Getting up to the summit is a 20 to 30-minute hike up a paved road with a ~300 foot altitude change.
It doesn’t sound bad but when you’re trying to haul gear up, it’s not a happy time.
Coming down, by the way, is much easier.
I was setup and on the air at 9:17 (EDT) and was hearing a station on 1200 baud (we were all going to be operating at 9600 baud).
Turns out it was KM6BWB-10 (yes, I decoded it), a balloon at ~35k feet in altitude over DC!
At 10:39, my friends down at Comers Rock (KJ4OAP) came online and we chatted a bit on UHF.
Things started coming together fairly quickly then.
At 10:44 I was seeing Maryland Mountains which meant that Hawksbill had to be on the air as well.
At 11:05, Roan showed up followed by Clingmans Dome at 11:37.
The best part was seeing Katahdin on my screen at 12:25!
I did, eventually, see all of the stations on my screen and even received a QSL from VE1WRG in Nova Scotia!
We were asked to obtain signal strengths of our neighbors.
From AOMTN-5, I was receiving COMERS-4 with roughtly 8-9 bars and HAWKSBILL-6 with roughly 3 bars.
I was never able to reach Hawksbill on UHF voice which goes to show that this is probably the shakiest path on the network.
Figure 2. AOMTN-5 Station in 2020
At 2:00PM, everyone packed up and headed off of their summits.
I was very ready to get down.
Even though temperatures were supposed to be in the upper 70Fs to lower 80Fs, the sun beating down with very little shade, made it nearly unbearable.
The flying insects were bad, too.
I need a better plan for that summit…