Subj : Amateur Radio Newsline (D To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Jun 19 2020 08:52 am WORLD OF DX In the world of DX, listen for John, W5JON, in St. Kitts, where he's using the call sign, V47JA, from Calypso Bay, until July 2nd. He is operating from 160 metres to 6 metres, using SSB, and FT8. Send QSLs via LoTW, or send directly to his home call sign. Be listening for Giorgio, IU5HWS, who is on the air from Iraq until mid-July. You can listen for him on 40, 20, and 10 metres. For details on his activation, visit his YI/IU5HWS page on QRZ.com, which he is updating regularly. ** KICKER: UP UP AND AWAY - TO VICTORY NEIL/ANCHOR: We close this week's report with a story that we hope proves uplifting, amid the present turbulence in the world. What, after all, is more uplifting than a helium-filled mid-altitude balloon? Well, perhaps FOUR such balloons, all equipped with solar panels and APRS transmitters. Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB, brings us the tale. RALPH: On June 8, Liam Kennedy, KN6EQU, became a big winner, when his mid-altitude balloon crashed in a tree by a lake outside Liverpool, Nova Scotia, Canada. The balloon was one of four launched from the West Coast of the U.S. just days earlier in a race across the continent, that was part of an educational project for students during lockdown. For the California amateur, who has a long history supporting the International Space Station's radio contacts with students, this race against educators who are seasoned balloon competitors, had him feeling a bit like a newbie. LIAM: "When everyone launched, all of their balloons were way higher, going way faster, and mine was just bobbing along. And, I just wanted it to just survive, just go at least for another day." RALPH: That single day turned into several days, and Liam's balloon made it all the way to the Eastern Time Zone, crossing the finish line first. LIAM: "I didn't deserve to win, in terms of the effort everyone else put through." RALPH: Humbled but happy, win he did! His grand prize? Sharing that victory with his friend, Ted Tagami, KK6UUQ, of Magnitude.io the second-place winner, who'd actually funded the very balloon that beat him. Liam had also helped educators teach students about jet streams, weather predictions, and of course, ham radio. His other prize: finding joy in following the crash recovery days later, as volunteers from the Annapolis Royal Space Agency, the Annapolis Valley Amateur Radio Club, and other hams in Nova Scotia, retrieved the tracker, turning the expedition into an international effort. LIAM: This provided a type of community working together, to recover something that is now going to add on some more interesting opportunities in learning going forward. So, it is almost like paying it forward. RALPH: Community - and a hopeful eye toward the future. Two things as uplifting as those adventurous balloons themselves. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Ralph Squillace, KK6ITB. ** NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to ARISS; Amateur News Weekly; the ARRL; CQ Magazine; David Behar, K7DB; DX-World; Essex Ham; European Space Agency; the Mid Somerset Amateur Radio Club; NASA; Ohio Penn DX; QRZ.COM; shortwaveradio.de; Southgate Amateur Radio News; Ted Randall's QSO Radio Show; Twitter; WTWW Shortwave; Youngsters on the Air Oceania; and you, our listeners, that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline. Please send emails to our address at newsline@arnewsline.org. More information is available at Amateur Radio Newsline's only official website at arnewsline.org. For now, with Caryn Eve Murray, KD2GUT, at the news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide, I'm Neil Rapp, WB9VPG, in Bloomington, Indiana, saying 73, and as always, we thank you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2020. All rights reserved. --- SBBSecho 3.11-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - tbolt.synchro.net (801:1/2) þ Synchronet þ Temple of Doom BBS - tod.eothnet.com .