'Come in, Amenia, do you copy?'


By CORY ALLYN


 


AMENIA — The weekend of June 27 and 28, the Southern Berkshire Amateur Radio Club, based in Sharon, drove across the state border to the Amenia Town Hall to set up and test its emergency communication equipment. The event is known as the American Radio Relay League Field Day, and is celebrated nationwide.

The club, which has 30 dues-paying members, set up three stations under the pavilion at the Town Hall parking lot, as well as several large antennas easily reaching 40 feet in the air.

It took the group of half a dozen club members about two hours to set up the antennas, but Field Day is not just about giving the public a chance to look into the world of ham radio operators. It’s also a time for operators to sharpen their skills and test their equipment. Club member Bill Clum estimated that if an emergency situation were to arise and they needed to broadcast quickly, they could have the antenna functional in 15 minutes.

There are presently more than a half million amateur radio operators in the United States, and 2.5 million around the world. One of the goals of Field Day, club President Ed Rubin explained, is to try to make contact with as many different hams in the United States as possible. Points are awarded per contact, and the results will be published in QST, a magazine published for amateur radio enthusiasts.

In the past, the Southern Berkshire Amateur Radio Club has contacted stations as far away as Texas, California, Hawaii and Alaska. More than 34,000 hams took part in Field Day last year.

"Field Day is a way for hams to get outdoors and have fun operating under some challenging conditions," said Rubin. The club began operating at 2 p.m. on Saturday, broadcasting almost continuously until 2 p.m. on Sunday. It was a long 24 hours, but well worth the effort for these hams.

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