[arrl-odv:23688] Thank You and HNY!

Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios. A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members, hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio. One very profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted. Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks. 73, Brian N5ZGT ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division

Happy New Year All! I will give a more detailed accounting tomorrow after I recover from a contest style Red Badge Day. It looks like about 1600 or 1700 plus Q's under 24hrs at K5UZ. It was a blast to work so many of you and thanks for the points! Wow! Of course I cannot thank Staff enough for all the hard work they put forth to make this a major success which exceeded our wildest expectations! Now that we've all turned back in to pumpkins, I second Brian's motion. As I just told a couple of AD's and another friend just now this could be on the order if heroine withdrawals! Hi! Now, where's that bottle of Clicquot for New Years Eve! 73 ES DX David A. Norris, K5UZ Director Delta Division Sent from my iPhone On Dec 31, 2014, at 6:25 PM, Brian Mileshosky <n5zgt@swcp.com> wrote:
Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios.
A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members, hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio.
One very profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted.
Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks.
73,
Brian N5ZGT
ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division
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Brian, that’s as nice a summary of the Centennial-QP as I’ve seen. Thanks. Here’s a perspective from the field: From: Lyle Piner [mailto:firstcolonial@aol.com] Sent: Thursday, January 01, 2015 12:06 PM To: nn1n@arrl.net; Craigie, Kay, N3KN; k1zz@arrl.net Subject: Thank You! Happy 2015! I know you all must be feeling a certain sense of relief with the successful close of the ARRL Centennial year. Much has already been written about the great success of the Centennial QSO Party and the W1AW portable special event stations so I won't belabor that here. I am writing specifically to say thank you. As a relatively new amateur (first licensed in 2013), the timing of the centennial online celebration could not have been better from my perspective. The events prompted me to extend my operating privileges (Extra Class this year), extend my reach by becoming active in digital modes, and extend my involvement by becoming credentialed as a VE and joining my local ARES/RACES group. Most importantly, the events allowed me to "meet" each of you on the air and chat with some great people such as yourselves. Again, my sincere thanks and I hope to meet you on the air again soon. 73 Lyle Piner, N4ACK Windsor, VA Lyle’s message is practically a check list of what we had hoped the on-air event would accomplish. Others I have heard from say it got them back on the air for the first time in a long while (in some cases literally decades), motivated them to put up new or better antennas, and improved their operating skills. When you get the February issue of QST you’ll see that I put a teaser in the editorial about HPM’s 150th birthday being in 2019. I’m sure we’ll hear from members offering ideas for something special between now and then, because they won’t want to wait that long. If you’ve gotten as far as page 57 of the proposed 2015-16 Plan you’ve seen there are discussions underway for a possible 2016 activity. 73, Dave K1ZZ From: arrl-odv [mailto:arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org] On Behalf Of Mileshosky, Brian, N5ZGT Sent: Wednesday, December 31, 2014 7:25 PM To: arrl-odv Subject: [arrl-odv:23688] Thank You and HNY! Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios. A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members, hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio. One very profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted. Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks. 73, Brian N5ZGT ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division

Brian, Some of us have radios and antennas that rank well above the "peanut whistle" category. The rigs at the WY7's place will be blistering the airwaves for the RTTY Roundup this weekend. We are coming off a Division winning, fourth place W/VE and sixth world-wide score and plan to defend it. I once heard a Division Director say to a crowd at a division convention in WY, "If you are bored with Amateur Radio, you aren't looking deep enough". Might I suggest an on-air activity that will suit your station? You could try JT65 or JT9. Neither of these require power and may be paced more to your operating style. See you in Windsor, Dwayne, WY7FD On 2014-12-31 17:25, Brian Mileshosky wrote:
Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios.
A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members,
hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio.
One very
profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted.
Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year
everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks.
73,
Brian N5ZGT
ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division

Ouuuuuuuuch! My nose is bleeding after that one. May shiny pins escape the frigid Wyoming winter and find solace basking in the high-VSWR generated warmth of your feedline. 73, Brian N5ZGT From: arrl-odv [mailto:arrl-odv-bounces@reflector.arrl.org] On Behalf Of dwayne@wy7fd.com Sent: Friday, January 02, 2015 2:03 PM To: arrl-odv@reflector.arrl.org Subject: [arrl-odv:23695] Re: Thank You and HNY! Brian, Some of us have radios and antennas that rank well above the “peanut whistle” category. The rigs at the WY7’s place will be blistering the airwaves for the RTTY Roundup this weekend. We are coming off a Division winning, fourth place W/VE and sixth world-wide score and plan to defend it. I once heard a Division Director say to a crowd at a division convention in WY, “If you are bored with Amateur Radio, you aren’t looking deep enough”. Might I suggest an on-air activity that will suit your station? You could try JT65 or JT9. Neither of these require power and may be paced more to your operating style. See you in Windsor, Dwayne, WY7FD On 2014-12-31 17:25, Brian Mileshosky wrote: Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios. A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members, hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio. One very profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted. Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks. 73, Brian N5ZGT ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division

The turn of the New Year reminded me of an email I sent two years ago after the bands went nearly quiet at the end of the home run that was ARRL's Centennial QSO Party. Two years later, a similar note is deserved. Another hearty kudos and thank you to the Board, ARRL staff and volunteers, our members, and hams — this time for engineering, organizing, executing, and participating in ARRL’s year-long National Parks on the Air event. It’ll be another month until all logs are due but, as of this moment, stats show that hams participating in NPOTA caused over 20,000 activations in the field from dang close to all of National Park Service’s 489 units throughout last year. Quite impressive. I have visited with many hams at conventions, hamfests, forums, and during casual QSOs who remarked that long-duration (and finite) operating events such as the Centennial QSO Party and NPOTA have created a completely new kind of dynamic and challenge to being on the air, not to mention League promotion. Though we have many organizational challenges to rise to in 2017, I hope that a sliver of bandwidth is set aside to craft ways of building on the member and ham enthusiasm that the NPOTA and Centennial QSO Party events have created. A happy and healthy new year to each of you; I look forward to our gathering in a few weeks. 73, Brian N5ZGT
Begin forwarded message:
From: Brian Mileshosky <n5zgt@swcp.com> Subject: Thank You and HNY! Date: December 31, 2014 at 5:25:12 PM MST To: <arrl-odv@arrl.org>
Okay, now I'm bored on the air -- same for a zillion other League members and hams across the world. Fair warning: I'm making a Director's motion in January to create a Centennial QSO Party Anonymous or Points Anonymous service, because lots of people now find themselves staring hopelessly at their now absolutely quiet radios.
A huge THANK YOU to everyone -- ODV, staff, volunteers, members, hams -- for an absolute home run on the air this past year. Centennial celebration aside, if there is one thing that I hope everyone who participated in the QSO Party walked away with, it is that they became better and more dedicated radio operators throughout the year. That they used this year-long opportunity to learn more about themselves as an op, learned more about their gear, uncovered station and operating limitations and found ways to resolve them, and rediscovered the magic, fun (God forbid), and camaraderie that is ham radio.
One very profound moment today was working a few folks in the QSO Party who I hadn't worked since back in January 1, 2014. Staring at that date in the log, and greeting those hams once again, with literally one year of time padding our last QSO was an in-your-face "this year has absolutely flown by way too fast" epiphany. I hope everyone enjoyed it as much as they could while it lasted.
Happy Centennial, and Happy New Year everyone. Be safe this evening and see you in a few weeks.
73,
Brian N5ZGT
ARRL Director, Rocky Mountain Division
participants (4)
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Brian Mileshosky
-
David Norris
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dwayne@wy7fd.com
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Sumner, Dave, K1ZZ