When I see a long list of countries I find it irresistible to check it off against my 200 + country QSL (station verification) list which I've collected over the past 45 years. And so it was with the Olympic Games ceremony on Friday night in London. Among the 201 countries filing past that aren't on my QSL list is the Bahamas. ZNS-1 from the Bahamas Broadcasting Corporation on 1540 AM has been audible in Cape Town for decades and I must have sent a dozen reports but with never a squeak back. I know some DXers have got one so there's always a hope. It struck me how many countries have attended the Games over the years without winning a single medal. It is a tribute to human striving that they keep coming back with athletes who have made the qualifying standard in the hope of one day breaking their duck. The South African team is targeting '12 medals in 2012' but the London bookies are putting the odds on quite a bit less than that. Most of the athletes are camped in the Olympic village with its thin walls and cramped conditions, not ideal for being at your best on race day, so anything can happen. One country at the Games that I do have on my QSL list is the low-profile Central African Republic. Like South Africa, this country tells you exactly where it is! It was heard on 60mb in French in Cape Town in 1971. The form letter apologises for not having a QSL card.
Current posts on this blog are QSLs (verifications from radio stations) and, often, audio of their station identifications, from around the world. These are mostly stations heard on medium-wave (AM) over long distances, often from Cape Point, south of Cape Town, with my friend, Vashek Korinek. But also included are other QSLs received over a 50-year participation in the hobby, with comments about the station, the area, the politics or the economics.
Sunday, 29 July 2012
Sunday, 22 July 2012
The Gold just keeps on Roving

Sunday, 15 July 2012
A380 Toulouse in Farnborough

Saturday, 7 July 2012
Angola's oil - not Dundo yet
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If you cast an eye over a map of the Atlantic Ocean you will see how snugly Brazil might have fitted into the armpit of west Africa and down the western coast of the continent. And so it was about a 300m years ago. This was the supercontinent of Pangaea. We keep on hearing how Brazil has discoverd these great oil fields in the pre-salt sub-ocean depths in the Campos Santos basin. And no surprise that right across the other side of that same ocean another Portuguese-speaking country is busy auctioning off licences in its own pre-salt oil fields in the Kwanza basin. Angola, which already produces 1.6m barrels per day is set to boost that a lot over the next decade as it brings the next generation of oil discoveries into production. Some say that the convection currents in the earth's mantle will move the continents together again but in the meantime the Angolans are going to make off like bandits. The QSL is from Radio Diamang heard on 60mb and 31mb way back in 1968 when I was a schoolboy in Cape Town. What a nice full-detail card in Portuguese, French and English and a pic of a cool marimba band. The station is named for Companhia de Diamantes de Angola which controlled the gem-quality diamond fields discovered near Dundo in north-eastern Angola 100 years ago.
Sunday, 1 July 2012
Who goes after Hugo goes?

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