During my embassy assignments in Guinea Bissaue, Sierra Leone and Botswana, I 
participated in JOTA with Cincinnati Boy Scouts through N8DL.  I even had 
Botswana Scouts in my shack to speak with the Cincinnati scouts.I don't ever 
recalling ARRL adverts in Boy's Life but plenty of stories in the magazine 
mentioning amateur radio and the League.  Perhaps one of you will write 
one.Dave K8MNSent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Walter Underwood 
<wun...@wunderwood.org> Date: 12/24/19  13:08  (GMT-05:00) To: 
elecraft@mailman.qth.net Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Reaching Across the 
Chronological Divide Interesting that nobody has yet mentioned Scouting and 
Jamboree on the Air (JOTA).Here is an article about a troop using amateur radio 
to coordinate dispersed camping groups and train for 
em-comm.https://blog.scoutingmagazine.org/2019/12/24/assistant-scoutmasters-help-scouts-get-trained-to-be-amateur-radio-operators/A
 troop in our area uses radios to allow groups of older youth to hike in 
separate groups. The fast group (always the youth, oddly) checks in every 15 
minutes. If they can’t make contact, they stop until they can. With a license, 
they can switch from FRS/GMRS to amateur bands and hike with a bigger gap.JOTA 
is on the third full weekend of October every year. This year, we had over 9000 
Scouts participate in the US. https://k2bsa.net/jota-usa-reports/From running a 
JOTA station a couple of times, I believe that prospective hams have just as 
wide a range of interests as active hams. We need a shotgun approach with each 
pellet (metaphor falling apart here) being someone who is excited about that 
activity. You don’t have to be an expert—I ran the “send your name in Morse 
Code” station and I’m not a CW operator—but you do need to represent how that 
activity could be exciting. Hands on, do everything hands on. No butts in seats 
for PowerPoint. Anybody ever say “I think I’ll go home and watch a nice 
PowerPoint preso tonight”? Here are some photos from our JOTA station this 
year. I’m the guy with the white hair. Oh, that doesn’t help. White hair and 
beard. Note the empty log sheet in front of the KX-line. HF was pretty dead. 
Must do digital modes next 
year.https://www.flickr.com/photos/walter_underwood/albums/72157711437854946 
wunderK6WRUWalter UnderwoodRadio Scouting Chair, Pacific Skyline 
Councilhttp://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my 
blog)https://www.linkedin.com/in/walterunderwood/> On Dec 23, 2019, at 9:59 PM, 
donov...@starpower.net wrote:> > Eric, > > > If you've grown tired of the usual 
awards, there's the "Alphabet Sandwich" > Call Letter Award. See page 4: > > > 
https://ftp.unpad.ac.id/orari/orari-diklat/pemula/organisasi/internasional/REG%203/JAPAN.pdf
 > > > 73 > Frank > W3LPL > > ----- Original Message -----> > From: "Eric J" 
<eric_c...@hotmail.com> > To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net > Sent: Monday, December 
23, 2019 6:56:22 PM > Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Reaching Across the Chronological 
Divide > > I mean this sincerely. I'm NOT in grumpy-old-man mode, though I can 
do that very well. The majority of QSOs with new people are about as 
interesting, enduring and deep as a short chat in the checkout line at Safeway. 
Many aren't even that interesting. PSK ops just throw on a brag tape and walk 
away. It's a pleasant few minutes, but it rarely leads to anything more. It 
does happen, but who in their right mind would spend thousands of dollars and 
hours on the outside chance it does? The opportunity for superficial chit chat 
with strangers was NEVER on my mind at 14 when I got interested in ham radio so 
it's a bit much to expect teenagers today to care about that. > > Ham radio has 
always been chock full of quick award-qualifying or contest contacts. Worked 
All Continents, countries, states, provinces, counties, grids, lighthouses, 
summits, guys named Fred. Go back as far as you want in QST and it's full of 
honor rolls, contest results...and SKs. It's nothing new to this period in ham 
radio. But ham radio has also been full of interesting challenges too. It's 
never been a very homogeneous hobby. I have no predictions except things are 
rapidly changing and that will continue in whatever direction those entering 
the hobby take it. The Baofeng Techs will change it as much as us Heathkit Kids 
did. Change is good. > > Eric KE6US > > 
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This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net > Please help support this email list: 
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> ______________________________________________________________> Elecraft 
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