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Re: [IRCA] July 10 Rockwork 4 DXpedition-- Murphy's Law on Steroids



Gary

It sounds like you folks had typical Sunday-morning-time-to-reel-in-the-antennas-at-Grayland weather today.

I experienced similar weather this morning while driving through Puyallup on the way to Mount Rainier. Well maybe not as much wind, but the rain was relentless for a few minutes. So you could have gotten equally drenched by staying home, if you'd wanted.

Bruce

On 7/10/2016 08:07, d1028gary@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
It's probably safe to say that none of our DXpedition group has ever endured such a miserable DXing session. Severe rain and wind pounded the highly-exposed Rockwork 4 ocean cliff turnoff throughout our antenna setup and radio listening, providing a very stark welcome for our distinguished Japanese visitors (Hiroo Nakagawa and Satoshi Miyauchi).
We all knew we were in trouble as soon as we drove up to the ocean cliff site at the bizarre hour of 0315 (local time). A toxic mixture of heavy rain and wind was hammering the cliff, making even our antenna setup a most miserable experience. Having been through this bad movie before (at Cape Perpetua in August of 2014) I came prepared with strong plastic tie wraps to anchor the FSL bases and waterproof covers for the antennas themselves, but unlike the smart Japanese visitors none of the North Americans had come with raincoats. As such, both Tom and I were thoroughly drenched and shivering while Hiroo-san and Satoshi-san seemed warm and comfy. Nick was only drenched from the knees down, apparently having escaped the worst by deploying a more modest antenna requiring less setup time. Tom's broadband loop supports absolutely refused to stay vertical in the stiff wind until I offered him several of the 175-lb. test plastic tie wraps, and of course in the predawn darkness (and foul weather) the loop wires had unintended foot traffic, at one time causing the loop to be tightly snagged in Satoshi-san's car trunk (really). Despite the challenges we all managed to deploy our antennas and receive DU-DX, although we were all in agreement that the session's propagation was somewhat "watered down." The single, thoroughly drenched 15" FSL managed to receive 657-Star, 702-2BL, 738-Tahiti and 1035-Newstalk ZB for both Satoshi-san and me, which is probably the first time in history that a single FSL was used to boost two Ultralight radios for simultaneous MP3 recordings. We have one more morning together at the wild ocean cliff site, which obviously can't be any worse than the one we just experienced. For those interested, an on-site video of the "Session from Hell" is posted at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lw9k6E08eME&feature=youtu.be , featuring a sorry collection of soaked and shivering DXers wondering how they ever survived such a wacky experience. 73 and Good DX,
Gary DeBock (drying out and warming up at the "Bunk House" in Nehalem, OR)


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