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[CQ-Contest] New Blood in Contesting (can one go homeagain?)

Subject: [CQ-Contest] New Blood in Contesting (can one go homeagain?)
From: k2kir@telenet.net (Bud Hippisley)
Date: Fri Mar 17 01:35:49 2000
At 04:27 PM 2000-03-16 -0900, Wigi Tozzi wrote:
>
I'd like to see some comments posted
>about how people got into contesting... So that maybe we can look at
>those stories, and see if one or more of those ideas can be used to
>bring more people to contesting now. Since I offered the challenge, I'll
>start...
=============================

>From K2KIR -- Shortly after I first got my General Class license I was rag 
>chewing on 40 meters one August afternoon when a station called me and asked 
>me if I would take a message for a non-ham in my city.  From that chance 
>encounter evolved my lengthy involvement in traffic handling.  I learned from 
>my ARRL literature that I could apply for an appointment as Official Relay 
>Station, which I did, and a local club member pointed out that as an appointee 
>I could participate in something called a "CD Party", where I would trade 
>exchanges with other traffic handlers and other League appointees.  I knew 
>nothing about contesting and less about CD Parties, but the potential 
>fraternalism interested me, and so with details of the next quarterly CD Party 
>in hand, I entered and had a ball.  I think I might have made all of 30 or 40 
>contacts that first time, but I was hooked, and I never missed a CW CD Party 
>from then (1955) until they were terminated.  Sometimes (such as when I was in 
>co!
!
llege) I could only get on long enough to make two or three contacts and 
sometimes I took first place, but I was always in them, going after my own 
personal goals -- and helping others fill their logs.   From there I branched 
out into SS, VHF QSO Parties, various state parties, Field Day (oops, sorry, I 
forgot -- Field Day's not a contest), and an occasional foray into DX tests.  

The point of my story is this -- I got into contesting much like the proverbial 
frog in boiling water.  I didn't start out my operating career by saying "I 
want to be a contester", nor did some speaker at a hamfest or club meeting 
convince me that contesting was the way to go.  I got into contesting by 
accident, but once there I found I enjoyed it even though it wasn't what I had 
originally started out to accomplish.  I believe that when the CD Parties 
disappeared we lost one of the better migration paths for budding contesters.  
So perhaps one train of thought should be to find another way to get 
individuals active in other aspects of ham radio exposed to a contest 
environment without contesting, per se, being the primary immediate objective.

Bud, K2KIR 



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