What’s in your WAS circle?

Phone WAS 20m from Laguna Beach CA (DM13)

I never thought of myself as an award chaser.

Maybe like many kids, the endless pressure to achieve a scholastic level as measured by an exam put me off of any more “exams” and by loose association awards. I don’t want to be measured anymore.

However, what I did enjoy as a kid was hearing voices from far away places sharing far aware news that in truth was somewhat lost on me, I just wanted the confirmation card.

The most exciting were always from somewhere exotic sounding to this teenager; maybe India, maybe Australia or even Canada sprinkled amongst all the east European cultural “happy” cards I would also receive.

If I’m chasing an award surely it must be the ARRL DXCC that is the mark of true afficiando that has confirmation of contacts with a minimum of a 100 countries. True that was fun but WAS seemed to capture my imagination in a different way.

Maybe it’s because I’m an “ersatz” American bearing a passport but growing up a million miles away. Lost in the history of the USA is actually quite enlightening and enriching. Lost in old National Geographic’s that paint a picture of colored canyons in Utah, yachts tied up in slips at the end of a yards in Florida or yet another story of Mount Vernon. It all tells the fabric of my adopted country, a place that I have a deep respect and admiration for.

Celebrating becoming “ersatz”

WAS is an award offered by the US’s amateur radio league (ARRL) for anyone global that makes contact with an amateur in each and every US state, hence Worked All States. Sounds pretty simple and at some level it is. Where you can make it all the more interesting is to slice the WAS and achieve it for as specific communication method such as voice or morse code or harder still for a specific band such as 20m, 40m, 10m etc.

Location play a part as slicing it one way (say 40m) might be much easier from the middle of the country with a smaller distribution of distances to each and every state. Think about it, Nebraska, a fine place to live is roughly no more than 1,200 miles to any of the lower 48 unlike Maine, an equally wonderful place to live is various distances up to 2,500 miles to each and every lower 48. WAS on 40m might be much harder in Maine than Nebraska.

WAS so far….

Like many things in life starting something is easy and finishing it somewhat harder, think 80/20 rule.

I’ve been nibbling away at 15m and 10m WAS for a while. Contests don’t seem to have closed the final mile and I’m passionately trying to gain 3 more states on 10m phone and a similar number on 15m phone.

Truth is I would have been fine with phone WAS on multiple bands but now I’ve made some progress on CW and especially CW WAS, a whole new goal of per band triple crown awaits that is WAS phone, morse and digital. Drats, I’ve moved the goal posts…..

My WAS progress with 50 mile circle touching Laguna Beach

Counting sunspots…..Cycle 25

Whether your iconic 1700s event is the Battle of Culloden (1746, think Outlander), the French Indian Wars (1756-1763), the American Revolution (1765-1783) or Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, some “enlightened” astronomers started counting sunspots and over time determined a cycle of 11 years between maximum count with a big dip in-between.

The more recent science of radio in the 1900s lead to a realization that our ability to communicate on different bands is correlated to where the sun, our sun is in it’s 11 year cycle.

Nearing the current cycles maxima, we get to enjoy easier, almost global communication on bands such as 10m and 15m that are hitherto unheard of 5 years either side of the maxima.

Here we are at the peak of cycle 25 and it’s time to close those WAS goals on 10m, 15m and possible others between and around.

Humans have counted sunspots for since the mid 1750s

WAS and SOTA, a new goal made in heaven?

I’ve wandered the world of SOTA for almost 8 years. Goals change, radios change, antennas change, as do I. The enthusiasm for racing up the same local peaks year in a year out has waned and maybe best deferred. New peaks can be fun and my 8 year journey has taken me to 280 different peaks (no repeats) across the western USA and parts of Europe.

WAS requires all contacts for a single award to be made within a 50 mile radius of each other and with that I lassoed about 60 peaks not far from home. Most never visited as most are small “urban” peaks offering measly single or two points compared to “giants” in the San Gabriels and San Bernardinos offering eight points.

Now I have a new goal to further my WAS and grow my leg muscles…activate as many of the 60 (less what I have done or are off limits, think USMC base) as soon as possible

~60 SOTA peaks in my WAS circle touching Laguna Beach, CA

What’s in your WAS circle?

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