Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio
amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website. Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website. Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website at http://www.arrl.org/ |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mike Terry wrote:
A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website at http://www.arrl.org/ There's a longer version?! It already set a record for a press release. I gather somebody wants to take the frequencies away. Jeez, talk about pointless self-importance. You could get even better emergency communications by putting up more cell phone towers and not have to suffer through the press release. Look for a ``Car-jackers Handle Emergency Transportation'' release from civil rights organizatons. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone have any information about the node status of the IRLP
station on Cayman? www.irlp.net I have checked the listings but the station is not listed anymore. I will be on island next month and will bring VHF gear and hope to use the irlp when I get there. 73. Here is a link to the Cayman amateur radio club in Cayman Islands. http://www.alarnold.ca/cayman-restoration.html |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Ron Hardin" wrote in message ... Mike Terry wrote: A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website at http://www.arrl.org/ There's a longer version?! It already set a record for a press release. I gather somebody wants to take the frequencies away. Jeez, talk about pointless self-importance. You could get even better emergency communications by putting up more cell phone towers and not have to suffer through the press release. Look for a ``Car-jackers Handle Emergency Transportation'' release from civil rights organizatons. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. gee Ron, why go to such an effort to belittle a group of volunteers who donate their time, equipment, and expertise and only to have the satisfaction that they helped some people? |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tim Perry" wrote in message ... "Ron Hardin" wrote in message ... Mike Terry wrote: A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website at http://www.arrl.org/ There's a longer version?! It already set a record for a press release. I gather somebody wants to take the frequencies away. Jeez, talk about pointless self-importance. You could get even better emergency communications by putting up more cell phone towers and not have to suffer through the press release. Look for a ``Car-jackers Handle Emergency Transportation'' release from civil rights organizatons. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. gee Ron, why go to such an effort to belittle a group of volunteers who donate their time, equipment, and expertise and only to have the satisfaction that they helped some people? Their work is thankless, and a little overblown press once and awhile is about as bad as that gets. What's really aggravating, is to hear the vermin crawl out of their holes and whistle and otherwise deliberately disrupt emergency communications on the HWN and Maritime Mobile Net. Some Amateur operators in spanish and asian languages (one group allegedly operates within Florida) deliberately acts up on 14323 whenever the net is active on 14325. Jack |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
As residents clean up in the wake of Hurricane Ivan, Tim Skelly Cason,
professional musician from Fort Walton Beach, Florida, now in Los Angeles California says: "My Brother, Ted Cason of the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Dept. has been working with local residents using all types of short wave communications. All communication was lost during and immediately following the storm. Short wave devices became the source of communication within the department and to contact residents around Fort Walton Beach and Destin." The damaged sustained by Hurricane Ivan will obviously take years to correct. Tim Skelly Cason also said "… after Hurricane Opal, parts of highway 98 were impassable for weeks. Now, Hurricane Ivan has re-opened the wounds left by Opal and is a stark reminder of the power of mother nature's fury!" Tim Skelly Cason, former bassist of the band Cripple Need Cane also went on to say, "People in California and other parts of the nation that don't have experience with hurricanes have no idea how it all happens. The worst part is the water surge up from the Gulf of Mexico. This ‘storm surge' brings excessive high-tides and waves about 10 times their normal size, and in a place that gets 2 foot waves on average, a 10 to 15 foot wave on top of an already high tide, causes extreme changes to the coastline and any structures in it's path." Tim Skelly Cason, will be appearing in New York City at the Bass Player Live event sponsored by Bass Player Magazine, Saturday and Sunday, October 16 and 17 to demonstrate products for Roland, the largest musical instrument manufacturer in the world. During his stay in Manhattan he will use short wave radio to communicate to his companions. Tim Skelly Cason is an electronics engineer as well and went on to say, "After 911, (September 11th,) I'll be a lot more prone to carry a short wave walkie-talkie when I'm in the city. I'm glad we have this old technology to fall back on. It's in many ways superior to all the hype and hoopla of modern digital communication devices." You can read more from Tim Skelly Cason, former Bassist for the band Cripple Need Cane, at http://www.timcason.com "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website. Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website. Amateurs Handle Emergency Comms in Wake of Hurricane Ivan As the third major hurricane in two months crossed the Caribbean Sea, radio amateurs in the region have once again been in action, providing emergency communications. The Hurricane Watch Net has been in almost continuous operation on 14325kHz for over three weeks. It coordinates its activities with WX4NHC at the American National Hurricane Centre, which gathers real-time weather data and damage reports from radio amateurs in the path of the hurricane. In Cuba, IARU Region 2 Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, praised the Hurricane Watch Net for its outstanding efforts in collecting ground-level weather data from stations in Cuba. CO2KK was the Hurricane Watch Net liaison station. He and many other Cuban amateurs were active in providing communications as Hurricane Ivan passed over the north-western end of the island. Arnie said that nearly 800 Cuban amateurs were involved in handling emergency traffic related to Hurricane Ivan. He spent some 55 hours in continuous operation handling emergency traffic to the affected area. In the Cayman Islands, HMS Richmond was moored off Grand Cayman but had no communications to shore to direct its humanitarian relief efforts. A member of the Hurricane Watch Net called London to get a satellite telephone number for the governor of the Cayman Islands, which was relayed to the Richmond via the net. The Hurricane Watch Net was also able to advise the Richmond that it was possible to land an aircraft on the Grand Cayman airport runway. It had been assumed the runway was unusable until the net learned from a private pilot that it was still possible to land there. As Hurricane Ivan threatens the US Gulf Coast, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service there is being placed on standby alert. Local Emergency Coordinators are establishing VHF and UHF repeater nets and monitoring the emergency frequencies of 3965 and 7243kHz. A longer version of this news story is available on the ARRL website at http://www.arrl.org/ |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|