By KO4WFP
Note: This is the third article for my trip to southwest Georgia at the beginning of January 2025. If you didn’t read the previous article, it is available here: Chickasawhatchee WMA (US-3739)
In POTA and camping, one may plan and prepare; but no matter how much of that one does, there are invariably challenges that arise pushing you out of your comfort zone. Challenges put one into what I call “ham radio mode”. You know what ham radio mode is, right? You evaluate a situation, assess your available resources to address the problem, and implement a solution with those resources. The trip to southwest Georgia presented several unexpected challenges.
The first unexpected challenge was that of my keys. I brought two paddles – the VK3IL design paddle and the mini palm paddle. Upon plugging it in, the VK3IL would only send dahs. So I defaulted to my backup, the mini palm. However, something was wrong with the connector on the back as randomly, the dit paddle would stop working. Ugh! After my first activation, I used my CW Morse straight key which I brought along because of Straight Key Night on January 1st. I hadn’t used a straight key for POTA in ages and, though a little challenging at first, it was a good change of pace.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Straight-Key.jpg?resize=474%2C356&ssl=1)
The second unexpected event was the soles of my old riding boots peeling back from the boots themselves. This happened as I was packing up my equipment at Chickasawhatchee. Thankfully, I found a Family Dollar store on the way back to Kolomoki Mounds State Park, purchased some JB Weld glue, and repaired them Thursday evening while sitting by the campfire.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/sole-of-boot-coming-off.jpg?resize=474%2C632&ssl=1)
The third unexpected event (don’t such things often come in threes?) were the cold temperatures at night. I did check the weather forecast before departing Savannah. However, it’s been nearly thirty years since I’ve camped in 30 degree weather and the weeks leading up to the trip had been unseasonably warm – highs in the 70s and lows in the mid 50s. So while I knew intellectually that it would be cold, I wasn’t thinking from an experiential perspective.
The first night I couldn’t get comfortably warm despite having a Northface sleeping bag (rated for 25/40 degrees) and a SeatoSummit Thermolite Reactor Extreme liner. I also threw on top of Daisy and I (she had a sleeping pad and bag of her own), a survival blanket I keep in the car for emergencies.
Late into the first night, I remembered a moving quilt/blanket also in Kai’s trunk for emergencies. I was too cold to retrieve it from the car that night. But for the second night, I laid it on the floor of the tent under Daisy and then wrapped it over both of us. Though the situation that night was better than the first, I was still not comfortably warm. (This is why winter is my least favorite season – I spend all winter trying to keep my hands and feet warm.)
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/frost-on-Kai.jpg?resize=474%2C356&ssl=1)
While I disliked throwing in the towel, I also didn’t want to suffer through two more nights of frigid weather. I tried to remember that the goal has to serve me and not the other way around.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/stink-bug-QRPer-scaled.jpg?resize=474%2C356&ssl=1)
After tearing down camp and packing the car, Daisy and I headed northeast back home with a planned stop at Doerun Pitcher Plant Bog Wildlife Management Area (US-7882). It is a relatively small WMA – only 600 acres. The land was purchased in 1994 from a family estate and named for the pitcher plants found on site.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SW-GA-Trip-Day-3.jpeg?resize=474%2C437&ssl=1)
Pitcher plants are carnivorous plants. According to Wikipedia, they have a “deep cavity filled with digestive liquid” in which insects are trapped and drown. There are over 100 species of carnivorous plants worldwide and three New World (North and South America) genus including sarracenia which are found at this WMA. The three species one can view at this park are the yellow pitcher plant (sarracenia flava), hooded pitcher plant (sarracenia minor), and the parrot pitcher plant (sarracenia psittacina).
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/more-pitcher-plants.jpg?resize=474%2C632&ssl=1)
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Sarracenia-minor-David-McAdoo-CC-BY.jpg?resize=400%2C600&ssl=1)
I was able to view all three species though they were not in their prime due to the cold temperatures.
This WMA is easily spotted from the road. It is a short drive into the property where one encounters a kiosk and trail to the pitcher plant bog. As there was no one present and no power lines in the parking lot, I decided to set up here for my activation.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/entrance.jpg?resize=474%2C356&ssl=1)
On the edge of the parking lot was a pine tree with branches low enough to reach with my arbor line. There were plenty of parking spaces to the left of my car so there was no issue running my antenna northwest across the lot. That enabled Daisy and I to sit in the sun (again, it was chilly in the shade here) and see anyone approaching in case I did need to move my antenna. I installed the Tufteln EFRW easily and readied myself to get on the air.
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/setup.jpg?resize=474%2C356&ssl=1)
Unfortunately, I did not have sufficient cell service to access the POTA site at this park. I texted Glenn and he spotted me on 14.058. As I had a four-hour drive ahead of me, this was a park at which I would not linger so sticking to one band would have to suffice.
Twenty meters did not disappoint. In fifty minutes, I had 23 contacts, many of whom I knew – Steve N2YLO, Todd W2TEF, Ed KN9V, Brian K3ES, Eric WZ5MM, Rick K8BMA, and Bob AC9MG. Though the POTA exchange may be short and not challenging, I always enjoy seeing ops I know on the air during an activation. It puts a smile on my face. (I just wish I could knew and remember everyone’s name. I sent the wrong name to Carlos AE2W – sorry about that!)
![](https://i0.wp.com/qrper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Doerun-QSO-Map.jpg?resize=474%2C344&ssl=1)
With this park successfully activated, it was time to head home to Savannah. The other parks I had hoped to activate during this trip – Kolomoki Mounds State Park, Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge, Lake Walter F. George WMA, Silver Lake State Fishing Lake, and/or Lake Seminole WMA – would have to wait for another trip.
But that isn’t the end. Just like Ginsu knives, there is more! As I had set aside Sunday for this trip, I resolved to find a park near Savannah to activate that day. What park would I pick? Stay tuned…
Equipment Used
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Shipping blankets are part of our camping experience too. They carpet the floor of the tent. They help to protect the tent floor as well as provide a comfortable area for the pup to lie down.
Rick:
It’s good to know someone else uses moving blankets. If I tackle cold-weather camping again, I will keep that in mind. Thanks for the comment.
72,
Teri KO4WFP
The POTA Babe
Sounds like you need a Mr Heater. I camp in Upper Michigan and love my “Little Buddy” one I carry.
73
NN9G, Dan
Dan:
I had no idea such a thing existed I could inside a tent. I will keep that in mind should I decide to tackle cold-weather camping again. Thank you for the recommendation.
72,
Teri KO4WFP
The POTA Babe
Unless the thing uses electricity to produce heat, I would worry about carbon monoxide.
A good quality pad underneath you is important to avoid losing heat to the ground. Air mattresses provide little insulation unless they have foam inside them, as the ThermaRest ones do.
Eating a bedtime snack (not in the tent!) can, as the snack gets digested, warm you up and starting the night warm will help you stay warm the rest of the night.
Does your sleeping bag have a hood? Covering one’s head is worth quite a lot. And snugging things up so that only one’s nose is outside the bag helps a lot too. In my youth I did lots of backpacking using a lightweight sleeping bag to save pack weight and by using these techniques when the weather turned colder than expected I nevertheless stayed warm enough.
David VE7EZM
Cold nights are miserable and I’ve had my fair share. Not sure which sleeping pad you were using, but the temperature rating for a sleeping bag assumes you have a highly reflective sleeping pad to reflect your body heat back up to you.
Jared:
You are correct about reflective pads and I did have one with me – the LuxuryMap pad from Therm-a-rest which provides great insulation from the ground. However, I was still cold. I struggle even in comfortable temps in my house to keep my feet warm. Having a heater (as someone else suggested) would certainly help me. Even a heating pad (which I might consider) under my feet would make a significant difference as no matter how many layers I put on my feet or snuggling them up under me in the sleeping bag helped. Sigh. I may just have to be the warmer-weather-camping POTA Babe.
72,
Teri KO4WFP
The POTA Babe
Yeah, that pad is about the warmest out there. I’m a 3-season camper myself. Thanks for sharing!
Jared