by Teri (KO4WFP)
I had planned to take the week off from POTA when I received an email from Dave N1CGP asking if I was participating in the March 8th Young Ladies Relay League event. The event is an all-day celebration of International Women’s Day with POTA activations. Well, there was no way the POTA Babe could sit that out!
My day was already packed with appointments but I had four hours in the afternoon I could squeeze in an activation. I chose to activate Canoochee Sandhills Wildlife Management Area (WMA), a 35 minute drive from my home QTH. The park would not count toward my 2024 goal as I had already activated it last year. However, it would work for this event.
Daisy and I headed out around 2:30 PM under partly cloudy skies and 73 degrees. Apple Maps took me a slightly different route than my prior trips. As I was driving along, suddenly the paved road became dirt but what a fun ride! We fishtailed a little and that put a smile on this POTA Babe’s face.
Carolina Jasmine, a vine with yellow trumpet-like flowers, bloomed along the roadside. It is the state flower of South Carolina and adaptable, growing in a variety of conditions. What I didn’t know about it before writing this article is that all of the plant is poisonous. Even deer and rabbits will not eat it and that is saying something.
At the WMA, there was only one pickup truck parked off the road so it looked like Daisy and I would have the place pretty much to ourselves. I decided to use the Chelegance MC-750 vertical since time was limited. Daisy and I donned our blaze orange gear, set up, and got down to business. I had one hour to get a valid activation. As I hadn’t used the 40 meter coil yet on this antenna, I opted to start with 20 meters. I called and called CQ but had only two takers in 20 minutes.
It was time to see if 17 meters would come to my rescue. It did! I had 22 contacts on that band in 40 minutes including Peder SM2SUM (a regular) in Sweden.
The weather, while operating on 17 meters, turned cold and windy, gusty enough to blow over the antenna during one of my QSOs. I put on the hoodie I had taken off earlier and wished I was sitting INSIDE instead of outside the car.
At this point, I hoped to hunt a few activators, most of whom were on 20 meters. I reset the vertical for that band and began hunting but came up empty handed. The last one I tried, Melvin W3PYF, barely heard me and sent “Sri try later”. Unfortunately, I didn’t have later as I had a code buddy QSO with my best friend Caryn at 6:30 PM. Besides, I was sufficiently chilled from the weather that rolled in and was ready to head home.
This wasn’t one of my favorite activations, partially because I was pressed for time and the weather turned unpleasant. However, I did support my fellow YLs with the activation.
Sometimes, as a POTA Babe, you have to take one for the team.
Equipment Used
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Teri-
Thanks for sharing that!
Some days are like that. I was excited to be first to activate an entity up against the Canadian border. 20 minutes of CQing yielded nothing. I made my minimum 10 contacts by hunting. All but one was a European. I suspect I was catching the tail end of a solar flare.
Keep up the good work, and keep those reports coming!
73- Dave, K1SWL
Thanks for the Q into MT. It is always fun to log the east coast parks. GL YL CU AGN
K7ULM Dick
Way to take one for the team!
Fine job on switching bands and finding best propagation at the time and completing a good activation.
Looking forward to the next adventure of the POTA Babe!
73 de NG9T
The link to the MC-750 does not work. Great activation, thanks for the article.
73 de NK3B
Oscar:
Thanks for pointing out that out. I did not leave a link for that antenna. However, if you are interested, here it is:
https://chelegance.com/products/jncradio-mc-750-100-watts-portable-hf-gp-antenna/
72,
Teri KO4WFP