| |
I0OJJ > POLICY 29.03.22 17:19l 89 Lines 5448 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 12268I0OJJ
Read: DJ6UX GUEST
Subj: [SARC] World Amateur Radio Day - April 18
Path: DB0FHN<DB0RBS<DB0RES<ON0AR<GB7CIP<I0OJJ
Sent: 220329/1220z @:I0OJJ.ITA.EU [Rome] $:12268I0OJJ
The Communicator Digital Edition
///////////////////////////////////////////
World Amateur Radio Day - April 18
Posted: 28 Mar 2022 07:00 PM PDT
https://ve7sar.blogspot.com/2022/03/world-amateur-radio-day-april-18.html
The IARU
April 18 has been declared World Amateur Radio Day. It was on that day in
1925 that the International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) was founded, during
the International Radiotelegraph Conference in Paris. That is why radio
radio amateurs worldwide celebrate this day with special activities every
year.
The advocates of an International Amateur Radio Union were of the opinion
that the shortwave spectrum that radio amateurs use to transmit and to
receive, could unite people all over the world, something that was assumed
impossible. Therefore, this unifying action was undertaken. In addition to
protecting and preserving frequency spectrum for the radio amateur, the
IARU also strives to protect the frequency spectrum of importance to other
services. For radio amateurs, protection of our bands is of utmost
importance, as shown through amateur response in countless emergencies and
disasters worldwide.Interest in amateur radio has only grown since those
early days, with more than 3 million radio amateurs worldwide. Through this
medium people from different countries and cultures could interact with
each other and exchange ideas, long before there were facilities such as
(mobile) phones, e-mail or social media.And amateur radio is still popular
because you don't need a mobile network or internet to communicate. This
is especially important to those in remote areas, those with outdoor
interests such as hikers, off-roaders and hunters, emergency preparedness,
as a hobby, or as an entry to a new career path such as electronics and
communications. The service is, and always has been completely
infrastructure independent. Radio amateurs are especially important to
maintain connections during disasters, in the event that regular
communication channels are no longer available. For example, the Amateur
Radio Service kept agencies in New York City in contact with each other
after their command center was destroyed during the tragedy of 9/11.Radio
amateurs were the first to discover that the HF spectrum was not the
wasteland that experts from those days branded it, but a tool that could
support global communication. When the industry discovered that amateurs
could successfully communicate worldwide on these shorter wavelengths,
amateur radio was again in great danger of being pushed aside. This led to
the creation of the IARU. At the International Radio Telegraph Convention
of 1927, amateur radio assignments were made that are still recognized
today: 160, 80, 40, 20 and 10 meters. In the course of the years, the
IARU has also worked to give radio amateurs new bands at 136 kHz, 472 kHz,
5 MHz, 10 MHz, 18 MHz, 24 MHz and 50 MHz, and a regional European
allocation at 70 MHz.The 25 countries that formed the IARU in 1925 have
now grown to more than 160 affiliated associations in three regions. IARU
Region 1 includes Europe, Africa, the Middle East and North Asia. Region 2
includes North and South America and Region 3 includes Australia, New
Zealand, the Pacific Islands and most of Asia. The International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) has recognized the IARU as the representative
of the interests of radio amateurs.IARU has member societies in countries
shown in yellow
All radio amateurs are invited to go on the air on World Amateur Radio Day
to explore our hobby, to promote it to family and friends, and within their
interests.Do you want to get involved? We offer our on-line courses about
every 12-weeks. Further information is available at:
https://bit.ly/SARCcoursesRAC “Get on the Air on World Amateur Radio Day”
Special EventOn Monday, April 18, 2022, Radio Amateurs of Canada is once
again organizing a special on-air event to celebrate World Amateur Radio
Day.Every year on April 18, Radio Amateurs worldwide take to the airwaves
in celebration of Amateur Radio and to commemorate the formation of the
International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) on April 18, 1925. Radio Amateurs
of Canada is once again holding a “Get on the Air on World Amateur Radio
Day” special event in which we encourage as many Amateurs as possible to
get on the air and contact as many RAC stations as possible.RAC official
stations will operate across Canada from 0000Z to 2359Z on April 18. The
RAC official station call signs are VA2RAC, VA3RAC, VE1RAC, VE4RAC, VE5RAC,
VE6RAC, VE7RAC, VE8RAC, VE9RAC, VO1RAC, VO2RAC, VY0RAC, VY1RAC and VY2RAC.
Those contacting one or more of these stations will be eligible for a
special commemorative certificate noting their participation in RACs Get
on the Air on World Amateur Radio Day Event.Participants simply need to
complete one or more contacts, on any band and mode, with RAC official
stations to earn their certificates.No logs need to be submitted; simply
check back on the RAC website when instructed and enter your call sign to
download your certificate.
Sources:
https://nationaldaycalendar.com/international-amateur-radio-day-april-18/,
https://1drv.ms/b/s!ApeN-l7qi2UFk3OAFuk8KTSq4Rti?e=LOohoE, and RAC “Get on
the Air on World Amateur Radio Day” Special Event~
Read previous mail | Read next mail
| |