The Call It The Smiling Coast
Henryk Kotowski
(SM0JHF) on March 25, 2003
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Place: The Gambia, West Africa - CQ Zone 35
Time: November 2002
Mission: No-Aluminium DXpedition
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A typical beach in The Gambia - a country sometimes
called "The Smiling Coast". In the background the Yagi antenna of C53M/C56R
- Station One
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I could not find any more exotic place to go to around CQ WW Contest
last November. One week before the contest I saw a last-minute charter
flight and hotel package for around U$400 to The Gambia. I did not hesitate
too long in spite of the news coming from this otherwise peaceful country
that Ron C56RF had just been found murdered there. I packed my ICOM 706,
a power supply and an automatic antenna tuner. Clothing ? - a few tee-shirts,
a few long sleeved shirts for the evening, a couple of shorts and long
pants for the evening, two or three hats, that's all you need there. Took
my malaria pill and phoned Juha OH9MM in Finland to ask him if his team
would be on the same flight. I had exchanged some e-mails in the summer
with Juha regarding his plans for The Gambia but I was not really raving
about going to the same spot for the third time... and on a fullpriced
airticket. The flight departed quite early in the morning but I made it
to the airport on time. We landed in Canary Islands for refuelling and
I could meet Juha OH9MM, Kimmo OH9MDV, and a few others when they rushed
into the smoking area of the transit hall of Las Palmas airport. They told
me which hotels they had booked in The Gambia; those were known to me from
my previous trips. I found myself in Kololi, The Senegambia area, late
in the evening. I cursed when I discovered that the hotel was equipped
with British wall outlets and I did not bring my mains adapter. Previously
I stayed in Scandinavian-build hotels and it never crossed my mind that
there might be anything else than what we have in Sweden. In the United
Europe, I have seen at least five different wall outlets. Maybe that's
the next step after implementing EURO money - introducing a unified wall
outlet (maybe a US type to simplify it).
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The equipment in the operating position of C56JHF
(G&T is missing)
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The QTH of C56JHF November 2002. An all-band wire
antenna supported by a 7-m fishing rod
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Though the British wall sockets are very difficult to penetrate, I managed
to rape the one in my hotel room. I always carry a Swiss army knife and
a miniature fake Leatherman tool with me. A 7-meter (23ft) fishing rod
served as my antenna-wire support on the balcony. I listened on 10 MHz
and heard very strong C56R, the callsign of this international DXpedition
that I met on my flight. How come ? Next morning, in Kotu, I learned that
Franz DL9GFB had arrived a few days earlier and was staying in Senegambia
Hotel, which explained his strong signals at my QTH. They were using the
same callsign from 4 different locations. Next morning I also met Jeff
N0DY and Stein, nicknamed Rag, LA6FJA who'd been here also for a couple
of days. The group was large - 5 guys from Latvia, 3 from Finland, and
those 3 just mentioned. When I offered my help, the mastermind of this
DXpedition, Juha OH9MM said: We are quite many and I am afraid some of
us are going to be idle at times.
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Jeff N0DY (left) and Stein LA6FJA (right).
The man in the middle is not Jeff Steinman, he is Juris YL2GM.
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Station Number One - a tunable Yagi (steppIR)
and verticals on the roof of Kombo Beach Hotel, Kotu
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A close-up view of Juris YL2GM at station One
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Larry YL3CW operating at station One
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The station number One was assembled and set up in Kombo Beach Hotel
with a 3 element yagi and some fibreglass verticals on the roof. This yagi
was also made of fibreglass, an innovative design called SteppIR using
moving copper strips inside fibreglass tubing (more information on http://www.steppir.com/).
The station was accomodated in the hotel room shared by Jeff and Stein.
Station numer Two was set up in Bakotu Hotel. The roof was easily accessible
and the Latvians, like spiders, kept on spinning wires. I could not really
figure out which wires were parts of which antenna but it seems they worked
allright. Station number Three was in Bungalow Beach Hotel but it was mainly
a 6-meter position with an optional vertical dipole for 12- and 17-meter
bands. The 6-m yagi was made all of fishing rods - a home made design of
Raimo OH3BHL. There was a station number Four, in Senegambia Hotel, but
I could not find it. Franz DL9GFB must have had a Stealth antenna, I presume.
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Station Two - Arvis YL2LY - using IC 7400
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On the balcony outside station
Two - from left Girts YL2KL, Juha OH9MM, Jeff N0DY |
I visited the 3 stations in Kotu almost every day, checking for the
progress of antenna growth and offering my assistance. It seems that the
main headache was the wireless computer link. The distance between stations
One and Two was no more than 500 meters but something swallowed the bytes.
I visited one more station in The Gambia. A commercial AM radio station
called Radio Syd. It was an offshore station south of Sweden that found
shelter in this newly independent country at the end of 60's. However,
this turned out to be a quite hostile environment near Banjul. The coastal
erosion advances rapidly and this radio station is now on an peninsula.
Last September a storm toppled the 150ft antenna tower so the radio station
is QRT but luckily no one was hurt. The elements are not favorable here.
Even the local people show more violence than I noticed before. I once
took a taxi but the driver was from another village and he was literarlly
attacked by other, local, taxi drivers.
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| Radio Syd - a commercial AM
station that went QRT on Sep 11, 2002 |
The antenna tower of Radio Syd
in RIP position |
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| A taxi ride to Kotu ? - No way.
Local taxi drivers of Kololi stopped this man... and I had to take another
cab. |
A view from my hotel balcony.
These lizzards engaged in sexual activity are more than 5 ft long. |
The propagation, though, is favorable. With a piece of wire as the antenna
and a few other wires acting counterpoise, I made thousands of contacts.
Hundreds of them were on 6-meter band which can be very hot here. It did
open to Europe only, though. During the CQ WW Contest I made a thousand
QSOs, mainly on HF bands. My only 80-meter contest exchanges were with
XT2DX and EA8ZS. On Top Band this 23ft wire did not tune at all. I gave
the C53M team a few multipliers (C5) in the contest.
A detailed write up of C56R/C53M DXpedition is due to appear in the
National Contest Journal. If anyone reading this does not know the NCJ,
then I recommend going to http://www.ncjweb.com/
and checking the obvious advantages.
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| Girts YL2KL at station numer
One |
Jeff N0DY at the second operating
position of station Two |
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Kimmo OH0MDV at station Two
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Kaspars YL1ZF at the second operating position of
station Two
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Encouraging to see a few young guys on a DXpedition. Stein LA6FJA was
23 years old and Kaspars YL1ZF 25 years old at the time of their stay in
The Gambia.
My previous visit to The Gambia, in January 2000, is described on www.qsl.net/c56jhf
My next trip to The Gambia is... not improbable.
Henryk Kotowski SM0JHF
copyright 2003
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