Good Evening,
Thunderstorms have been arriving off the Pacific Ocean and passing inland. Makes me scurry about unhooking antennas and finding where Sam is located. Two rare critter announcements: on Monday evening, while driving home from work, I saw a black bear cub very close to Buxton. He saw me and galumphed into the woods. Mom must have been close at hand because he was not too frightened. This morning I walked out on the porch and noticed something odd. I stood still and recognized a mask in the shadows. He was being very still too. I had never before seen a raccoon in Oregon. We stared at each other for a while until I looked away. He then started moving off. He was quite a long way from the nearest water which is odd for them. I normally saw them quite close the streams and cricks at home. Yes, crick, I am from a part of the Midwest where the maps spell it that way. It is pronounced crek with a short e sort of a schwa but not quite :) On Thursday morning 20 meters was having its problems albeit local. My normal sked into OK City was filled with: "Are you there Kevin?" While my end was filled with perfect copy. His local QRN was high from the passing thunderstorms. On Friday that all changed. There was QSB of two types simultaneously but that did not stop us from making an hour long chat out of things. Thursday held its Fox hunts on twenty which were a great way to determine propagation potential. I worked Wyoming (not easily) and then South Carolina with no problem at all. I heard stations from all over so I know twenty was working pretty well by then. Seems like the sun has tossed a little excitement at the ionosphere and has a few spots too. All should be well for tomorrow's first net. Then we come to forty: it should be good as well as long as the Midwestern thunderstorms are not too bad. Weather here has been HOT. Yes, hot, it got to 101 while I was downtown and into the high 80s up here on the mountain. Luckily we've had a little rain with very little lightning. Fire danger is not too high yet but that will come. If the temperatures stay warmer than normal and we get a little wind the forests will become tinder. The ocean has been bringing us morning fogs which help keep things wetter. The fogs come in and the large trees mine them for water. One morning I was awakened by what I thought was a good rainfall. I went to feed Sam and looked out at the deck. It was dry while the roof was getting a steady patter of rain drops. As I drove to work I saw what had occurred. Under each tree is a circle of moisture surrounded by dry areas. The gravel road alternated between wet round spots and dry open areas all the way down to about 1000 feet in elevation where I turned into Willamette River valley weather. Tomorrow: 1) Hail signs (first letter or two of the suffix of your call) 2) NCS help (as well as QSP/QNP <relay> help) Please join us: Sunday 2300z (Sunday 4 PM PDT) 14050 kHz Monday 0200z (Sunday 7 PM PDT) 7045 kHz 73, Kevin. KD5ONS P.S. I am pretty sure there will be a K3 on the air tomorrow during the nets. Please join us to give it a listen. KJR _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |