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The Village Squire, 1981-08, Page 28Six Achers by Yvonne Reynolds The strange, wide world of the ham My husband is a ham. This has nothing to do with porcine posteriors or thespian excesses. Don is a radio amateur, one small link in a million -strong chain that encircles our global village. His interest in this engrossing pastime was first aroused when one of his sister's boyfriends showed kid brother his amateur radio station. The memory of all those mysterious black boxes equipped with quivering needles, flashing lights and intricately calibrated dials helped determine Don's choice of career as a radio officer in the RCAF. (The former boyfriend went on to law, served as an MPP, is now a judge, and still an active ham.) Becoming a radio amateur is like contracting an incurable disease - one is marked for life, and seeks solace and comfort regularly with other similarily afflicted sufferers. Some of the symptoms include heads tilted up at 45 degree angles, eyes constantly scanning rooftops for inverted vees. dipoles. and cubical quads pinpointing the abode of a frater- nal brother, and fingers nervously drum- ming out messages in Morse code on any handy vertical or horizontal surface. Ten months after we moved to Newfoundland, a baby's bed was set up in Don's "ham shack". At the time I blamed the prevailing winds from Conception Bay, but am now wondering if 1 was the victim of gamma rays, solar flares, or errant radio emissions. Often as Don bent over his Morse key he became aware that he was being observed. He would turn around in his swivel chair to see a little boy standing up in the corner of his crib, wide-awake brown eyes implishly reflecting the glow from the radio receiver. We waited anxiously for Colin's first words. firmly convinced that instead of "da da" they would be "dah-dit-di-dah". Hams recognized each other by signs as unmistakable as a lodge member's secret handshake. One of our most cherished and closest friendships began when a newcomer to Ottawa walked past our house and spotted a big insulator on our clothesline. Frank knew he was hot on the trail of another radio amateur. On the negative side, friendships can be strained to the breaking point. We once drove over 100 miles from Halifax to Greenwood to visit friends. When we arrived, George was in the basement talking on the ham band to a "contact". Although we stayed three hours, with George's XYL (ex young lady/wife) disappearing for short intervals and reappearing, progressively more agitat- ed, we never did see George. Hams talk to each other in acronyms, abbreviations and Q codes; 73s and 88s are "best wishes" and "hugs and kisses". They refer to each other as OM (old man); Europeans and South Ameri- cans, being more emotional, preface this with the word "dear". The bulk of the conversation is technical and, to the uninitated, dull, dull, dull. Don might discuss equipment with a Jesuit priest in the Amazon jungle, or exchange read - ab ility and signal strength with a Russian soldier in Northern Sibera. Talking on a ham set is cheaper than on a phone, but has its drawbacks. With a bit of help from Ma Bell, I can converse with my Vancouver son for hours on such diverse topics as whether the Treaty of Versailles sowed the seeds of World War II, or if Margaret Laurence's The Diviners should be on the required reading list for Grade 13 English students. After Don, with the help of fellow hams, establishes a phone patch with my son, and I realize that every radio enthusiast from Bonavista to Bella Bella and from the Argentine to the Arctic can listen in, I ask for my child's name, rank and serial number and hang up. And he's not even in the army! Now that we live in the country, Don is in his glory. He spends one-third of his time building antennas, another third erecting them on a high tower, and the rest of the time trying to figure out why they don't work. I hardly dare leave our six acres. The minute my back is turned he is boring holes in floors, taking slices off doors, tunnelling through walls and putting wires through, under, over and around anything that can be bored, drilled, soldered or demolished. Recently Don was able to put our neighbour's brother-in-law, visiting from Germany, in touch with relatives back home. As Hans designs test gear for radio and radar equipment carried on Lufthansa aircraft, Don hoped for a potential convert. "Ever consider becoming a ham?" he queried. Hans threw up his hands in horror. 0", "Nein", he replied emphatically. "1 have friends who have become hams, and they have spent so much time with radio their marriaged lasted an average of only five years." Well, I am past the five-year mark, and being a ham's XYL does have its rewards - I always know what time it is in Greenwich, England. Yvonne Reynolds and husband la retired CAF of/icerl share six rural acres with one hastily bred part Sheltie, one Himalayan aristocut. one peasant cut. and an aper -changing number of Bantle chickens and Saanen and Nubian gouts. tasty -nu Bakery & Cheese House ` \ a Fresh baked bread, rolls, pastries daily! 40 kinds of doughnuts over 60 varieties of Canadian and imported cheeses Zurich 236-4912 Seaforth 527-1803 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1981 PG. 27