2020-08-15

yl.beam #85 august 2020

Contents
  • Dxpedition to Island of Pemba.
  • Contest Burnout!
  • Teodora Karastoyanova, LZ2CWW, from Bulgaria, HST Champion  
  • "Rufz" code  The Mongolian Radio Sport Federation (MRSF)  
  • Czechoslovakian pioneer yl in Mongolia - Milada Klouckova,  JT1YL/ OK1KX,
  • Ruby Boye WW2 radio operator at Vanikoro in the Solomon Islands
  • Condolences
  • Contacts & Calendar



yl from Slovak Republic on Dxpedition to Island of Pemba.
 OM5MF Margita Lukacková  is part of team activating  Island of Pemba IOTA (AF-063)
Callsign 5H4WZ from February 6 to 18, 2020
Pemba is an island that is part of the Zanzibar archipelago, located near the east coast of Africa, in waters of the Indian Ocean. It is 50 km north of the island of Unguja, and another 50 km from the African coast. The islands of Pemba, Unguja and Mafia Island are the three main ones that make up the Zanzibar archipelago or Spice Islands. In the 1960s, Zanzibar joined the former Tanganyika colony to form the new state of Tanzania.
                    =============
The team departed from Vienna Airport on February 5 2020,  landing in Zanzibar and arriving on Pemba Island the following day. They set up a station with a 40m antenna and were making CW contacts by the evening.
As the 7 February was a holiday, there was little interest in the team's lost luggage and as the Titanex vertical and 2 fiber poles was part of the lost luggage, the team had to improvise.
Outside Temperatures were 35C, with high humidity. Electricity outages common.
The lost luggage with the antenna arrived, on the 10th. and the team were able to continue with the initial plan and erected  vertical on 160/80m.  10k qso had already been made.
After operating for a week, the team took some time off to enjoy a boat trip to a desert island.
The next day the AC kept dropping to 120V, which made operating even more difficult. Blackouts became more frequent.
As the Dxpedition neared its end, the night of the 15th was the last chance for contacts in the low bands 80 & 160m. After that the team had to pack away all antennas and from Monday to Tuesday would only operate  one radio. They went QRT on the 18 February and uploaded the last log.
Information: http://ea7fmt.wordpress.com Qrz and web photos.
 www.ea7fmt.es . Wikipedia

Contest Burnout!
LX8HQ Luxembourg HQ, IARU HF Championship
Mendaly Ries  LX2VY Luxembourg  12 July, 2020
Ergh. Explanation for non hams... 24h radiocontest - 2nd time I've competed in Radio World-championships. My left ear hurts from the head-phones. I'm listening compulsively to the pigeons in the back-yard during BBQ dinner to decipher whether they are yelling Delta 6 or Echo 6 and try to note it on the napkin. No pen. I really would like to sleep now... but my foot keeps kicking the bed for PTT (we use mike sewing pedals you push with the foot to open the microphone). And my left finger taps randomly on the cushion to change between the antenna configurations to hear US or Japan or Europe or what the hell... in dire need of sleep and quietude. But happy. No voice tomorrow. I've spoken more in one day than during a year. As said. Kaputt but happy.
LZ2CWW-TeodoraHST.jpg
"HIGH-SPEED MORSE TELEGRAPHY"
means telegraphing and understanding of  Morsecode (CW) at very high speeds.
16th IARU High-Speed Telegraphy World Championship 2019, were held at Albena, Bulgaria,
Teams from 15 countries participated with a total of 60 men and 30 women.
Can you top 195 words per minute? That's the speed at which both the male and female winners  were able to copy, both setting new world records in the process.
 26-year-old yl Teodora Karastoyanova, LZ2CWW, from Bulgaria, scored 293,877 points in the competition, breaking her own world record of 286,944 set earlier in the year in the Romanian Championships.
Teodora was born in 1993 and started with Amateur radio in 2005, she was licensed in 2007.  She has set six world records – four at Rufz xp and two at Morse Runner
During the HST Cup of Europe, held in Bucharest, Romania, from 1 to 5 May 2019, she set a new world record in RufzXP with 286.944 points. In Albena, Bulgaria, from 13 to 17 September 2019 Theodora established, in the 16th IARU High-Speed Telegraphy World Championship a new female record, always in RufzXP, with 293,877 points and a maximum speed of 943 characters / minute or 195 WPM.

"Rufz" is the abbreviation of the German word "Rufzeichen Hören", which means "Listening to Names ". RufzXP is training software to improve Code speed and CW practice, in particular (ultra) high memory copying speed of real amateur radio calls. It focuses on improving proficiency in CW, it is not a Contest simulator and does not include QRM.  RufzXP is a must for any serious High Speed Telegraphy

The Mongolian Radio Sport Federation (MRSF)
Radio sport in Mongolia began in 1958. The main goal was to prepare radio operators for the Mongolian army. Later  radio techniques, amateur radio and high speed telegraphy were introduced to the public.
In 1957 the Czechoslovakian embassy’s communication operator L. Klauchik operated a radio amateur station using the callsign JT1AA. In 1958 Milada Klouckova was the first woman working from the Czechoslovakian embassy under the callsign JT1YL.
In November 1958 the first Mongolian HST team participated in an international tournament held among socialist countries. In 1962 the first HST championship of Mongolia was held. Since then the national HST championship has become a regular event in the country.    http://www.highspeedtelegraphy.com/HST-Mongolia

Czechoslovakian yl in Mongolia
Milada Klouckova,  JT1YL,also OK1KX, wife of Ludvik JT1AA/OK1KW
QTH: Ulan Bator - Mongolia - Zone 23
Mila was a very active YL, in particular over 20 and 15 meters, in voice and CW.
An exceptional operator, a very talented telegraph operator, Mila was at the end of the '50s a much sought-after and prized DX. Her QSL card, illustrated with her portrait, was particularly sought after.          for antique qsl pictures see:    https://f6blk.net/main_en.php?page=126

Ja-Well-No-Fine
The 17th IARU HST Championship which was to have been held  in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia during August 2020 was cancelled.
As 2020 marks the end of WW2, 75 years ago and the ALARA (Australian Ladies) will be holding their 40th annual contest over the  last weekend in August, the story below seemed appropriate.
Editor – Heather (ZS5YH) 
VanikoroMap.jpg 

Vanikoro is an island located 118 kilometres (73 miles)  South-east of  Santa Cruz group, part of the Solomon Islands. in the Pacific  Ocean     [11.6500° S, 166.9000° E]
Ruby Boye WW2 radio operator at Vanikoro in the Solomon Islands
“Calling Mrs Boye on Vanikoro.” So began a message from Japanese forces to Ruby Boye in 1942. What followed was a terse and direct threat for Ruby to discontinue her operations. Over the course of World War II, Ruby Boye operated the radio at Vanikoro in the Solomon Islands as Australia’s only female coastwatcher. Her service warranted a personal visit to Vanikoro by Fleet Admiral William F. “Bull” Halsey Jr, USN, and earned her a British Empire Medal (BEM).
Ruby was born Ruby Olive Jones on 29 July 1891 in Sydney, the fifth of eight children. She was working as a saleswoman when she married a laundry proprietor, Sydney Skov Boye who had previously lived in Tulagi in the Solomon Islands, in Sydney on 25 October 1919.
Skov returned to Tulagi, with Ruby and their son, Ken, in 1928 to take up his old position with Lever Brothers. Their second son, Don, was born shortly afterwards and the two boys would spend most of their school years in Sydney. In 1936 Skov accepted the position of Island Manager for the Kauri Timber Company’s logging operations on Vanikoro in the Santa Cruz group. Vanikoro is a mountainous island surrounded by a treacherous coral reef. There were no roads. The timber logged in the mountains was hauled to the harbour by rail tractors where they were rafted together to await shipping to Australia. Ships would arrive from Melbourne four times a year to collect the logs and at the same time delivered mail and supplies for the loggers. Around 20 Kauri employees, including a radio operator and a doctor, came to Vanikoro from Australia and New Zealand on two year contracts in addition to about 80 islander labourers.
The family lived in the island’s main village, Paeu, on the south-west coast of the island on the southern bank of the Lawrence River where crocodiles were common. A suspension bridge over the river led to the main part of the village as well as the company store, office, machine shop and living quarters for the company’s workforce.
Upon the declaration of World War II, Lieutenant Commander (later Commander, OBE) Eric Feldt assumed responsibility for the naval coast-watching network in the South Pacific. Vanikoro formed part of the network; however, the operator wanted to return to Australia to join the RAAF. He suggested that Ruby could take over the operation of the radio until a replacement arrived. Ruby agreed and so learned how to operate the radio and compile weather reports using a panel of instruments and her own observations. She sent weather reports by voice four times a day, providing vital meteorological information for both ships and aircraft. No replacement was ever sent; there was no need as long as Ruby kept sending her reports. Ken and Don, meanwhile, returned to Australia to stay with relatives.
Timber production at Vanikoro ceased when the Japanese entered the war, and staff and their families left by ship. Skov decided to stay to look after the company's interests while Ruby considered it her duty to continue operating the radio. With the departure of the doctor, Ruby also took on the responsibility of the health and welfare of the local islanders, many of whom travelled between the islands by canoe and brought Ruby information about Japanese movements and dispositions.
It was a courageous decision. Ruby was 50 and Skov was older, and they were the only non-Solomon Islanders left on the island. If the Japanese did invade the island, and Vanikoro was in a precarious position, they were defenceless. They received supplies infrequently and were often short of rations. No mail, newspapers or magazines were delivered, and the radio was strictly for intelligence use only. Ruby only ever received three personal messages over the radio; to advise her of the deaths of her father, mother and a sister.
Ruby initially directed her reports to Tulagi but when it fell to the Japanese in May 1942 she was directed to send her reports to Vila in the New Hebrides (Vanuatu). It was at this time in early 1942 that Ruby received the first of several threatening messages. One of her fellow coast-watchers, listening on the same frequency, responded to the Japanese operator “in language which they wouldn’t repeat to a lady.” For her part, Ruby remained unperturbed; “I felt just a little bit queer when I heard that voice but somehow I felt he was bragging... The mere fact that I was annoying them sufficiently to have them warn me off was somewhat gratifying.” Shortly afterwards Ruby’s radio was changed to a different frequency and she was instructed to transmit only in Morse Code, which she had taught herself.
ruby-on-vanikoro.jpg 
Ruby-on-Vanakoro
As civilians, coast-watchers were advised to cease their operations and evacuate as the Japanese advanced into their territory. The vast majority of them, like Ruby, chose to continue their activities in the knowledge that capture could result in their execution. In March 1942, following the execution of an elderly planter, the coast-watchers were given ranks or ratings, mostly in the Volunteer Reserve, in the hope that this would provide them some protection in the event of capture. From 27 July 1943 Ruby was officially appointed an honourary third officer in the Women’s Royal Australian Naval Service (WRANS). Her uniform was later air-dropped to her. The US Army also offered Ruby’s little outpost official recognition as 3rd Army Outpost. Those appointments would, in reality, offer Ruby little protection if she ever were captured. She and Skov agreed that if the Japanese ever did land on Vanikoro they would head into the jungle and, if it came to it, take their own lives rather than be captured. Ruby also provided a vital intelligence link in the South Pacific and often relayed messages from other coast-watchers when they were unable to reach the US base at Vila. She is credited with passing on vital information during the Battle of the Coral Sea, as well as from Leyte and Guadalcanal.
Japanese reconnaissance planes were often heard overhead and on one occasion during the night, lights were seen and boat engines were heard around the reef lasting for around four hours. Ruby believed that the Japanese were trying to find the entrance to the harbour but abandoned their attempt to land when they were unable to do so. For safety reasons it was decided to move the radio equipment across the river away from the Boye’s home. After the suspension bridge across the Lawrence River collapsed, Ruby had to make the journey to the radio shack across the crocodile-infested river by punt and through ankle-deep mud four times a day.
In 1944 a Catalina flying boat refuelling station was established on the island. This meant an improvement in conditions for Ruby as supplies were delivered on a more regular basis; however, the station was also a target for Japanese air raids which occasionally damaged aircraft and tenders in the harbour.
Such was the appreciation for Ruby’s efforts that Admiral Halsey personally called on her at Vanikoro. He arrived in a flying boat and a small group of officers came ashore to be met by Skov. Halsey introduced himself; “Name’s Halsey. Not stopping for long, just thought I’d like to call in and meet that marvellous woman who runs the radio.” Halsey told Ruby that he was “playing hookey” by visiting.
It was around this time, in 1944, that Ruby developed shingles and Halsey arranged for a USN Catalina to fly her to Sydney for treatment. Four US servicemen were assigned to take over the operation of the radio during her convalescence; four men assigned to do the work that Ruby had been doing on her own. After three weeks in Australia, she re-joined Skov at Vanikoro and resumed her coast-watching duties.
As the Japanese were slowly pushed northwards, the Americans withdrew from Vanikoro in 1945 but Ruby diligently continued her work until until the news was received, via her tele-radio, that the war was over. The Kauri Timber Company resumed logging operations after the war and Ruby was officially employed as secretary to the manager while continuing to send weather reports to the Bureau of Meteorology. Ruby was presented with her BEM in 1946 in a ceremony in Suva.
In 1947 Skov fell ill and both he and Ruby returned to Sydney in August for diagnosis and treatment. Two weeks after being diagnosed with Leukemia, Skov passed away. Ruby briefly returned to Vanikoro to finalise affairs there before returning to Australia for good.
Ruby married Frank Jones in 1950 and took on the name Boye-Jones; but 11 years later, Frank too passed away. Ruby lived alone at her Penshurst home for the next thirty years before moving into a nursing home at the age of 96. She remained active and enjoyed the company of a vast network of friends and family. In her own words; “Age is a matter of mind and if you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.” The then Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Mike Hudson, wrote to her on her 98th birthday saying; “Your name is synonymous with the finest traditions of service to the Navy and the nation. We have not, nor will not, forget your wonderful contribution.”

Ruby passed away on 14 September 1990, aged 99. An accommodation block at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra, is named in her honour, and the Ex-WRANS Association has dedicated a page to her in the Garden Island Chapel Remembrance Book.
Author: Petar Djokovic RAN Semaphore series.
https://www.navy.gov.au/…/
public…/semaphore-calling-mrs-boye
Condolences
Dit is met leedwese dat ek vanoggend moes kennis neem en nou moet bekend maak dat Rina, vrou van Joe Haarhoff ZS1AAB (stil sleutel) en moeder van Bennie ZS1GX deur die dood weggeneem is. Sy het gereeld saam met Joe vergaderings van die die Boland klub bygewo
on. Ek wil graag my innige meegevoel aan Bennie en familie oordra. Dit was altyd lekker om by hulle te kuier.  DE Theo ZS1BO
oulike sketse onthou wat Rina op die voorblad (en soms binne) CQ BOLAND gedoen het in die 1980's.
She was not licensed but Rina  monitored  the om's qsls from inside the house on the 2m radio keeping up-to-date on the latest discussions. She also attended numerous club meetings and knew every ham by his/her call sign!
Posted - 17/07/2020   ZS1BO & Rassie Erasmus ZS1YT (SARL forum) Rina's sketch below.
BolandSketchRina.jpg 
Condolences - It is with deep regret that we announce that the key of Paul Ras, ZS6PR went silent in the early hours of Friday 10th July 2020. We extend our sincere condolences to his wife Cecile, ZS6CJR, daughter Sanmarie, son Paul, family and friends. SARL 12/07/2020 News

S/k   ZS1MGT  Gwen Thompson  -  It is with deep regret that we announce that the key of Gwen Thompson, ZS1MGT of Ashton went silent on Friday 26 June 2020 after a long struggle with cancer. We extend our sincere condolences to her husband Bev, ZS1BEV, their two sons, cousin Errol, ZS6KED, family and friends. ( SARL News 5 July, 2020)

SK  KE7LSR   Helen Jean Cuffel,  (Dec. 7, 1938 – 26 June, 2020) age 81
a resident of the Peninsula for the past 57 years, died June 26, 2020 at her Long Beach (WA) residence with her family at her side. She married Norman “Bud” Cuffel  on July 26, 1957 . In October 1964, she and Bud moved to the Peninsula from Bickelton, Washington.
silentKey.jpg


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Calendar August 2020 
9 Aug      YL Sprint 40m 12:00 to 14:00 UTC  Womens Day (SA) / Nasionale Vroue Dag  Thurs
10 Aug    SARL Youth Sprint 2019 Saturday 12:00-14:00 UTC (Inter. Youth Day 12 Aug)
Aug 15-16  CW - CVADX Concurso Verde e Amarelo  21:00-21:00 (UTC)  (Green & Yellow)  YL Single Operator category
Aug 16       SARL HF Digital contest (RSA) 14:00 to 17:00 UTC 20, 40, 80m
Aug 22- 23 ILLW International Lighthouse & Lightship weekend
Aug 22-23  CVA-DX Concurso Verde e Amarelo  SSB - 21:00-21:00 (UTC) Green & Yellow) 
      Separate  YL Single Operator category http://www.cvadx.org
Aug 29-30  40th A.L.A.R.A. Contest. 2020 Saturday at 0600 UTC- Sunday at 0559 UTC
          Phone & CW.  All HF Bands, except 160m & WARC Bands, Echolink accepted. https://www.alara.org.au/contests
 YL's of Chile  6th  anniversary 2020, Aug last weekend.
September 2020
Sept 5       YL Net 1st  Saturday of month, 2000 (UK) on GB3DA Danbury 2m repeater.
Sept 5- 6   Region 1 SSB Field Day   1300-1300 UTC
Sept 11-19 Giro Rosa (URI)  (starts Fri 11, ends Sat 19) [26 June - July 5   Canc.]


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