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Tag Archives: Radio

QRP, Mountains, and a “Sort Of” POTA Activation

21 Thursday May 2026

Posted by Tim Hughes Living with CML in Amateur Radio, Cycling, Life, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alabama, Amateur Radio, Antenna, Communications, Contest, Cycling, HAM, HAM Radio, LAB599, mountain, Parks on the Air, POTA, POTA Reel, POTA33, Race, Radio, SOTA, USS Alabama

This post probably won’t interest most of my readers, but for my fellow ham radio operators and radio nerds, I managed to do a POTA activation… sort of… last Sunday.

I managed to get 13 contacts at Park #US-4450 in the Talladega National Forest. I say “sort of” because the cell signal was so bad I couldn’t get online to spot myself, so I just hunted contacts on and off all day and hoped somebody would hear me calling.

For this activation, I used a Lab599 TX-500 portable HF transceiver running 10 watts on 50 MHz. Well… technically more like 7 watts by the time everything was said and done. QRP operation always makes things more challenging, but honestly, that’s part of the fun. Anybody can make contact with a high-powered base station. It takes a little patience, stubbornness, and luck to do it with low power from the side of a mountain.

My setup included one of the original POTA Reels antennas along with a POTA33H telescopic mast that extends to 33 feet. I mounted everything using a hitch-mounted flagpole holder that slides into the receiver hitch on my truck. In true ham radio fashion, I also improvised a little engineering by using the packaging from the POTA33H mast to wedge everything tighter inside the hitch mount. If it looks questionable but works, then it’s officially “field tested.”

The biggest challenge was the location itself. Rest Stop #2 was at the bottom of the hill with mountains surrounding us in every direction. Even with the antenna nearly 33 feet in the air, I still struggled getting my signal out. And having only around 7 watts coming from the radio certainly didn’t help matters.

Still, I managed 13 contacts, and honestly, I was happy with that considering the conditions.

This wasn’t my first activation, though. Last May, I activated from the USS Alabama during one of their Living History events. Over the course of two days, I made more than 200 contacts there. That remains my personal record and probably spoiled me a little when it comes to future activations.

There’s just something enjoyable about setting up a portable station in the middle of nowhere and seeing how far a little bit of wire and a few watts can travel. Some people golf. Some people fish. Some of us throw antennas into the air and get excited when somebody three states away says, “You’re five-nine in Alabama.”

And honestly, that’s probably enough to convince most normal people that we’re all a little crazy.

73’s

KJ4PZI

Across Oceans No Problem… But North Dakota Is Apparently Narnia

02 Monday Feb 2026

Posted by Tim Hughes Living with CML in Amateur Radio, Life, Retirement, Uncategorized

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Tags

Alaska, Amateur Radio, Antenna, antennas, Belgium, Contacts, HAM Radio, ham-radio, Hawaii, Italy, Life, long-distance, Map, North Dakota, over-seas, POTA, propagation, Radio, radio-waves, Retirement, time zone

After sharing the news about finally reaching the state of Hawaii, I decided to make a map showing all of my long-distance contacts thus far in 2026. I was pretty proud of it… right up until I realized I had to explain that it does not include my contacts inside the continental United States. If it did, the map would just look like I sneezed ink all over North America.

What really caught my attention, though, is something that makes absolutely no sense to me. I can sit down, turn on the radio, and talk to someone in Italy like they’re sitting across the street. No drama. No struggle. No begging the radio gods for mercy.

But North Dakota?
Alaska?
Hawaii (until recently)?

Apparently, those are protected by an invisible force field.

I’ve tried to come up with logical explanations for this, mostly so I don’t have to accept that radio waves are just messing with me personally.

First — The Antenna
My antenna slopes from East to West. That probably means something very scientific and important. I’m not an antenna expert, though. I’m more of a “put it up, see if it works, and if it doesn’t… stare at it like it betrayed me” kind of guy.

Second — Operator Population
Some states just don’t have as many HAM operators. That makes sense for Alaska and North Dakota. Hawaii is small, and I honestly don’t know how many operators there are. For all I know, there are a handful of guys rotating shifts between operating radios and living their best life on the beach. And honestly, if I lived there, I might not be inside talking on the radio either.

Third — Time Zones (The Real Culprit)
Most of my hunting happens in the morning. There’s about a four-hour difference between Hawaii and me, and about three hours between Alaska. So when I’m wrapping up radio time and moving on to things like work, errands, or pretending to be productive, they’re just waking up and figuring out where they left their coffee mug.

Meanwhile, when I’m making contacts in the East — Belgium, Italy, places like that — it’s the middle of the night over there. Apparently, those operators are either serious night owls, incredibly dedicated to the hobby, or avoiding sleep like it owes them money.

The longer I do this hobby, the more I realize HAM radio is this weird mix of science, timing, geography, luck, and occasionally sacrificing a little dignity while calling CQ for the tenth time in a row.

But that’s also what makes it fun.

Because at the end of the day, I can bounce a signal off the atmosphere, talk to someone on the other side of the planet…
…and still get ghosted by North Dakota.

And honestly, that feels personal.

Confessions of a Closet Radio Nerd

16 Friday Jan 2026

Posted by Tim Hughes Living with CML in Amateur Radio

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Tags

Amateur Radio, Antenna, antennas, Cell Phone, Communications, Electronics, Emergency, HAM, ham-radio, Knobs, Nerd, Operator, Outage, Parks on the Air, Portable, POTA, Power, Radio, Radio Waves, Search and Rescue, writing

In a group discussion today, I was asked to tell something about myself that no one else knew. I had to think for a few minutes because I’m basically an open book. There’s not much left to reveal unless we start talking about my snack habits. After a minute or two, I finally said, “HAM radio.”

Instantly, I was rewarded with the same looks people give when you say words like “cryptocurrency” or “CrossFit.” Blank. Confused. Slight concern. Not surprisingly, several people in the room had no idea what HAM radio was, which was perfect because it gave me a chance to climb onto my invisible soapbox and explain.

For those who are unfamiliar, amateur radio operators utilize radios and antennas to communicate with individuals locally, across the country, and occasionally around the world—without relying on cell towers, Wi-Fi, or satellites. Just radios, airwaves, and a little bit of nerdy wizardry. You can talk to someone down the street, or someone on the other side of the planet, assuming the atmosphere is in a good mood that day.

Some people collect stamps. Some people golf. Some people run marathons. Apparently, I sit in my house and talk to strangers through invisible waves in the sky. We all need hobbies.

What originally pulled me into HAM radio was the emergency side of it. When storms hit, and the power goes out, phones stop working, and the internet disappears, amateur radio is often still standing. Hams pass emergency traffic, help with search and rescue, and provide communication when nothing else will. It’s fun and practical. Like a Swiss Army knife… that talks.

And honestly, with the Verizon cell phone outage the other day, it kind of proved that point. We like to think our phones are indestructible… right up until we’re standing in the kitchen holding a useless glowing rectangle, whispering, “Why have you forsaken me?” That’s when old-school radio suddenly doesn’t seem so old.

I also told them about something I do pretty much daily called Parks on the Air. It’s an activity where people with portable HAM radio stations go out to qualified parks and try to “activate” the park by making contacts with “hunters” like me.

Let me be clear: they pack up radios, antennas, batteries, tables, chairs, snacks, and probably a small generator. They drive to a park, hike to a spot, and set up in the elements.

I sit in the comfort of my home, coffee in hand, climate control working beautifully, talking to them while they’re sitting in weather conditions not suitable for man, beast, or common sense. They’re battling wind, heat, cold, bugs, and curious squirrels. I’m battling whether my coffee needs more cream. It’s a dangerous hobby, but I manage.

Of course, there’s also something kind of amazing about bouncing your voice off the atmosphere and having it land in someone else’s living room hundreds or thousands of miles away. No apps. No passwords. No updates. No, “your call cannot be completed as dialed.” Just you, a radio, and a whole lot of invisible stuff you barely passed in science class.

As I was explaining all this, I realized how funny it is that in an age of FaceTime, group texts, and social media, the most surprising thing about me involves equipment that looks like it should be mounted in a WWII submarine. But honestly, that’s part of the charm. Something is refreshing about a form of communication that doesn’t require a monthly bill, a software update, or your first pet’s name.

If I sparked your interest and you want to learn more about HAM radio, I’d genuinely love to talk to you about it and try to answer any questions you may have. Fair warning: this offer may come with diagrams.

So yes… apparently I’m a closet radio nerd. And I’m okay with that.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go see if anyone in Antarctica wants to hear about the weather in my backyard.

365 Day Photo Challenge 170/365 “Today’s Ponderings”

18 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by Tim Hughes Living with CML in Photography

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Tags

365 Day Photo Challenge, Alabama, Crazy, Drivers, music, Photography, Radio

http://tchphotography.smugmug.com/Fire-Truck/i-sQnJ34N/A

I had to take a two hour trip this morning to meet some people to run some tests on a building system.  I had to get up at 3am this morning to leave my office at 5am.  Two hours later I was sitting in the parking lot of our other office.  During my two hour trip I tried to find a radio station that I could listen too but couldn’t find anything that would interest me.

I’m not really into Country music, used to be but not anymore.  Too much whining for my taste.  I usually like 70’s and 80’s, Bluegrass and occasional Jazz.  At 5am in the morning all I could find was preaching.  Not wanted to hear that early in the morning.  The drive was a peaceful one and I enjoyed the change of my everyday pace.

On my way home was a different story.  It was nerve racking to say the least.  The roads were packed with crazy drivers and impatient people.  I was exhausted when I finally made it back to work. But, I still had another 45 minutes before I could actually make it to my front door.  More crazies.  Got to do it again in the morning.  3am comes early.

“Life Goes On!”

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