Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia
"No Boss, I'm not suffering
from a hangover, I'm suffering from being a DXer"
Craig Edwards
February 12-15,
2005
In January 2005 I handed in my
resignation so that my very homesick wife and I
could leave Townsville in Queensland to return back
to Adelaide in South Australia. I was very lucky
to quickly secure a three-year contract back in
South Australia in Murray Bridge, only an hour away
from the famed Coorong
DX site. Now what on earth has this got to do
with Mount Isa I hear you ask?
Well three weeks prior to my
departure from work, my boss offered me a visit
to handover some of my work in person to our Mount
Isa unit. So I jumped at the chance. Having visited
Mount Isa in Queensland for work in October
2004, I realised that the possibilities for
interesting Asian mediumwave DX was there. At the
same time though I realised that the inland location
with lots of high voltage lines for the mining machinery
everywhere would be a limiting variable.
A barren wide open countryside
en route to Mount Isa |
What made the deal oh so sweeter
was the fact that I'd be departing on the Friday
afternoon, work only a few hours Saturday morning,
have Sunday off and then work all day Monday with
a flight back Tuesday morning. This effectively
meant I had four consecutive sunrises to listen.
On my last visit I didn't have
the company car so I was confined to a noisy hotel
room with only 20 metres of wire randomly strung
outside. This time I had 200 metres and use of the
company car so I could go on the outskirts of the
city and listen from the vehicle. This was more
dangerous (bulls, snakes, drunken cowboys, serial
killers, etc) but the rewards would surely be much
better.
Now in all honesty I planned
the business trip like a DXpedition where instead
of analysing tapes, writing reports and sleeping
during the day, I'd have to drag my bleary eyed
ass to work. Now remember this was the organisation
I was leaving in a couple of weeks so I'm sure as
fellow DXers that you'll understand that my focus
for these few days was 95% radio and 5% work.
4LM 666 kHz studios |
Actually early in the week I
was wondering whether this trip was going to happen
at all. With the memory of my cancelled DX trips
in January
2005 fresh in my mind, the Mount Isa adventure
was almost cancelled. I was booked to fly out Friday,
however on Monday morning I woke to see on the TV
that Tropical Cyclone Harvey had formed on the coast
directly north of Mount Isa and was heading south.
It started as a category 1 but quickly grew to category
3 as it hit land on Monday afternoon. Fortunately
it weakened Tuesday afternoon and by Wednesday morning
I woke to hear that it was no longer a cyclone,
just a nasty storm carrying nasty 'low' full of
thunderstorms which headed north east away from
Mount Isa, not to mention the flight path from Townsville.
Phew! I dodged a bullet there. The skies were clear
on Friday for take off. That's just one of the issues
that you're faced with when planning DXpeditions
around the tropics in the wet season.
The plane to get to Mount Isa
is quite small and hence the amount of luggage is
very limited. Despite this I was able to sneak in
the Icom R75, tape deck, headphones, pre-amp, patch
cords, 12V rechargeable mini-battery (for R75 and
pre-amp), 1.5V fan, 200 metres of wire, disposable
batteries, want lists, texts, oh and clothes and
toiletries, all in one suitcase and carry on bag
for the R75.
ABC Radio North West
Queensland studio
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For this trip I planned on waking
up very early and listen until sunrise for Europe,
Africa and the Middle East. As far as this visit,
Asians would be considered pests like the Australian
stations. This is because Townsville in the morning
is sensational for South East Asia but these dominate
any attempts to hear Europe, Africa and the Middle
East. Don't get me wrong, that's not a complaint,
the monsoon rains in January meant I couldn't get
out of town to do DXpeditions hunting North America,
so instead I had to stay home and go for Asians
and it was very rewarding hearing over a hundred
during that month, but it was time for something
different.
This trip was very timely as
it gave me a dress rehearsal for my biggest and
most challenging DXpedition yet which was to begin
a month later in early March. This will be a 14-day
(8 days driving, 6 days not driving) adventure as
my wife and I return home to Adelaide for good.
It will entail a drive from Townsville, through
Mount Isa to Tennant Creek. Then we head up to Katherine
and stay there for 4 days. We then head south via
Alice Springs, Uluru and Coober Pedy en route to
Adelaide.
Is it just me, or is this
giant copper mine a bit close to the town?
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The 'DX from the car' set up
will be identical except there will be 300m terminated
instead of 200m unterminated and hopefully a couple
of EWE's might be utilised too. So the Mount Isa
trip would allow me to test equipment out and enable
me to log the easier to hear Africans, Middle Easterners
and Europeans and to see what is on offer from this
region of the world. This way if conditions are
excellent on one particular morning I won't waste
my time on reporting stations that can be heard
even when conditions are average.
On Friday afternoon I touched
down at Mount Isa airport and quickly headed to
the supermarket for food and checked into the hotel.
It was now 5:30pm (0730 UTC) and I had an hour before
dusk to find an antenna site on the outskirts of
town before the roads would be riddled with kangaroos
and it would have been too dangerous to risk driving
around in the company car. My plan was to listen
from the side of the road and string out the 200
metres along the ground. My direction of choice
was 270° to North Africa, I figured this was
a fair compromise between going for Africa and Europe
and pointing away from South East Asia.
Oooops there's the 4LM
transmitting tower, better not choose the northern
road out of town to listen from. |
There are 3 major roads into
town. I tried the south side of town but this was
riddled with bulls and cows roaming free in unfenced
areas and I didn't fancy facing one of these critters
at 3:00am in the morning while I ran out my wire,
they also would have surely got themselves caught
up in it.
Option 2 was the north side of
town however the road went north without any kinks
and the airport non-directional beacon and the 4LM
666 kHz tower was just on the northern outskirts,
so scratch that idea. By this time I was peeved
off and had about 15 minutes to find something,
so I drove through town to get to the western side
with my fingers crossed. Luckily the road although
pointing straight to town, did provide me with the
direction I wanted and five minutes drive from my
hotel was a huge gravelled area where truckies could
stop off. Fortunately there were no amenities here
and the truck drivers would opt for the monster
service stations with asphalt truck parking, fuel,
showers, 24 hour food etc. On the four mornings
I had there, I only ever saw one road train pull
up.
On Saturday morning I woke at
3:00am and headed out to the site to string out
200 metres of wire on the side of the road and then
a random wire of ~20 metres which was my earth wire
- a compromise due to no other earthing options.
I always get a bit weary at a new location because
I never know what the movements of the locals are
- both human and creature - and I never know how
I'll be received in the event of an encounter. DX'wise
I wonder whether it's going to be any good, especially
as Mount Isa isn't exactly my number one spot in
Australia to listen for Africa/Europe/Middle East
as it is so far inland. This was probably the best
morning of the trip with some interesting signals
from Europe.
I figured work wouldn't
appreciate me testing this flooded roadway. |
The Sunday morning was WOEFUL.
The strongest signal of the previous morning, Farda
1575 khz was raising barely a whimper and there
were no Africans or Europeans to be heard. Thank
goodness this wasn't the 1st morning otherwise I
would have thought there was something wrong with
the antenna set up or location. What made this worse
was that I'd woken up especially early at 2:00am
to drive to the outskirts of town again and run
out the wire. So I was really impressed to be welcomed
by crappy conditions. I tried to make the best of
it by logging Western Australian stations I hadn't
QSL'ed like 6PR 882, 6WH 1017, 6TZ 963, Vision Radio
1431 and 6KW 819. I was so tired I'd find a WA station,
switch on the tape recorder and close my eyes for
20 minutes before moving to the next one. There's
no worse feeling than being this exhausted when
the DX is cold.
The southern direction
out of town had it's fair share roadside wire
tangling beverage destroyers to contend with. |
For the Monday morning I had
to wake a little later as I had work, mind you 4:00am
still felt early! On Tuesday the morning of my flight
back, I woke at 2:00am!!! Oh boys and girls I was
barely human that day. These last 2 mornings the
Europeans and Middle Eastern stations came to the
party and it gave me a chance to confirm a couple
of unid's I had and add a few more items to the
log. I really enjoyed the chance to target this
part of the world again and it certainly gave me
a number of reports to send out to stations that
I haven't been able to hear while in Townsville.
Very pleased with the trail considering this was
a business trip and it was a big improvement on
the previous Mount Isa visit.
Loggings by (CE) Craig Edwards
DXing in a car by the side of a road using Icom
R75 and 200m (600ft) unterminated wire to Middle
East/Europe
630 2013 RRI Makassar, Sulawesi,
Indonesia. Very good with call to prayers heard
well over 4QN (CE)
702 2020 BBC, A'Seela, Oman.
Presume the one here with AA news commentaries (CE)
760 2047 Radio Sana'a, Alshahr,
Yemen. Strong het but poor modulation with non-stop
male AA talks (CE)
909 2032 VOA, Sebele Pikwe, Botswana.
Fair with VOA news in EE well over threshold RRI
Sorong signal (CE)
Do I make you horny baby?
OK I might give the southern road a miss
|
936 1959 DXIM Cagayan de Oro,
Philippines. Came across AA like talk for a few
moments when sudden sign on of this one destroyed
potential Trans-Indian catch. Full legal English
ID for DXIM and Radio ng Bayan at very good levels
(CE)
972 1659 unid. Middle Eastern
up tempo music noted initially. Difficult reception
due to mixing with 5PB and RRI. Big mess at 1700
with BBC WS from 5PB but unexpected US EE accented
noted for a few seconds on hour underneath but no
ID - definitely not from the Philippines. Following
this was male and female talks in unid Middle Eastern
language. On other mornings could only detect RRI
and 5PB. In Townsville the other contender is HLCA
but no sign of them in Mt Isa due to antenna set
up. High power Tajik Radio station must be a chance
here - need to go through tapes properly yet (CE)
1080 2045 IRIB, Abadan, Iran.
Presume the one here with non-stop male talks in
Middle Eastern language, I'm assuming Farsi (CE)
1134 1910 AIR Calcutta, India.
Good here with usual National program music show
// 9425 and 9470 (CE)
1170 1854 Radio Farda, Al-Dhabbaya,
United Arab Emirates. Male presenting popular music
in presumed Farsi over HLSR. Noted on the hour phone
numbers then Radio Farda ID. Later in the morning
around 2000 this was totally dominated by DXMR (CE)
DX HQ, this time in the
4WD Holden at sunrise looking back along the
antenna pointing west to Mount Isa, the Middle
East and Europe |
1179 1947 RSI, Solvesborg, Sweden.
Fair here over 3RPH (playing BBC WS) and JOOR. Noted
with German commentary (CE)
1179 2009 unid. Noted during
Sweden fade with male announcer in SS with sound
effects and animated talks. Thought this might be
sign on of unlisted Philippines station but it wasn't
(CE)
1260 2015 Radio Sawa, Rhodes,
Dodecanese Island. Fairly good here over 4MW and
DXRF with non-stop AA commentary (CE)
1440 1836 BSKSA Damman, Saudi
Arabia. Usual strong signal in AA well over JOWF
and 2PB (CE)
1449 1920 IRIB Bandar-e-Torkamen,
Iran. Fair hear mixing with 2MG with prayers (CE)
1458 1940 Radio Vision, Pamandzi,
Mayotte. Fair here at various times on all but one
morning (when conditions were dead), non-stop talks
in FF (CE)
1458 1952 VOA Fllake, Albania.
Tentative as no ID heard but we've noted this in
the past on DXpeditions with openings to Europe
like this morning. Fair here in unid Euro language
noted for only 5 or so minutes but then disappeared
under usual Mayotte and background Philippines and
China mess. (CE)
1467 1848 Vatican Radio via Roumoules,
France. Poor here with Vatican sermon and talks
in eastern block like language. Retuned just prior
to the hour to note it buried in the mush and splatter
from 4ZR 1476, never surfaced again during the trip
(CE)
DX HQ at sunrise from
another angle |
1494 2004 Radio Jordan, Al-Karanah,
Jordan. Nice signal here with AA programming noted
// 9830, although MW was stronger!! Another signal
noted underneath but not the expected DXOC, had
talks with European language so perhaps the Russian
station, but Jordan was too dominant on the channel.
(CE)
1521 1721 BSKSA Duba, Saudi Arabia.
Non-stop male talks in AA (CE)
1530 1903 VOA, Pinheira, Sao
Tome & Principe. Poor in French at this stage
but peaked nicely on retune at 2030 with VOA news
in EE mixing with DZME (CE)
1548 1715 DW Trincomalee, Sri
Lanka. Not a bad strength but swamped by 4QD monster
signal, easily detectable German talks noted during
an interview with lots of pauses on ABC. (CE)
1548 2028 Radio Sawa, Kuwait
City, Kuwait. Poor under dominant 4QD playing AA
pop tunes until ID and animated talks at 2030 (CE)
1566 1705 AIR Nagpur, India.
Good here with typical National program music show
// 9425 (CE)
1575 1730 Radio Farda, Al-Dhabbaya,
United Arab Emirates. Fair here with presumed Farsi
talks with upbeat modern music - had me stumped
as I clearly heard the Radio Farda ID when I quickly
checked tape later that day. But it didn't register
while listening that this was a new outlet for Farda
so I didn't check if it was // 1170. When I returned
home and got to the MW e-lists I realised this only
came on the air a few days prior to me hearing it
- thanks for the Scandinavian DXers for help on
this one, also noted on East Coast USA by Mark Connelly
so the new transmitter is doing a great job. Was
the most reliable Middle Eastern station noted each
morning. (CE)
published
on March 31, 2005
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