna include the following. Note that UTC (Universal Time) is 5 hours ahead of EST [4 ahead of EDT effective Apr 6]. Note that because the changing situation in the area these times and frequencies are subject to change; of course checking the frequencies from time to time is your best bet of hearing a broadcast.

Egypt, Radio Cairo on 9900 at 2315 UTC

Iran, Voice of the Islamic Republic, Tehran on 9022 at 1030 UTC (also on 9835 and 11970) Iran also on 13730 and 13745 at 1330 UTC.

Iraq, Radio Baghdad on 11787 (varies slightly to 11785) at 2000 UTC. Also check 15265, 15375, 15385, 21470 at 1100 UTC.

Israel, Kol Israel on 6280, 7475, 9435 at 0500 (also on 11605). Israel also on 15640, 17535 and 6220 at 2000 UTC. Also check 1700 UTC on 17545. At 1900 UTC on 11605, 15615 and 17545.

Kuwait (Radio Kuwait) on 11990 kHz at 1800 UTC. Also check 15110 kHz.

Syria, Radio Damascus on 12085 (and 13610 frequently) at 0500 and 2000 UTC

Turkey, Voice of Turkey, Ankara on 11960 and 12000 at 2100 UTC; on 6020 at 0400 and 2300 UTC

United Arab Emirates Radio, Dubai on 13675, 15395 at 0020, 1330 UTC; 15395 at 0030; 0200 on 15395 and 15370.

Groton Road Race Volunteers Needed

NVARC logoFrom: “Ralph R. Swick”
To: All 2002 Groton Road Race Amateur Radio Volunteers
Sent: Monday, March 24, 2003 8:09 PM
Subject: Radio Volunteers needed for GRR 2003

The 2003 Groton Road Race date is approaching. This year’s race is scheduled for Sunday, April 27. The Nashoba Valley Amateur Radio Club has once again been asked to coordinate logistics, health, and safety radio communications for this event.

You helped us last year and the road race committee remains greatly indebted to you for volunteering your time.

If you are available on April 27 for at least the afternoon, and are willing to help us this year please contact me at kd1sm@arrl.net or 978.582.7351 (between 7pm and 10pm).

I plan to have a pre-race briefing meeting on Saturday, April 19. At this meeting we will briefly discuss changes from prior years, make assignments, and hand out instruction packets and T-shirts. This pre-race meeting will be 0930 to 1030 at the Pepperell Community Center at the Pepperell Rotary (intersections of Routes 111 and 113). If you are not able to make this meeting on the 19th, please do not let that dissuade you from volunteering to help us on the 27th.

Thanks once again for helping to demonstrate why Amateur Radio is an important resource to our communities.

I attach below a more lengthy description that you might want to share with other Ham Radio operators to explain why this is an important event for us and to encourage them to consider helping.

73,
Ralph Swick KD1SM

Groton Road Race Depends on Amateur Radio

Since its start in 1990, the Groton Road Race has depended on Amateur Radio to provide logistics support and course safety communication. The Groton Road Race pulls in Police Officers from a wide area to manage traffic on the major roads over which the course runs. Hams provide the only radio communications that all these Officers from multiple towns have in common. This is a premier opportunity for Amateur Radio to “strut its stuff” — to demonstrate that we are professional in what we do and that we provide a service with skills that cannot be obtained anywhere else.

In addition to the health and safety communication during the actual race, Amateur Radio Operators assist the pre-race parking teams get a thousand vehicles safely into and out of the parking area and their occupants into shuttle busses to the race grounds. Radio Operators also shadow the Race Directors and their staff during course setup and provide the critical coordination link between the Race Director and the Groton Police Department to confirm road closings and permit the starting musket to be fired.

This year, the 12th Groton Road Race will be held on Sunday, April 27. There are four separate races scheduled during the day; a Tot’s Trot, a 2k Fun Run, a 5k road race, and a 10k road race. Approximately 40 Radio Operators are needed to fill the necessary roles during the day. This has always been a fun and rewarding experience for the radio volunteers. There is even one operator who runs the 5k race then grabs his HT to man a station along the 10k course. 2-Meter handhelds are sufficient for most of the locations, though a few stations with higher ERP (mobile magmount and higher power) will be needed.

If you are able to assist, please contact Ralph Swick KD1SM at kd1sm@arrl.net or telephone 978.582.7351 evenings. Some tasks will start as early as 0900 while the major 10k race requires operators to be on station at 1230. A pre-race-day briefing meeting is planned for Saturday, April 19 in Groton, location TBD. At the briefing meeting station assigments will be made and T-shirts and instruction packets will be distributed. If you are not able to attend the briefing meeting but have participated in the Groton Road Race or similar event before and are available on the 27th, please do still contact Ralph.

For further details about the race itself, go to http://www.grotonroadrace.com/

CEMARC Meeting April 19, 2003

CEMARC logoARRL Affiliated Club Coordinator Frank Murphy, N1DHW announces the North Shore Radio Association and the Cape Ann Amateur Radio Association wil jointly host the next CEMARC meeting on April 19, 2003 at 9:00 am at the CAARA club house in Gloucester. All Eastern Massachusetts clubs are urged to send a representative to this meeting.

K1USN Needs Your Help

K1USN QSL card
W1AI writes:

“The K1USN radio club is doing a great thing! Each year we introduce amateur radio to approximately 4,000 scouts as part of their Overnight Adventure on the USS Salem museum ship in Quincy, MA! The scout groups each receive a 30-minute presentation introducing them to amateur radio and Morse code, followed by a 30-minute hands-on radio demonstration, allowing them to talk on-the-air to hams via HF and/or 2M/IRLP. In the typical weekend (about 40 weekends per year), we do this for 6 different groups of scouts, typically reaching a total of 100 or more scouts. Who knows how many of the seeds we sew will eventually sprout into the next generation of hams?
“Unfortunately — as is too often the case — the bulk of the work tends
to fall on the shoulders of a handful of individuals. While the work is
enjoyable and gives us a tremendous sense of accomplishment, the
unrelenting requirement to give up every single Saturday leads to stress
and burnout. We need to spread the load!

“I ask for your help to change this situation.

“First, I ask that the various clubs in the area make a commitment to
help us out. Clubs on the South Shore might commit to providing us with
2-3 volunteers, one weekend each month. Clubs further away might commit
to sending us 2-3 volunteers, one weekend out of every 2 months. (They
could carpool, reducing the cost and boredom of travel.) The scout
groups come from a wide area, from New York to Maine. It’s not
unreasonable to ask a volunteer to travel an hour or more once every
couple of months.

“Second, I send messages requesting volunteers each week to a list of 85
area hams. I would like to expand this list to include more people who
may be interested in volunteering to help on occasion. Please forward
this message to hams in your local area. Anyone interested volunteering
for this valuable project should send a message to
W1AI@hamtestonline.com requesting to be added to the USS Salem list.

“Third, talk us up. If this sounds like a valuable project, then tell
your ham friends about it. Come out and visit us some Saturday, and
find out first-hand what all the fuss is about, and then take the
message back personally to your clubs! I don’t have any statistics, but
it’s possible that we may be spreading the word about amateur radio to
more kids than any other single organization in the world!

“I’m not asking you to do more than I am willing to do myself. Each
week I spend 2-3 hours on emails and phone calls to coordinate the next
weekend’s events, 1 hour driving, and 4 hours on board. If one person
from each area club did as much in each month as I do every week, my
life would be much easier!

“No special skills are required. If you want to do the ‘Intro to
Amateur Radio & Morse code’ presentations, it helps if you have at least
a little experience doing presentations. We have a script that you can
follow, but you are free to do it your own way. You do not have to be a
Morse code whiz. You can watch one of the “pros” give the course 1-2
times to see how it flows, and take over doing the presentations
yourself when you feel ready.

“To demonstrate the VHF equipment, you need a Technician license and at
least a bit of operating experience. To demonstrate the HF equipment,
you need at least a Tech w/HF license and a bit of operating experience.
We will show you everything else you need to know!

“Many people have read articles speculating about the future disposition
of the USS Salem. People often ask me what’s going to happen. The
answer is that I don’t know, and neither does anyone else at this point.
We’re all hoping that the USS Salem will continue to provide this
excellent learning opportunity for many years to come.

“However, what might happen some number of months or years from now is
not important to this project in the near-term. Right now we need to
take advantage of the opportunity we currently have, and that’s why I
need your help today!

“I’m always sad when I’m forced to cancel the amateur radio activities
on board the USS Salem due to a lack of volunteers. I need a larger
number of people to participate in this activity so cancellations won’t
have to happen!”

Thanks & 73,
John, W1AI
www.hamtestonline.com
W1AI@hamtestonline.com

[I encourage all ARRL affiliated clubs to respond to John’s challenge
and solicit 2-3 volunteers to assist in this worthy cause. -K9HI]