These both came in the mail on Friday. The card from K4DAY is the second “DAY” in a couple of months. It would have been more appropriate to have gotten these a couple of months ago near Father’s Day.
These QSL cards posts are very cool. The unique calls and interesting pictures are wonderful trivia and they are an affirmation of the fun of being a ham.
I visited family in the Winston-Salem area some years ago and we decide to see Pilot Mountain on the way back home through the Virginia on the Blue Ridge Parkway. That is indeed some of the most idyllic scenery that one can enjoy via traveling the American road. Pilot Mountain is a quartzite dome that is also known as Pilot Knob. You can drive up to the top of the larger part of it to the left in this picture and the knob itself is inaccessible to tourists to preserve it, and there is a lookout facing the gap between them that provides some awesome views.
Hi, Lloyd! My blog is one of the longest-running amateur radio blogs. I’ve been doing this for 15 years now, and there are more than 3,000 posts here. I hope you’ll find it useful.
Steve says
These QSL cards posts are very cool. The unique calls and interesting pictures are wonderful trivia and they are an affirmation of the fun of being a ham.
I visited family in the Winston-Salem area some years ago and we decide to see Pilot Mountain on the way back home through the Virginia on the Blue Ridge Parkway. That is indeed some of the most idyllic scenery that one can enjoy via traveling the American road. Pilot Mountain is a quartzite dome that is also known as Pilot Knob. You can drive up to the top of the larger part of it to the left in this picture and the knob itself is inaccessible to tourists to preserve it, and there is a lookout facing the gap between them that provides some awesome views.
Thanks for posting these cards,
73 – Steve W8SFC
LLOYD J LACHOW says
looking for info on 20M hamstick dipoles, what should I stumble across, but your blog!
nice to see you again!
LL
K3ESE
Dan KB6NU says
Hi, Lloyd! My blog is one of the longest-running amateur radio blogs. I’ve been doing this for 15 years now, and there are more than 3,000 posts here. I hope you’ll find it useful.