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Old April 17th 10, 01:24 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.moderated
N2EY N2EY is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Apr 2010
Posts: 26
Default Wash DC ham numbers. What is wrong?

On Apr 16, 10:21 am, "Michael J. Coslo" wrote:

While Washington DC is a district, for all intents and
purposes, it is a city, just like Philadelphia or New York.


It's even more urbanized than Philadelphia, IMHO. (I've spend
considerable time in both cities).

And in line with what Jim had said, I'm actually surprised that there
are some many hams per non-hams.


I think you meant "so many hams...". I suspect that many of them are
temporary transplants (students, for example).

I can under stand that there are relatively many hams in places like
Alaska. They live a lot closer to the edge of disaster than most of
us, and there's only so much infrastructure you can put in in some of
the more remote areas.


I don't think Alaskans are "much closer" to the edge of disaster than
most of us. However, I bet they do have fewer restrictions on
antennas.

And for longer than I've been a ham, there's been the special Alaskan
emergency frequency. Might be more than a few folks who got ham
licenses just to use it.

There are probably a lot of factors that influence the number of hams
per-capita, and what they do. For example, Florida has lots of hams -
and lots of retirees.

73 de Jim, N2EY