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6 O'Clock Net Survey 11/30/20   Please Respond!

Net Topic December 2

The Can Am Crown sled dog race is held yearly the first Saturday in March… the same time of the year as the Iditarod.  It starts Saturday morning at Fort Kent, Maine and usually ends back at Fort Kent late the following Monday evening.  The event brings together dogs and mushers from throughout the United States and Canada and thousands of spectators line Main Street to watch the start of the race. 

It’s a 250 mile journey thru the north Maine woods near the Canadian border. There are 4 checkpoints where participants can rest, eat, and warm up.  In March temperatures there can range from a sunny 20 degrees F to below zero with wind chills of -40 degrees F.   There are over 20 amateur radio operators dispersed  along the course.  It takes year round planning, tons of ham radio equipment, repeaters, cross banding, simplex, HF communications, and 4 net controllers to keep it running day and night.  This race has been the premier dog sled race in New England for 28 years but sadly, due to Covid 19, the race has been canceled for 2021.


Click Photo for more........

Topics for November 30

Halley's Comet appeared in the sky when Mark Twain was born on November 30th, 1835. The comet moves in a seventy-five or seventy-six-year orbit, and, as it neared Earth once again, Twain said,

I came in with Halley's Comet... It is coming again ... and I expect to go out with it... The Almighty has said, no doubt: 'Now here are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in together, they must go out together.'

Sure enough, he died on April 21, 1910, just as the comet made its next pass within sight of Earth.

Halley's Comet was named after Edmund Halley, who realized that several earlier comets were one and the same. Then he calculated its narrow elliptical orbit. The comet rides in from the outer fringe of the solar system, makes a tight turn around the sun (inside the orbit of Mercury), and then sling-shots back out, far beyond Neptune.


November 30th, 2009  - Switzerland – “CERN's Large Hadron Collider has on this day become the world's highest energy particle accelerator, having accelerated its twin beams of protons to an energy of 1.18 TeV in the early hours of the morning.” A teraelectronvolt (TeV) is equivalent to the energy level of a flying mosquito, while CERN wants to ultimately achieve maximum power of 7.0 teraelectronvolts or trillion electronvolts in its bid to replicate the big bang that started the universe.  

Pictures (left) are of the supercollider and of an episode of Big Bang Theory where Sheldon gets sick after hugging Penny when she says he can take her place to go to see the CERN supercollider.


Topics for November 27

The 2020 Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, a 75-foot tall Norway Spruce that was acquired in Oneonta, N.Y. and was being prepared for setting on a platform at Rockefeller Center Nov. 14, when a small owl was discovered inside it.  The tree had traveled 200 miles over 3 days. 

The Saw-whet owl, they named ‘Rockefeller,’ recovered at a wildlife center and was then released back into the wild.

A mysterious metal “obelisk” found buried in the remote western United States desert has inflamed the imaginations of UFO spotters, conspiracy theorists and Stanley Kubrick (2001: a space odyssey) fans around the world.The shiny pillar – which protrudes around 12 feet from the red rocks of southern Utah – was spotted last Wednesday November 18th by baffled local officials counting bighorn sheep from the air. Landing to investigate, the Utah Department of Public Safety crew members found a metal monolith installed in the ground but no obvious indication of who might have put it there.

More than 830 miles above Earth's surface, a next-generation satellite will keep an eye on global sea levels. The Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite launched Saturday November 21 at 12:17 p.m. ET from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. It is a joint venture between NASA and the European Space Agency.  A livestream of the launch was available to watch on NASA's website. The satellite launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.The Falcon 9's first stage returned for a vertical landing on Earth. Once in orbit, the pickup truck-size satellite will track global sea levels for the next five and a half years.

Topics for November 25

On Nov. 28, 1918,  during the Spanish Flu pandemic which was still killing but seemed to be retreating the nation celebrated Thanksgiving.  Exuberantly.  “Best Thanksgiving in History of City,” proclaimed a headline in the New York Sun. Philadelphia, and despite a daylong chilly drizzle, it was the venue for parades, sporting events, and “flag raisings,” The Inquirer reported.   In the words of historian Kenneth C. Davis, author of the “Don’t Know Much About” series, the national attitude was: “We have a lot to be thankful for. The war is over, we’re still alive.” He added that by Thanksgiving, people were anxious to forget an epidemic that they didn’t quite understand in the first place.

The coronavirus and the Spanish flu appear to have at least one thing in common in that they both induced certain degrees of denial.  Also in 1918 people were tired of war, of death, and of rationing and needed a break.  But sadly there was a resurgence and influenza death #s soared, matching the totals of 1915, 1916, and 1917.

The response to the Spanish Flu was less organized than how we are handling Covid-19.. less insistence on wearing masks and social distancing.    Hopefully people now in 2020 will not celebrate too soon and will heed the warnings … we’re not out of this yet.

 See this link for more:

https://www.inquirer.com/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-deaths-flu-1918-pandemic-philadelphia-thanksgiving-pennsylvania-20201121.html 

Topics for November 23

Nov 22, 1906 Germany - - SOS Started 

1906 : International Morse code distress signal or SOS (... --- ... ) ( three dots, three dashes, three dots became the worldwide standard when it was included in the second International Radiotelegraphic Convention, in Berlin. 

Nov 23, 1963  - UK -- Doctor Who 

The British science fiction television programme Doctor Who from the BBC is shown on TV for the first time. "the Doctor" played by William Hartnell in the first series travels through time and space in the TARDIS ( A blue 1950's police box ) . Over 40 years featuring a number of doctors fighting alien baddies including the Daleks "Doctor Who" has gained a cult status in Britain and is also the longest-running science fiction television show in the world   

One of the things I like best about Dr. Who is that the Tardis is bigger on the inside! 

Joe Walsh, WB6ACU

As a member of the Eagles, Walsh was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998, and into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001. The Eagles are considered to be one of the most influential bands of the 1970s, and they remain one of the best-selling American bands in the history of popular music.[7] His creative contribution to music has received praise from many of the best rock guitarists, including Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page, who said, "He has a tremendous feel for the instrument. I've loved his style since the early James Gang."[8] Eric Clapton said that "He's one of the best guitarists to surface in some time. I don't listen to many records, but I listen to his."[8] The Who's guitarist, Pete Townshend, said "Joe Walsh is a fluid and intelligent player. There're not many like that around. (Wiki)

Joe Walsh has played with the Eagles for many years and enjoys Ham Radio as his hobby in his spare time. I hope that you get the chance to work him on the air waves. Until then (Take It Easy) --Joe, WB6ACU (QRZ)


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patrick Vincent Coleman (13 March 1872 – 6 December 1917)[1] was a train dispatcher for the Canadian Government Railways (formerly the ICR, Intercolonial Railway of Canada) who was killed in the Halifax Explosion, but not before he sent a message to an incoming passenger train to stop out of range of the explosion. Today he is remembered as one of the heroic figures from the disaster.

On the morning of 6 December 1917, the 45-year-old Coleman and Chief Clerk William Lovett were working in the Richmond station, surrounded by the railway yards near the foot of Richmond Street, only a few hundred feet from Pier 6. From there, trains were controlled on the main line into Halifax. The line ran along the western shore of Bedford Basin from Rockingham Station to the city's passenger terminal at the North Street Station, located a mile to the south of Richmond Station. Coleman was an experienced dispatcher who had been commended a few years earlier for helping to safely stop a runaway train.[2]

At approximately 8:45 a.m., there was a collision between SS Mont-Blanc, a French munitions ship carrying a cargo of high explosives, and a Norwegian vessel, SS Imo. Immediately thereafter Mont-Blanc caught fire, and the crew abandoned ship. The vessel drifted from near the mid-channel over to Pier 6 on the slack tide in a matter of minutes and beached herself.[3] A sailor, believed to have been sent ashore by a naval officer, warned Coleman and Lovett of her cargo of high explosives.[4] The overnight express train No. 10 from Saint John, New Brunswick, carrying nearly 300 passengers, was due to arrive at 8:55 a.m. Before leaving the office, Lovett called CGR terminal agent Henry Dustan to warn him of a burning ship laden with explosives that was heading for the pier.[5] After sending Lovett's message, Coleman and Lovett were said to have left the CGR depot. However, the dispatcher returned to the telegraph office and continued sending warning messages along the rail line as far as Truro to stop trains inbound for Halifax. An accepted version of Coleman's Morse code message reads as follows:

Hold up the train. Ammunition ship afire in harbour making for Pier 6 and will explode. Guess this will be my last message. Good-bye boys.[6]

The telegraphed warnings were apparently heeded, as the No. 10 passenger train was stopped just before the explosion occurred. The train was halted at Rockingham Station, on the western shore of Bedford Basin, approximately 6.4 kilometres (4.0 mi) from the downtown terminal. After the explosion, Coleman's message, followed by other messages later sent by railway officials who made their way to Rockingham, passed word of the disaster to the rest of Canada. The railway quickly mobilized aid, sending a dozen relief trains with fire and medical help from towns in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick on the day of the disaster, followed two days later by help from other parts of Canada and from the United States, most notably Boston. Even though Lovett had left the station, both he and Coleman were killed in the explosion.[7]

Although historians debate whether Coleman's initial message actually contributed to stopping the No. 10 train, there is some documented evidence to indicate it did. No. 10's Conductor Gillespie reported to the Moncton Transcript that although running on time, "his train was held for fifteen minutes by the dispatcher at Rockingham."[8]

Vince Coleman was also the subject of a Heritage Minute and was a prominent character in the CBC miniseries Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion. The Heritage Minute and other sources contain historical inaccuracies in that Coleman is shown warning others in the area surrounding the depot station of the impending explosion. In reality the Richmond Station was surrounded by freight yards. Another error is the exaggeration of the number of passengers aboard the Saint John train. The four-car overnight passenger train contained a maximum of 300 people, not 700 as claimed in the Heritage Minute.[9] The warning message is also changed. Coleman's telegraph key, watch and pen are on display in the Halifax Explosion exhibit at Halifax's Maritime Museum of the Atlantic.

Coleman is interred at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Halifax, at the intersection of Mumford Road with Joseph Howe Drive. A street is named after him in the Clayton Park neighbourhood of Halifax, and in 2007 a section of Albert Street near his old home was renamed Vincent Street. A condominium near Mount Olivet Cemetery on Bayer's Road is named The Vincent Coleman, also in his honour.[10]

Coleman was inducted into the Canadian Railway Hall of Fame in 2004.[11] A Halifax harbour ferry was named Vincent Coleman, by popular vote in the spring of 2017.[12] The ferry was dedicated and officially entered service in a ceremony at the Halifax ferry terminal on March 14, 2018


Topics November 18 & 20   and Photo of ISS Crew  Forwarded by K1TAT

On November 18, 1929 at 5:02 pm Newfoundland time, a magnitude 7.2 (M7.2) earthquake occurred approximately 250 kilometres south of Newfoundland under the Atlantic Ocean. This earthquake became known as the Grand Banks Earthquake, though it actually occurred west of the Grand Banks fishing region. Also known as the Laurentian Slope Earthquake, it was felt as far away as New York and Montreal. 


On land, damage was limited to Cape Breton Island, where chimneys tumbled and roads were blocked by minor landslides. 

In the Atlantic Ocean, however, the earthquake triggered a huge underwater slump, which severed 12 transatlantic cables and generated a tsunami. The tsunami was recorded along the eastern seaboard as far south as South Carolina and across the Atlantic Ocean in Portugal. 

My cat, Grimm (a 9 year old black & white shorthair),  as usual had to investigate my radio station last night as I got ready for the net.  He’s as eager as any ham I’ve ever met when the radio is powered up.  That reminded me of a ham, Charlie, who said he had two cats that were always there helping him make contacts.   So I went online this morning to see what I could find about cats and ham radio and was astonished to see the thousands of pictures of cats asleep on any size radio, cats who stuffed themselves into the shelves between radio components, and so on.  

I imagine that they liked it best when there were tube radios all nice and warm.  This is not just in the US of course.   I found an Essex site in the UK called “Shack Cats On The Air.”  There was also an article about “Digital Mode Operation vs CAT Control” … uh, but that’s a whole other thing.

Thanksgiving from the 

Turkey's Perspective

A poem by Jim Cavanaugh,  KD1FW

Thanksgiving Day

A poem by Jim Cavanaugh,  KD1FW

Topics November 16

November 16, 1992 Eric Lawes, while using a metal detector to search for a friend's lost hammer near Hoxne, Suffolk, England, discovered the 1,600 year old Hoxne Hoard, the largest hoard of Roman silver and gold ever found in Britain, and the largest collection of 4th and 5th century coins found anywhere within the bounds of the former Roman Empire.  

The hoard consists of 14,865 Roman gold, silver, and bronze coins and approximately 200 items of silver tableware and gold jewelry. The objects are now in the British Museum in London.  Lawes received £1.75 million from the British government for finding the gold and leaving it intact, which he split with the farmer on whose land the hoard was uncovered (he also eventually found the hammer, which later also went on exhibit) 

One thing that one of CAARA’s members (Stan Stone W4HIX) said he intensely disliked was duct tape.  During World War II, Revolite (then a division of Johnson & Johnson) developed an adhesive tape made from a rubber-based adhesive applied to a durable duck cloth backing 

This tape resisted water and was used to seal some ammunition cases during that period.  It has since been used to fix anything from holding up broken car side mirrors to keeping lunar dust off of the lunar vehicle’s fenders during the Apollo 17 mission. 

Topics November 13

Happy Friday the 13th!  Friday the 13th has long been considered a harbinger of bad luck where everything and anything can go wrong.  Just like walking under a ladder, crossing paths with a black cat or breaking a mirror, many people hold fast to the belief that Friday the 13th brings bad luck. There is a word for the fear of this day.  It’s “paraskevidekatriaphobia.”  Friday the 13th happens at least once every year but can occur up to three times in the same year.  It occurs in any month that begins on a Sunday.

1940 Jeep Willy

November 13, 1940  (which was a Wednesday)- U.S.A. - - Jeep 

The prototype for the Jeep featuring four-wheel drive, an open-air cab, and a rifle rack mounted under the windshield was submitted to the U.S. Army for approval by the car maker Willys-Overland. 


2021 Jeep Wrangler

One year later, with the U.S. declaration of war, mass production of the Jeep began. By the war's end in 1945, some 600,000 Jeeps known as Willy’s had rolled off the assembly lines.  For me the Jeep is still the best car on the road and I’ll own another one some day.

Topics November 11

Veteran's Day,  A Poem by Jim Cavanaugh,KD1FW

November 12, 1970  - U.S.A. - - the Exploding Whale  The Oregon Highway Division attempted to destroy a rotting eight-ton 45 foot sperm whale on a beach near Florence, Oregon with half a ton of dynamite, leading to the now infamous exploding whale incident. The explosion caused large pieces of blubber to land some distance away from the beach and left much of the whale intact. The debris is estimating to have gone 100 feet into the air. At first, locals cheered the spectacle. 

But cheers soon gave way to panic and running as large chunks of blubber sailed over their heads and landed with a thud at their feet. Smaller pieces pelted their bodies. The smell of putrid whale oil engulfed the scene. In a spectacular denouement, a giant piece of whale at least 3 square feet in size landed directly on a brand-new Cadillac, smashing the top and blowing out the windows.

ROCKPORT, Mass. — in October 2012 a dead 50-foot finback whale first beached in Rockport, where town officials were trying to figure out what to do with it.  Under the law, the community where the dead sea mammal washes ashore is responsible for its disposal. 

They ended up burying it there at the beach.  Another in September 2014 ended up in the rocks in Rockport.  Officials decided to leave it there and let nature take its course.

Topics November 9

Nov 10, 1975  - U.S.A. - - Edmund Fitzgerald 

The Edmund Fitzgerald carrying Iron Ore sank on Lake Superior in a storm with winds up to 75 miles an hour.  




All crew members were lost.  When launched on June 7, 1958, she was the largest ship on North America's Great Lakes, and she remains the largest to have sunk there.  




“The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" was written, composed and performed by Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot to commemorate the sinking of the ship.

The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down

Of the big lake they called Gitche Gumee

The lake, it is said, never gives up her dead

When the skies of November turn gloomy

With a load of iron ore twenty-six thousand tons more

Than the Edmund Fitzgerald weighed empty

That good ship and true was a bone to be chewed

When the gales of November came early…

In the 1930s, the car of the future had just one wheel. That wheel, in fact, was the entire car. The Dynasphere, as UK inventor Dr. J. H. Purves called it, offered a cabin within the circum-ference of the wheel for the driver and passenger to sit.  It could attain a speed of 30mph and the wheel moved fast enough to give a clear view of the road. 

It reminds me of the character BB-8 of Star Wars.  

It never caught on. You can watch it in action on YouTube.

Topics for November 6

November 9, 1965 -  at 5:16 p.m., the Great Blackout of the Northeast began as a tripped circuit breaker at a power plant on the Niagara River and caused a chain reaction sending power surges knocking out interconnected power companies down the East Coast. The blackout affected over 30 million persons, one-sixth of the entire U.S. population. Electricity also failed in Ontario and Quebec.  I remember this night.   I was 15 and living in Danvers, MA and I walked to the corner pharmacy and there were many other people out wandering around.   It was strangely quiet.      The blackout lasted for 12 hours. 

Ever have someone steal your lunch at work? Well I was looking for funny inventions and found this. You can pick up Anti-Theft Lunch Bags from PerpetualKid.  Bags are 7.25 inches in length by 7.25 inches wide and each bag has fake mold imprinted on both sides of the bag and feature a zipper style lock to make sure that your sandwich doesn’t actually go moldy before you are ready to eat it. Just hope that the person who was going to steal your sandwich doesn’t take it out of the fridge and put it in the bin!

Topic for November 4

A few decades ago, the wild turkey population in the US was dangerously dwindling.  Now they’re back but the problem is that when they get used to people, watch out! They are 25-30 lbs. that run at 15-20 mph, have a wing span of 6ft, can fly short distances and have sharp talons. I was out walking one day and saw one attack a car!  It had its talons out and leaped in the air at it.  Another day walking home from Market Basket someone from that neighborhood warned me to turn around and go home another way because there were turkeys ahead and they were mean.  This is happening often and in a lot of places not just Gloucester.  

 In a Washington Post article it was said that the birds of late have been accused of cracking roof tiles outside Sacramento, dangerously disrupting traffic in western New York and “terrorizing” residents near Akron, Ohio. Reports of turkey aggression in the Boston area have spiked in the past three years, forcing authorities to use lethal force at least five times, the Associated Press found. When the Cambridge, Mass., city council took up the matter recently, one member told of a turkey that chased a child and her dog outside church, and another recounted coming face-to-beak with a bird outside a community gathering where the large fowl had been discussed.  “It was like the turkey was waiting for me,” Councillor Dennis Carlone said from the dais. “They’re clearly strategizing.”

 https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp/2017/11/22/heres-the-deal-with-all-those-turkeys-terrorizing-the-suburbs/

Topics for November 2

November 2, 1947 American aviator and filmmaker Howard Hughes piloted the Spruce Goose, an eight-engine wooden flying boat intended to carry 750 passengers, on its only flight—one mile.

On November 2nd and 3rd 1957 there were several reports of UFO 🛸 sightings in Levelland, Texas.  Most reported seeing a blue or red cylindrical object. Their car engines shut off and only restarted when the object left. 

Thunderstorms were present in the area earlier in the day and the Air Force investigator concluded that a severe electrical storm – most probably ball lightning or St. Elmo's fire – was the major cause for the sightings and reported auto failures.

Ball lightning is an unexplained phenomenon described as luminescent, spherical objects that vary from pea-sized to several meters in diameter. Though usually associated with thunderstorms, the phenomenon is said to last considerably longer than the split-second flash of a lightning bolt. 

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