Rick Bressler [of the Greater Bridgeport (CT) ARC] has spoken to people in 310 countries since 2007, though “spoken to” is not the phrase he would use. Bressler would say he’s contacted, or “worked” operators in 301 countries. [Full story]
Phil Temples
North Shore Radio Association (MA) Field Day!
From the North Shore Radio Association Facebook page:
K1EMS making a second attempt at an ISS pass #ARRLFD #hamradio #amateurradio
K2K New Hampshire 2024 13 Colonies Special Event, Call for Operators
Eugene Glukhov, W1UAA, writes:
I invite you to participate in the 13 Colonies special event in 2024 as K2K from New Hampshire. The call sign will be active this year from July 1st to July 7th.
I would appreciate your participation, even if you can only spend a few hours. It’s a good reason to represent the state in the air from different counties. We can use all modes on all bands. This year the team has a satellite operator.
If you are ready to be an operator, please write to: k2k@hamlog.online.
June, 29, Saturday
1 p.m. – 4 p.m.
Where:
5 Pioneer Way, Merrimack, NH, 03054 (Clubhouse)
Link to Google Maps: https://maps.app.goo.gl/
You can bring sweets and drinks; we will provide burgers and hot dogs.
RSVP before June, 27, 10 p.m.
RSVP and other requests to: k2k@hamlog.online
If your plans change after the RSVP deadline, don’t worry and feel free to come. We will have plenty of food.
If you won’t be a K2K operator this year, come anyway.
Severe Weather & Amateur Radio Field Day Weekend Coordination Message #2, June 21-23, 2024
Hello to all…
..The following is the second in a series of messages on Amateur Radio Field Day Weekend and providing information on the weather during this period. This is a tradition spanning over 20 years for Amateur Radio Operators involved with Field Day and the NWS Boston/Norton SKYWARN Program..
..At this time, not every Field Day site will see a shower, thunderstorm or severe weather and a widespread washout is not expected. Some Field Day sites could be dry all weekend but other Field Day sites could be quite wet depending on where showers and thunderstorms develop. This will be monitored throughout the weekend..
..SKYWARN Self-Activation with Amateur Radio Call-Up Nets are likely Friday Afternoon and Evening in interior Southern New England for the severe weather and flood potential and possible Saturday through this weekend. SKYWARN Self-Activation will monitor conditions throughout Field Day weekend and activate as needed to guard Amateur Radio Field Day sites to provide weather information as well as to gather reports meeting SKYWARN reporting criteria throughout this weekend..
Here are some links to information on these Amateur Radio Field Day Sites from across the region.
Amateur Radio Field Day Information: https://www.arrl.org/field-day
Amateur Radio Field Day National Locator: https://www.arrl.org/field-
Eastern Massachusetts Field Day Home Page: https://ema.arrl.org/field-
Eastern Massachusetts Field Day Directory: https://ema.arrl.org/field_
The Severe Thunderstorm potential maybe a bit more isolated, perhaps similar to Wednesday of this week. It will be dependent on the frontal position that will bring cooler air into Northeast Massachusetts and amount of shear that overlaps with greater instability in the marginal risk area. Threat timeframe is 1-8 PM. In addition to the severe weather and lightning potential, flooding from very heavy downpours will bear close watching for flooding issues in areas that get repeated downpours.
This will depend on what occurs Friday and if the front that will be over the region separating warmer and more humid air from somewhat cooler air shifts northeast or holds its current position. If it shifts northeast, much of Southern New England would have thunderstorm and severe weather potential. If it doesn’t shift much, the current area of Marginal Risk denoted by SPC will be the impacted area and this will be updated in future updates. Threat timeframe is 1-8 PM like Friday.
This could be a day where much of Southern New England has severe weather potential but will depend on prior day’s convection, cloud debris, frontal position/triggering mechanism etc. and will be better known as we get to Saturday. Wind shear profiles appear a bit stronger for Sunday. All of Southern New England has a marginal risk for severe weather per SPC. Hazard timing will be better known on Saturday.
https://www.weather.gov/erh/
https://wx1box.org/southern-
https://www.weather.gov/
With the thunderstorm threat for this weekend, now is the time to remind folks that lightning is a threat to any and all Amateur Radio Field Day sites. Remember your lightning safety tips and details on lightning safety can be seen at the following link and we have also added a link from last year’s NWS Boston/Norton Lightning Safety Awareness Week and Public Information Statements on Lightning Safety and will update with this year’s statements in a future coordination message. See links below:
https://www.weather.gov/
ARES SKYWARN Coordinator
Eastern Massachusetts ARES Section Emergency Coordinator
Home Phone #: (508) 994-1875 (After 6 PM)
Home/Data #: (508) 997-4503 (After 6 PM)
Email Address: rmacedo@rcn.com
https://ares.ema.arrl.org
https://www.wx1box.org
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Follow us on Twitter – https://twitter.com/wx1box
The Berkshire Eagle: “Ham radio operators conducting field day”
“Ham radio operators from the Northern Berkshire Amateur Radio Club will be participating in a national amateur radio exercise from 1 p.m. Saturday, June 22, until 1 p.m. Sunday, June 23, at the Agricultural Fair Grounds, 371 Old Columbia St., Adams, MA. [Full story]
K9HI Presentation at ARRL Maine State Convention & Hamfest, June 15, 2024
ARRL Vice Director Phil Temples, K9HI, attended the Maine State Convention & Hamfest in Augusta, Maine, on June 15, 2024. He assisted at the ARRL table and co-presented at the ARRL Forum with Maine Section Manager Phil Duggan, N1EP.
Temples presented a special door prize at the ARRL Forum—a 100th anniversary hard copy edition of the ARRL Radio Amateurs Handbook to lucky winner Timothy Tracy, KC1CMX, Carmel, Maine.
Logbook of The World Status
Despite several ARRL statements that Logbook of The World (LoTW) and DXCC data are safe, it seems that some users are still concerned that this may not be the case due to the time that it’s taking to restore service.
Follows is a recent post from Jon Bloom, ex-KE3Z, one of the original LoTW authors:
—
Perhaps it will ease some minds if I tell you that I know for certain that these data are safe. I know this because I personally assisted ARRL staff to get these data backed up to locations and systems that are in no way connected to ARRL HQ or cloud systems. The LoTW data, for example, exists in multiple physical locations and cloud backup services. Such is also the case for the LoTW source code. In addition, I imported the LoTW data backup into a separate, new test database system to verify it. This took several days since the database is about 3 Terabytes in size. (It’s a LOT of data!)
Getting the systems themselves back on-line is another matter, and I have no information to share about that as I’m not involved in the ongoing process of restoring them. ARRL has apparently made the decision, wisely in my view, not to bring any affected systems back into service until all parts of them can be vetted and secured. But the data itself is safe, and LoTW will definitely be back at some point.
— Jon
[We are working with Jon to get LoTW back online. As you can see from his explanation, there is not a definite timeframe. We want to be sure that the LoTW platform is secure before we bring the system back up. I hope that this helps. —Fred Kemmerer, AB1OC]