Boy Howdy! I wish I could be wrong as often in my line of work and still be employed! All last week, all I was seeing from various outlets was that this past weekend was going to be a rainy one. Hazy, hot and humid with a chance for thundershowers on Saturday and most likely all day Sunday. They even gave Sunday a 70 - 80% probability.
Saturday turned out to be sunny and hot ....... all day long. Sunday ..... well, Sunday? The day started out sunny. When I went to my car in the morning to go to Church, I saw there was some moisture on the car and the road, so it must have rained some overnight. However, my weather station did not even record 1/100th of an inch, so whatever happened was really minor.
As the morning progressed, the skies did get grayer and more ominous. I decided that if I was going to set up portable, it would be backyard portable so I could bring all my Ham gear inside quickly. Then, as FOBB start time approached, the skies became even grayer and darker, so I decided at the last possible moment to participate as a home station.
Wouldn't you know it? At the halfway point at 3:00 PM EDT, I came upstairs to refill my water cup and take a "nature calls" break. When I passed our front window, it was sunny as all get out! As bad as it looked, we never got any rain all weekend, except for that tiny smattering during the overnight Saturday/Sunday!
Being on the air from home is better than not being on the air at all, so for that I am grateful. Band conditions were not the best. From the beginning, signals on 20 Meters were down in the mud and QSB was just terrible! A classic case of hearing someone and then they're gone before they even finish calling CQ! 40 Meters was as dead as a door nail, except for W2TEF, who had a good signal, and I think just stayed on 40 Meters the whole time.
Band conditions improved as the Sprint progressed. 40 Meters actually ended up being the better band for me with more QSOs that 20 Meters. I checked 15 Meters about 4 or 5 times and heard no one there. I think that would have been my best chance for QSOs with the Western part of the country. I ended the day with 21 QSOs in the log, with 13 of them being Bumblebees. I think the farthest west I got was Missouri. i worked a couple Florida stations and desperately tried to work old friend Kelly K4UPG, who is also down in Florida. At one point, I thought I had caught his attention as he was calling CQ. He faded out both times I tried to work him, so I don't think he ever heard me. And that's the kind of day it was, There were others whom I would call and they would fade away before I could tell if they were coming back to me or not.
But, so far, as per the 3830 Contest page, I'm currently in 5th place in the Home QRP category. I'm sure that I'll drop down as more entries come in, but 5th place for now is nice, and much better than I expected.
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