KNL-10 was an edition
with many obstacles. At first, this DXpedition was planned to go ahead on
Thursday the 17th of November and last until Monday the 21st.
Unfortunately at the very last moment we were informed that we couldn’t have
access to the field where we normally put up our beverage antennas because of a
hunting event. This resulted in a lot of
rescheduling work about the renting of the location, groceries orders etc, and
of course the hassle for the participants. It was decided to move the
DXpedition to Monday 21 to Friday 25/11. All this tuned out that Aart Rouw,
Leen van Oeveren and Marc van Leemputten couldn’t re-organize their daily
commitments to take part and only Jan Feenstra, Frank Huyghe, Frank Thijs, Marc
Vissers and yours truly (Guido Schotmans) would take part.
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Still hunters on the field |
Unlike previous
editions, we started an extra day earlier so we could drive in daylight and
didn’t end up in heavy morning traffic jam. This was welcomed by everyone. When
we arrived at the scene, we noticed that there were still hunters on the field.
Luckily it was just the end of their activity and moved further away after half
an hour and we could start putting up the long beverage antennas. We are experienced about that matter but they
clay soil was very muddy and sticky making walking along the field heavy. We accomplished erecting the North American
beverage, the one to Argentina and the Japan beverage (all 300m long) just
before sunset and just in time before the rain started to poor down. But as often happens, we had to defy the rain
to repair a connection on the Argentina beverage. The more shortwave and utility orientated guys
were buzzy putting up the LZ1AQ antenna, a Sony AN1 and a vertical.
We were ready for our
first DX-hunt in the night. Soon it became clear that after the previous years
of extraordinary great DX-catches, we will have to re-adjust our expectations
with the solar cycle going into the higher figures. Logging Australia (see
report HERE) and 10 different Japanese stations (see report HERE) wouldn’t be possible with this kind of
propagation. In fact reception on the North American antenna turned out to be
extremely noisy and it would stay that way the whole week long. There was also
not much variation in signal levels. Almost constant low values. On the
Argentina antenna, a nice clear log was made of Radio Super Boa Vontade on 1350
kHz and maybe there are still other things hidden in the files we have to
analyse.
Super R Boa Vontade
Next morning we had to
complete our beverage antenna farm. The 400m reversible Australia/Colombia
beverage and the and the non-terminated beverage to Africa. Later in the
evening, the Africa antenna brought logs from logs from Sudan on 765 kHz and
Gotel, Nigeria on 917 kHz. Dutch R Monique on 918 kHz spoiled the possibility
to catch R Benue, Nigeria. Bad luck while a week earlier it was not on the air.
(continues below the picture)
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Antenna work at the revesible Beverage |
Of course there was
also time for musing about antennas, receivers, computers and the issues
involved with it. Talking about computer issues… One time I decided to reboot
my laptop but it kept going into automatic recovery with no solution. Luckily I
had taken the HD caddy along so I was able to move a recovery file and solve
it. Another luck was that this didn’t happen during critical DXing hours.
For food we had the
regular Chinese take away. It was popular once again. Hugo Matten, our local
DXer and contact had the very nice habit to provide with tasty Belgian waffles.
Thanks Hugo !
Before the last night
we decided to move around the unterminated Africa beverage into the other
direction and making it a terminated beverage. A good move while this delivered
us a very nice and strong signal of Radio Gotel, Nigeria on 917 kHz with an ID
song. ID’s are quite seldom on that station.
Radio Gotel, Nigeria at excellent strength.
Other nice logs were Radio Paraguay on 920 kHz, KCBS, Pyongyang on 819 kHz with their National Anthem.
Friday was our last
day and antennas had to be taken down again. Not such an easy task while we got
plenty of rain during the night and the fields were transformed more or less
into muddy pools. Even after afterwards walking several hundreds of meters
along the road, mud was still sticking tightly on the boots.
(continues below the picture)
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Frank seems to be impressed by the Jaguar software - We are Jaguars ! What else. |
Several hours later we
arrived all well and safe home but tired and computers disks with lots of files
to be analysed. If anything
extraordinary jumps out you’ll hear it here.
Thanks again to the
owners of Vakantiewoning Knollehof for re-arranging our stay at very short
notice.
More pictures HERE.
Edit:
A few nice not so common logs discovered by Marc Vissers:
2022-11-22 0559 828 kHz AZR Antena 1, Monte das Cruzes, Antena Um ID, time, news // 666, 720 etc.
2002-11-23 0645 576 kHz CNR RNE Radio Nacional, Mesas de Galaz, Regional ID "Radio Nacional de España, Canarias".
2022-11-24 0645 972 kHz MLL RNE Radio Nacional, Melilla, Regional ID "Radio Nacional de España Melilla".
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Signals had difficulties getting through the clouds. 😀 |