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#1
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Put out a query on our local radio stations 'Trading Post' program to see if
anyone in the area had any HCJB memorabilia. Woman called me and has a hat (unworn), posters from the early 80's and some station literature. Have to see what it all looks like tomorrow. dxAce Michigan USA |
#2
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On May 3, 1:52�pm, dxAce wrote:
Put out a query on our local radio stations 'Trading Post' program to see if anyone in the area had any HCJB memorabilia. Woman called me and has a hat (unworn), posters from the early 80's and some station literature. Have to see what it all looks like tomorrow. dxAce Michigan USA |
#3
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On May 3, 1:52�pm, dxAce wrote:
Put out a query on our local radio stations 'Trading Post' program to see if anyone in the area had any HCJB memorabilia. Woman called me and has a hat (unworn), posters from the early 80's and some station literature. Have to see what it all looks like tomorrow. dxAce Michigan USA Steve, Keep us posted on what you find. I was just thinking about how much HCJB used to be everywhere on the dial back when I was a kid. I sure miss their programming. Mike |
#4
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On May 3, 6:32�pm, Bob Dobbs wrote:
Voice of the Andes was like WWV to me, another beacon of a signal, always used as a reference on the drifty old analog dial. Yeah, Bob, I think it was the first station I heard when my parents gave me my first SW portable back 1967. HCJB English religious programming was the strongest signal, as I remember. It was enough to really stoke my curiosity. I found a DX column in some popular tech magazine at the library and was ordering my first WRTH from Gilfer by 1968. Listening to HCJB's current limited lineup of Spanish (along with some Portuguese and German) programming just isn't the same. Like Steve, I think some of the old pennants would be really cool. Mike |
#5
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In article
, Mike wrote: On May 3, 6:32?pm, Bob Dobbs wrote: Voice of the Andes was like WWV to me, another beacon of a signal, always used as a reference on the drifty old analog dial. Yeah, Bob, I think it was the first station I heard when my parents gave me my first SW portable back 1967. HCJB English religious programming was the strongest signal, as I remember. It was enough to really stoke my curiosity. I found a DX column in some popular tech magazine at the library and was ordering my first WRTH from Gilfer by 1968. Listening to HCJB's current limited lineup of Spanish (along with some Portuguese and German) programming just isn't the same. Like Steve, I think some of the old pennants would be really cool. As a teenager I came across a busted SW tube radio, did a little work on it and put up a horizontal long wire in the backyard. The first time it fired up I had HCJB on it all the way from Quito Ecuador. I was floored. I could not believe I had a radio that got a signal from that far away. I had family members listen and nobody else thought it was that big a deal. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#6
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On May 3, 7:31*pm, Telamon
wrote: In article , *Mike wrote: On May 3, 6:32?pm, Bob Dobbs wrote: Voice of the Andes was like WWV to me, another beacon of a signal, always used as a reference on the drifty old analog dial. Yeah, Bob, I think it was the first station I heard when my parents gave me my first SW portable back 1967. HCJB English religious programming was the strongest signal, as I remember. It was enough to really stoke my curiosity. I found a DX column in some popular tech magazine at the library and was ordering my first WRTH from Gilfer by 1968. Listening to HCJB's current limited lineup of Spanish (along with some Portuguese and German) programming just isn't the same. Like Steve, I think some of the old pennants would be really cool. As a teenager I came across a busted SW tube radio, did a little work on it and put up a horizontal long wire in the backyard. The first time it fired up I had HCJB on it all the way from Quito Ecuador. I was floored. I could not believe I had a radio that got a signal from that far away. I had family members listen and nobody else thought it was that big a deal. -- Telamon Ventura, California- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Good post Telamon. I flipped the first time I heard them also, great show and real quality programming. I couldn't believe I was hearing this station "from the Andes".....though I wasn't quite sure exactly where it was so I checked out their QTH on my wall map. Of course I just had to write them being a newbie, with a very excited written letter and a post card of Cincinnati and one from my village and within a month I got my QSL card along with a handwritten letter from a fella in the station telling me to be on the look out - - that I would be receiving something else from the station. I received a box, in between a small and medium size package that had all kinds of goodies in them. From what I remember, there was a small calendar and a big calendar. Literature on the history of the station and Quito, Ecuador itself. Three pennants, two small ones and one extremely big one IMO - like the pennants of baseball teams. Either two or three pens and a little pad of stationary from the station, I think I may be missing one other thing but I can't think of it. |
#7
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![]() "Bushcraftgregg" wrote in message ... Good post Telamon. I flipped the first time I heard them also, great show and real quality programming. I couldn't believe I was hearing this station "from the Andes".....though I wasn't quite sure exactly where it was so I checked out their QTH on my wall map. Of course I just had to write them being a newbie, with a very excited written letter and a post card of Cincinnati and one from my village and within a month I got my QSL card along with a handwritten letter from a fella in the station telling me to be on the look out - - that I would be receiving something else from the station. I received a box, in between a small and medium size package that had all kinds of goodies in them. From what I remember, there was a small calendar and a big calendar. Literature on the history of the station and Quito, Ecuador itself. Three pennants, two small ones and one extremely big one IMO - like the pennants of baseball teams. Either two or three pens and a little pad of stationary from the station, I think I may be missing one other thing but I can't think of it. Somewhere in my skunkworks, I still have an HCJB pennant and program guide. I can't remember the name of the program (it was a DX specific program), but I do know that it is no longer run on HCJB, they stopped it a few years after I got the pennant. I also have a nice tape sent at the same time of music of the Andes. I wish my brain still worked, and I could remember the name of the person I corresponded with at the time.. it's hell getting older. |
#8
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![]() "Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... Somewhere in my skunkworks, I still have an HCJB pennant and program guide. I can't remember the name of the program (it was a DX specific program), but I do know that it is no longer run on HCJB, they stopped it a few years after I got the pennant. I also have a nice tape sent at the same time of music of the Andes. I wish my brain still worked, and I could remember the name of the person I corresponded with at the time.. it's hell getting older. Found it.. it was Ralph Kurtenbach that I had corresponded with and who sent the goodies. |
#9
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In article
, Bushcraftgregg wrote: On May 3, 7:31*pm, Telamon wrote: In article , *Mike wrote: On May 3, 6:32?pm, Bob Dobbs wrote: Voice of the Andes was like WWV to me, another beacon of a signal, always used as a reference on the drifty old analog dial. Yeah, Bob, I think it was the first station I heard when my parents gave me my first SW portable back 1967. HCJB English religious programming was the strongest signal, as I remember. It was enough to really stoke my curiosity. I found a DX column in some popular tech magazine at the library and was ordering my first WRTH from Gilfer by 1968. Listening to HCJB's current limited lineup of Spanish (along with some Portuguese and German) programming just isn't the same. Like Steve, I think some of the old pennants would be really cool. As a teenager I came across a busted SW tube radio, did a little work on it and put up a horizontal long wire in the backyard. The first time it fired up I had HCJB on it all the way from Quito Ecuador. I was floored. I could not believe I had a radio that got a signal from that far away. I had family members listen and nobody else thought it was that big a deal. Good post Telamon. I flipped the first time I heard them also, great show and real quality programming. I couldn't believe I was hearing this station "from the Andes".....though I wasn't quite sure exactly where it was so I checked out their QTH on my wall map. Of course I just had to write them being a newbie, with a very excited written letter and a post card of Cincinnati and one from my village and within a month I got my QSL card along with a handwritten letter from a fella in the station telling me to be on the look out - - that I would be receiving something else from the station. I received a box, in between a small and medium size package that had all kinds of goodies in them. From what I remember, there was a small calendar and a big calendar. Literature on the history of the station and Quito, Ecuador itself. Three pennants, two small ones and one extremely big one IMO - like the pennants of baseball teams. Either two or three pens and a little pad of stationary from the station, I think I may be missing one other thing but I can't think of it. I've never mailed reports for QSL cards. It must be nice to have those physical reminders of the good times in the past. HCJB always had this corny serial called unshackled. I ended up listening to a number of them just to hear that organ music. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#10
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In article ,
"Brenda Ann" wrote: "Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... Somewhere in my skunkworks, I still have an HCJB pennant and program guide. I can't remember the name of the program (it was a DX specific program), but I do know that it is no longer run on HCJB, they stopped it a few years after I got the pennant. I also have a nice tape sent at the same time of music of the Andes. I wish my brain still worked, and I could remember the name of the person I corresponded with at the time.. it's hell getting older. Found it.. it was Ralph Kurtenbach that I had corresponded with and who sent the goodies. You think that guy might still be around? You ought to see if you can find him and write him a letter. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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