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Fw: N7JI Oregon SM mid-November message


 



----- Forwarded Message -----

From: ARRL Members Only Web site <memberlist@...>
To: "tyson.brooks5@..." <tyson.brooks5@...>
Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2023 at 08:58:42 AM PST
Subject: N7JI Oregon SM mid-November message

Hello, Oregon!

I appreciate the opportunity to be able to write to all ARRL members in
the Oregon section. I am available to be at your club meetings, either
remotely or in-person (within reason), and am happy to answer questions,
take comments, and take complaints.

SCHOLARSHIPS

ARRL Foundation scholarship season is open. Now is the time to complete
those scholarship applications, get your recommendation letters, and
request transcripts. It's important to note that even if you're "not a
kid," but you're pursuing higher education, you may be eligible for some
of the scholarships offered.



CONTESTS

Contest season is in full swing. Contests are a great chance to work on
awards (WAS, WAC, WAZ, DXCC, and more), push your equipment and antennas
to their limits, and develop your operating skills. It's a great chance
to ask an Elmer to teach you, too.

If you hate contests; that's your prerogative. Fortunately, there are
bands (60, 30, 17, and 12 meters) where contests aren't permitted. And
let's not forget that there are a LOT of operating modes available to
us. This may actually work to your benefit. For example, if there's a
worldwide RTTY contest going on, there are fewer people on FT8, CW, and
SSB, so your desired operating band may be less crowded than usual.

ELMERING

Several other experienced hams and I recently (yesterday) worked with a
17 year old ham, coaching her through her first ARRL Sweepstakes SSB
contest. She is an officer in a brand new school club, and was the first
to use the club's recently assigned callsign, W0AXE. She had never been
on the HF bands, and everything was new to her, including how to tune in
an SSB signal, how, when, and why you should rotate an antenna,
adjusting mic gain, using a foot pedal and headset, understanding band
edges, telling the difference between who's calling CQ and who's
answering, how to call CQ, how to answer a CQ, when and why to use
phonetics, how an exchange works, and how to initiate a contact.

The act of opening up your station, and transferring your knowledge and
enthusiasm to others, is a perfect example of being an Elmer.

Those of us who have been hams for a long time may forget what it felt
like to know absolutely nothing, or next to nothing. When you offer your
services to a new ham, and you get to see an "AH HA!" moment, it can
cause flashbacks. Elmering can help create a confident, capable, and
skilled ham radio operator.

The great thing, of course, is seeing someone go from "zero" to "I've
got this" in a few short hours. You can literally feel their confidence
level rise, as they begin to take control, asking you fewer and fewer
questions, knowing when to confidently key the radio and speak into the
mic, and knowing exactly what to say.

VOLUNTEER POSITIONS

We have been looking for volunteers to provide services within the ARRL
Oregon section's field organization.



We have appointed a Section Emergency Coordinator and five Assistant
SECs, populated five of six District EC positions, and are working
closely with Oregon Office of Emergency Management. We also have 36
counties within Oregon, running the gamut from "lots of emcomm
activity," to "none.'

There are many opportunities for those who want to participate in
emergency communications. Many areas have active emcomm groups, and it's
easy to find one to join. Others, which have no active emcomm groups,
are ripe for creation of new ones.

Many of our newest ham operators are interested in emcomm - but many of
them are probably not reading this message. If emcomm is important to
you, let's work to reach out and find the new hams in your area, and
tell them there's a place for them.

While ARRL membership is not required for emcomm participation, ARRL can
help to provide training.



We are actively looking for an Affiliated Club Coordinator, the primary
contact and resource person for each Amateur Radio club in the section,
specializing in motivating, providing assistance and coordinating joint
activities of radio clubs.



ARRL MEMBERSHIP

As an ARRL member, ARRL provides many services that I personally feel
are very valuable and far too numerous to enumerate here. I hope you do
as well, thank you for being a member, and hoping that you will continue
to be a member.?

It is also true, however, that ARRL also advocates for EVERY ham radio
operator in the USA (whether they're members or not) by consistently
fighting for the amateur radio community in front of congress and the
FCC.

Simply put, the more members there are, the more effectively ARRL can
perform its important functions upon which we all rely.

At $59/year, that's less than $5 a month, a small price even if it just
covered lobbying...but ARRL member benefits are far greater than that.

And for those under 26, it's only $25/year, which is about the cost of a
small cup of black coffee a month.

Please feel free to contact me with any questions, comments, or
complaints, and I thank you for reading.

73,

Scott N7JI
ARRL Oregon SM

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ARRL Oregon Section
Section Manager: Scott R Rosenfeld, N7JI
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--
Tyson Brooks
W7BL

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