During my childhood, I watched my dad indulge his hobby: collecting stamps.

Most of the time his collection hibernated in two large photo albums on a shelf 
in the family room, seemingly forgotten. 

Then once a month, by prior arrangement, he'd receive a package of envelopes 
and postcards in the mail. Each item sported one or more cancelled stamps. Dad 
would fill a bowl with water, soak the stamps until they floated free, then lay 
them on a piece of wood by a window to dry in the hot San Diego sunshine. Once 
they were dry enough to handle, he'd pull out the albums and cement the stamps 
to blank pages in perfect rows and columns. 

One album held foreign stamps, the other domestic. I'd admire their colors and 
artwork. Sometimes I'd ask him questions about their monarchs, palaces, and 
currency denominations. But Dad seemed most interested in the fact that they 
were each slightly different -- their social, political, or geographical nature 
was secondary. 

When I was six or seven I started collecting coins in binders, emulating the 
lazy rhythm of my dad's pastime. This didn't last long, because I was soon 
consumed by an obsession with seashells in all their varied species. 

I lived in the perfect place for it. San Diego is famous for its beaches and 
coves, and I took full advantage of both. On summer weekends, my mother would 
take my friend Jeff and me to La Jolla, then let us roam while she stretched 
out on a lawn chair to read and tan. She was oblivious to the risks we were 
taking. 

We found three effective ways to collect shells in their native environment, 
with escalating levels of difficulty. 

First, you could arrive at the beach earlier than anyone else, at low tide, and 
scavenge for shells among the piles of pebbles and seaweed. This you would do 
barefoot, while dodging sharp stones, jellyfish, and rogue waves. 

Second, you might wander far out onto the sandstone formations to find tide 
pools that hadn't been raided. The substrate was slippery with moss; pockmarked 
with littoral snails, mussels, and keyhole limpets; and periodically doused by 
by breakers. Yet with luck you might reach deep into a bucket-sized hollow and 
find a well-polished chestnut cowrie among the anemones and hermit crabs. 
Indians used these egg-shaped cowries as wampum, and considering their beauty 
and diversity of form, it's easy to see why.

These two methods soon gave way to what Jeff and I really craved: searching the 
ocean floor itself for living mollusks. Once we'd both acquired masks, snorkels 
and fins, there was nothing to stop us, and no one to teach us how to do it 
right. We learned the hard way, swallowing seawater and popping our ear drums 
in pursuit of the deepest free dives we dared attempt. This was probably no 
more than 15 or 20 feet. But when you're ten years old, this made you the next 
Jacques Cousteau. We swam with bright orange garibaldis, snapper, and the 
occasional bat ray as we scanned the coral shelves for whelks, queen's tops, 
turrets, cones, and other spectacular univalves. 

Now, we could have collected shells the easy way, by simply purchasing them 
from the Cove Gift Shop, like everyone else. We considered this cheating, 
though, taking pride in our arduous adventures. Our treasure was hard-won. 

* * *

A few years later, armed with a ham license, I began a new collection. I worked 
stations all over the world first in CW mode, then SSB. Even as a teen I drew a 
parallel between seashells and DX, not just in terms of rarity or diversity, 
but in the visceral nature of the hunt. 

CW is not any easy skill to master. SSB also requires considerable skill with 
equipment, on-air technique, timing, and etiquette. Both allow the freedom to 
carry on short or long QSOs, over wide segments of spectrum, while expressing 
your individual style. Both can be pursued at home or in the field, even 
operating hand-held, no computer required. 

CW and SSB signals are there if you know where and when to look. They're hidden 
within atmospheric noise, like colorful shells of all sizes hidden by grains of 
sand. The hunt is still rewarding these days, but more difficult thanks to 
other preoccupations.

Speaking of which, if you get tired of collecting stamps, let's say with your 
VFO parked at 14.074 MHz, wander up or down the band and take a crack at doing 
things the hard way, using other modes. Listen. Search. Wade knee-deep among 
the hazards, taking chances, employing new skills. 

Better yet, become a mollusk. Get outdoors and call CQ from a wild, windy 
perch. Or from home, aim your beam in a new direction and pound some old brass. 

Let everyone else collect you.

73,
Wayne
N6KR










______________________________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
Post: mailto:Elecraft@mailman.qth.net

This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
Message delivered to arch...@mail-archive.com 

Reply via email to