What was the “wow”? What started as a warm up after getting Zanzibar loud and clear on 11735 kHz at 1600 hrs UTC and Maldives moderate on 1449 kHz soon went into an ecstasy with loads of long waves coming in varying from Antena Satelor Romania 153 kHz, Morocco R.Medi 171 kHz to Algiers on 252 kHz and Radio Polskei 225 kHz all coming in with clear noise free signals. Late into the night at 2100 hrs host of Philippines on the MW appeared, some clear and strong such as DZME 1531 kHz with their early morning chatter were soon overtaken by the Thai MW such as Chiang Mai 1476 kHz. The tropical bands which have very few stations left had some surprises in store for us. Radio Bougenville PNG on 3325 kHz at 2215 UTC was heard on 22nd with moderate to loud signals on a clear channels. However, it was elusive only for a day. Next day on this channel there was RRI Palangkarya signing on at 2200 UTC. Of the remaining Indonesians we could log RRI Makassar 4750 kHz and RRI Wamena 4870 kHz. All of the north Koreans including the Voice of People 3480 kHz and 3912 kHz were also there through all of the days of our listening and so were the Australian
domestics
2325 kHz Tennant Creek, 4835 kHz Alice Springs and 5025 kHz Katherine. It is
debatable whether to call Radio Tarma Peru on 4775 kHz at 2300 hrs listed to be
running 1 KW as the topping in the cake of the Latins first located by C.K.
Raman but there were other Cuban 60 m banders from Radio Havana 5040 kHz to Radio Rebelde 5025 kHz which appeared
fleetingly at 2300 hrs UTC. The higher frequency South Americans were
represented by Argentina on 15345 kHz, Radio Nacional da Amazonia Brazil 11780 kHz
which was not as strong as in Kolkata and R. Inconfidencia 15190 kHz. The American Missionaries World Harvest
Radio, WWCR ,WEWN and Radio Miami International were also there. Jose and
Alokesh were probably the first to hear Bangaldesh Betar Dhaka B on 819 kHz in
its first test transmission on 23rd Jan 2016. Jose also tuned in to
AWR program via AIR Port Blair on 4760 kHz and in the morning we could also log
AIR Leh on 4760 kHz.
What about the biggest “wow”? The beach was linked to the fishery by a short walk through dense forest and was therefore open only during day time. In this relatively lonely beach we carried a folding table, a Drake R8, automobile battery and material for a beverage and set up a 100m long beverage on the morning of 23rd January. Our aim was to hunt for the Bengal Pirates on the MW. We had noticed them in earlier Dxpeds at Mandarmani and also during our scouting trip to this place in early December. Our plan this time was a comprehensive survey. What did we come across? There were at least 20 Bengal pirates on the MW which operated between 1000 kHz to 1700 kHz and the spurious went up as far as the 4 Mhz region. Sudipta Ghose coordinated the Perseus capture of the entire band of Bengal Pirates. What more – some of these pirates were even identifying themselves and giving out mobile telephone numbers!
What about the biggest “wow”? The beach was linked to the fishery by a short walk through dense forest and was therefore open only during day time. In this relatively lonely beach we carried a folding table, a Drake R8, automobile battery and material for a beverage and set up a 100m long beverage on the morning of 23rd January. Our aim was to hunt for the Bengal Pirates on the MW. We had noticed them in earlier Dxpeds at Mandarmani and also during our scouting trip to this place in early December. Our plan this time was a comprehensive survey. What did we come across? There were at least 20 Bengal pirates on the MW which operated between 1000 kHz to 1700 kHz and the spurious went up as far as the 4 Mhz region. Sudipta Ghose coordinated the Perseus capture of the entire band of Bengal Pirates. What more – some of these pirates were even identifying themselves and giving out mobile telephone numbers!
Alokesh
and C.K.Raman had carried a J Pole FM antenna and that had its catch of
surprises too – FM stations varying from AIR Baripada in neighbouring Orissa to
Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal were logged. During day time while we chatted DX
Bangldesh FM would blare in the background.
Pradip Kundu true to his form of working wonders with lean equipments, managed to log the Brazilian time signal station on 10 Mhz using his Tecsun PL 660 portable receiver with telescopic antenna ( yes , not connected to a beverage ! ) while others were struggling with their Perseus, Drakes, Skanti and Kenwood. In time signal stations we also managed to log BPM on 2.5 Mhz and Italian time signal station on 10 Mhz.
Pradip Kundu true to his form of working wonders with lean equipments, managed to log the Brazilian time signal station on 10 Mhz using his Tecsun PL 660 portable receiver with telescopic antenna ( yes , not connected to a beverage ! ) while others were struggling with their Perseus, Drakes, Skanti and Kenwood. In time signal stations we also managed to log BPM on 2.5 Mhz and Italian time signal station on 10 Mhz.
What
about the disappointments? On the last night the huts next to ours were
occupied and this being the peak season, the resort was full. This caused the
noise level to jump up significantly and the long wave stations were a thing of
the past just after a day. While stringing a beverage in the east south east
direction part of it had to cross the waterbody but snapped. It was retrieved
repaired and restrung but we had to accept part of it being submerged in water.
Our vigorous hunt for the Japanese mw led by Debanjan yielded nothing except
for a lone MW NHK. The Japanese MW which were so common during our DX peds in
the mid eighties were simply not there. There was eerie echo of this in a
monitored conversation between two Bangladeshi fishing vessels who were lamenting
over “No fish: no catch “!
On the way back we stopped by a roadside tea shop and had muri and ghoogni for breakfast while we relished the DX experience of the last few days and also enjoyed DX snippets and the accounts from our efficient account manager Tripti Ranjan Basu who handled most of IDXCI administration in yesteryears. As we were going through a collection of QSL carried by PCK there was the last “ wow” - an AIR QSL which in one card had two QSLs of AIR Srinagar and AIR Aizwal scribbled in !! Yes two QSLs we had noticed them in one QSL card!! Such DX catches, DX tete-e-tete, DX “wow” and fellowship was the spirit of the IDXCI 35th Anniversary Dxped to Henry's Island near Bakkhali in West Bengal India.
On the way back we stopped by a roadside tea shop and had muri and ghoogni for breakfast while we relished the DX experience of the last few days and also enjoyed DX snippets and the accounts from our efficient account manager Tripti Ranjan Basu who handled most of IDXCI administration in yesteryears. As we were going through a collection of QSL carried by PCK there was the last “ wow” - an AIR QSL which in one card had two QSLs of AIR Srinagar and AIR Aizwal scribbled in !! Yes two QSLs we had noticed them in one QSL card!! Such DX catches, DX tete-e-tete, DX “wow” and fellowship was the spirit of the IDXCI 35th Anniversary Dxped to Henry's Island near Bakkhali in West Bengal India.
Supratik
Sanatani (VU2IFB)
Kolkata
26th
January 2016
Participants
Sudipta Ghose VU2UT, Baranagar, West Bengal.
Supratik Sanatani VU2IFB, Kolkata, West Bengal
Babul Gupta VU3ZBG, Barasat, West Bengal.
Tripti Ranjan Basu, Rahara, West Bengal.
Debanjan Chakrabarty VU3DCH, Kolkata, West Bengal.
Pradip Chandra Kundu, Agartala, Tripura
C. K. Raman VU3DJQ, Delhi.
Alokesh Gupta VU3BSE, Delhi.
Jose Jacob VU2JOS, Hyderabad, Telangana.
3325 23-Jan-16 1200 22322 Indo, RRI, Palangkaraya, YL talk
3480 23-Jan-16 1207 22442 Kor, Voice of the People,YL talk
1566 23-Jan-16 1211 33433 Chin, FEBC, talk
by OM
1188 23-Jan-16 1219 22332 Kor, Korea? YL
talk
603 23-Jan-16 1238 33433 Thai, Thailand unid, talk by YL, Music
13840 23-Jan-16 1245 44544 Eng, RNZI, talk
by OM
13845 23-Jan-16 1300 23322 Eng, WWCR, YL talk
3320 23-Jan-16 1309 22422 Kor, Pyongyang BS, talk by OM
1269 23-Jan-16 2106 33443 Malayalam, Asianet Radio, songs, announcement
5011 23-Jan-16 2119 22332 Malagasy, Radio Madagasikara, songs, YL talk
4750 23-Jan-16 2125 33433 Indo, RRI. Makassar, music
5025 23-Jan-16 2134 44444 Eng, ABC, news
3925 23-Jan-16 2145 22442 Jap, Radio Nikkei, talk by OM
3955 23-Jan-16 2147 33443 Fren, KBS, OM
/ YL talk
3975 23-Jan-16 2148 33443 Arab, Radio Vatican, OM talk
3925 23-Jan-16 2206 23322 Jap, Radio Nikkei, OM talk
5890 23-Jan-16 2220 33333 Eng, BBC, Current
affairs
9350 23-Jan-16 2226 22322 Eng, WWCR, talk
in English
9505 23-Jan-16 2230 22332 Eng, WHRI, music
9735 23-Jan-16 2239 22442 Jap, RTI, YL
talk
9790 23-Jan-16 2241 44444 Span, RRI, YL
talk
4885 23-Jan-16 2257 22442 Unid, Unid Latin, talk
by om
5050 23-Jan-16 2303 33443 Chin, Unid, music
4845 23-Jan-16 2307 22442 Unid, Unid Latin, talk
by om
4775 23-Jan-16 2317 22222 Span, R.Tarma, talk
by om
4865 23-Jan-16 2331 22442 Unid, Unid Latin, OM talk
5025 23-Jan-16 2350 22442 Span, R.Rebelde, song, YL talk
5040 24-Jan-16 0005 22442 Eng, RHC, OM talk, news
4875 24-Jan-16 0012 22442 Port, Unid Latin, music
1269 24-Jan-16 0025 44444 Bang, AIR, Agartala
1269 24-Jan-16 0025 44444 Tamil, AIR, Madurai om talk
4800 24-Jan-16 0525 33443 Chin, CNR, OM / YL talk
4820 24-Jan-16 0526 44444 Chin, PBS,OM / YL talk
4905 24-Jan-16 0526 44343 Chin, PBS,YL talk
4920 24-Jan-16 0528 44444 Chin, PBS, YL talk
5915 24-Jan-16 0532 44444 Chin,Unid, OM talk
5935 24-Jan-16 0533 44444 Chin, PBS,OM talk
5970 24-Jan-16 0536 24422 Chin,Unid,YL talk
2325 24-Jan-16 1147 22442 Eng, ABC Northern Territory music
2500 24-Jan-16 1203 22442 BPM, time signal, voice id
3925 24-Jan-16 1220 22442 Jap, R.Nikkei, YL talk
6055 24-Jan-16 1322 22242 Jap, R.Nikkei, YL talk
4010 24-Jan-16 1325 22422 Kyrgyz Kyrgyz Radio, song
4500 24-Jan-16 1327 44444 unid, PBS, YL talk
4750 24-Jan-16 1330 22422 Chin, CNR, OM talk
4765 24-Jan-16 1331 22222 Tajik, Tajik Radio, music / YL talk
21505 24-Jan-16 1335 44444 Arab, R. Saudi, OM talk
567 24-Jan-16 1447 32232 Eng, Lao National Radio news
1503 24-Jan-16 1458 33433 Thai, unid, YL / OM talk
1260 24-Jan-16 1502 22322 Urdu, PBC, id, YL talk
1197 24-Jan-16 1505 33333 Tamil, AIR, Tirunelveli talk om
4950 24-Jan-16 2100 22322 Port, R. National Angola, YL talk
4870 24-Jan-16 2102 22422 Indo, RRI Wamena, OM talk, music
15190 24-Jan-16 2112 22422 Port, R. Inconfidencia, OM talk, music
738 24-Jan-16 2121 33443 unid, DZRB, OM voice, music
11580 24-Jan-16 2133 22422 Eng, RMI, Rel
prog
11780 24-Jan-16 2137 33433 Port, R. N. Barzil, music, talk
11935 24-Jan-16 2140 33433 Port, R. RB2, OM talk, music
9200 24-Jan-16 2210 33443 Chin, unid
9350 24-Jan-16 2212 22422 Eng, WWCR, Rel
talk by om
9565 24-Jan-16 2216 22222 Span, Radio Marti, talk by OM
11830 24-Jan-16 2247 33433 Indo, IRIB, OM talk
11880 24-Jan-16 2249 22322 Eng, RHC, music
So another place with bearable Radio noise!
ReplyDeleteGreat DXped and great story.
ReplyDeleteMany congratulations to the Indian DX Club International on both your 35th anniversary and on such a fine DXpedition. I really enjoyed reading about your exploits at Henry's Island, about the antennas used, the equipment, and of course about the DX stations received during your visit. Wonderful stuff!!! I also enjoyed putting faces to such well known names. And it was lovely to read about my long time friend Sudipta Ghose so very active on the DX bands as well. Best wishes to you all. See you in another 35 years, eh?? ;-)
ReplyDeleteRob Wagner VK3BVW