Visitors, Geese, and a Busted Activation

This was supposed to be a post about how I made a bazillion POTA/WWFF contacts in an hour. Yeah, well, that didn’t happen. However, I had some interesting visitors stop during my (attempted) activation.

I made a trip over to French Creek State Park (US-1355, KFF-1355) for a short activation and a little antenna experimentation. To make sure I wouldn’t be in anyone’s way, I set up at a picnic table well away from the parking lot. 

My KH1 and CWMouse paddles
My KH1 and CWMouse paddles

My antenna today was a vertical wire just under 18 feet fed through a homebrew 9:1 unun with a counterpoise wire just under 9 feet. I ran 20 feet of RG-316 coax over to my Elecraft KH1 on the picnic table. I had used this antenna configuration with my Penntek TR-35 and T1 ATU a few times in the past. While it worked well with that rig, I wanted to see how it would work with the KH1’s ATU. 

My antenna with Hopewell Lake in the background.
My antenna with Hopewell Lake in the background.

My first visitors showed up just as I was getting started. It was about six Canada geese who wandered over about 20 feet from my antenna. One of them had a bad attitude and hissed at me when I went over to check the antenna. I calmly told him to buzz off; I was here first. They wisely moved on, de-escalating the situation. I’m pleased to report that no humans or geese were harmed during this brief but intense standoff. 

Radio-wise, I wasn’t having much luck. QSOs were few and far between. On paper, the band conditions didn’t look too bad, so I’m not sure what my issue was. 

My third contact was an ear-shattering call from my friend N3CU. Ken was also in the park somewhere, so that accounted for his loud signal. I told him where I was, and he came over to visit. I last ran into Ken in French Creek back in January, so it was great catching up with him. Eventually, Ken headed off to continue his activation.

Ken N3CU (left) and WB3GCK at French Creek State Park (Selfie courtesy of N3CU)
Ken N3CU (left) and me at French Creek State Park (Selfie courtesy of N3CU)

After I got back on the air, I heard a noise in the woods behind me. It was a hiker coming off ‌a trail. He was curious about my antenna, so I gave him my Amateur Radio and Parks on the Air “elevator speech.” After a brief chat, he headed off toward the lake.

After I had six 20M contacts in my log, I moved down to 30M. Just then, another fellow came up to see what I was doing. I was wearing my Navy ball cap, so that prompted five or ten minutes’ worth of “sea stories.” 

While we were swapping tall tales, I had the KH1 calling CQ with one of my earbuds in my ear. I heard N3CU calling, so I told my visitor I needed to answer a call. He wished me good luck and headed off towards the parking lot. I needed to get back home, so I shut down and packed up after finishing up with Ken. 

So, after an hour and a half, I only had seven contacts in my log. This was my first busted activation in quite some time, but I don’t consider it a failure. I was out in a beautiful park with excellent weather, and I got to catch up with a friend and chat with some other random visitors. 

I’m sure I’ll have better luck on the radio next time.

72, Craig WB3GCK

4 thoughts on “Visitors, Geese, and a Busted Activation”

  1. Not a busted activation if you log it with OOTA, outontheair.com Craig. Any one QSO outside your home shack counts as a valid activation. I bet you enjoyed the outdoor radio session anyway!

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    1. I just entered my first log in OOTA. There are no “busted” activations in WWFF either. You need 44 contacts to qualify a park, but they can be cummulative over time. I never really liked the POTA rule that contacts have to be made in the same UTC day. 72, Craig

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  2. Venice, Italy, Spain, AZ all gave me busted activations but the SOTA ones hurt the most. I even have domestic ones that I needed just a few more plus a safety qso.
    I travel during G4 storms and foolishly live on the knife edge running 5 watts SSB with short antennas operating from outdoor locations
    Now the FT891 brings power in the pack but limited to 20w due to battery pack limitations but its weight and size means I dont bring any extra shoes or underwear in my carry on.
    I hoped the FX-4cr would be the radio but its SSB performance is horrible but is a great cw/ft8 radio. I will try a different mic before sending it to the recycling center.
    The main point of any outdoor operation is just that fun and experimentation are the main goals.
    The geese left Canada due to “Elbows Up – Everything Up” and are camping their way to Dayton due to high hotel room costs.
    73s john ve3ips
    bands have been so bad that antenna testing is somewhat compromised
    18ft on a 9:1 was a good performer?

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    1. Not sure how to quantify the antenna’s performance, but I’ve done about three activations with it in the past. It worked reasonably well with 5W of CW.

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