Last evening I had been up on several earlier satellite passes and knowing Dean, ZD8DC was planning to come up on a later AO-7 pass I sat down in front of the TV to pass a bit of time. As I do all too often these days, I fell asleep in front of the TV but was awakened by a phone call from ZS2BK to alert me that Dean was booming in on AO-7. Everything was set up for AO-7 so the contact was quickly made with 59 signals both ways. Dean does extremely well over the 5000 km path with his portable FT-817 and Arrow antenna. It was not the first QSO with Dean but I was very pleased to have the opportunity to pass holiday greetings to Dean and to thank him for the excellent job he has done on the satellites during his work assignments on Ascension. The QSO also brought back some great memories.
On this date in 1964, exactly forty-five years ago I was ZD8HL on Ascension Island. I was working for the RCA Missile Test Project assigned as a technician on a C-band radar and our mission was to track the launch vehicles and payloads coming downrange from Cape Canaveral. Those were exciting times as we moved through Projects Mercury and Gemini with Apollo and the final goal of putting a man on the moon drawing closer.
Just a few days earlier I had been offered and accepted a transfer to Pretoria, South Africa which was the next tracking station down the line from Ascension. As I had less than ten days before the next monthly military flight to South Africa came through I had little time to decide what to take with me and what to send back to Cocoa Beach for storage. Unfortunately there was no reciprocal ham license agreement with South Africa so the Collins S-Line and other ham equipment was packed for Cocoa Beach. A huge disappointment that I could expect to be off the air for a while. The transfer would lead to a career change in later years and the lovely weather down here made the decision to retire here in South Africa an easy one to make.
Christmas on Ascension in 1964 was quiet with no launches scheduled. The FPS-16 radar was on a hill overlooking the base and we had asked and received permission to decorate the radar dish with Christmas lights. It was visible from much of the island and our "Christmas Tree" on the hill did a lot to raise the spirits of those who had been unable to go home on Christmas leave. The cooks in the mess hall really put on a Christmas feast for us, turkey and all the trimmings and no one went away hungry.
I want to thank Dean, ZD8DC for helping me bring back some of these memories with his operations from Ascension and I hope some of those great cooks are still staffing the mess hall for him this Christmas.
Holiday greetings to the satellite community throughout the world. Thanks for all your efforts in keeping interest in space alive and I hope that future years may see a revival of the spirit that existed when we were trying to put a man on the moon. Those were great times!
Hal ZS6WB
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Hal Lund ZS6WB