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    #21
    CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 7190 now.
    73 Al 4L5A

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      #22
      CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 14187 now.
      73 Al 4L5A

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        #23
        CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 50313.6 now FT8.
        73 Al 4L5A

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          #24
          CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 14165.1 now.
          73 Al 4L5A

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            #25
            CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 21280 now.
            73 Al 4L5A

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              #26
              CO0RRC from Cayo Coco Island, Cuba on 14017 now.
              73 Al 4L5A

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                #27
                My great adventure at CO0RRC – Cayo Coco Island, Cuba
                After my first Real DXpedition to Kiska Island (K7K) in July of 2022 I thought “this is terrific”
                but, the constant wetness and cold wind did not make for any sort of comfort. I’d camped in
                many different locations and conditions as both a young Boy Scout and adult volunteer leader
                but camping on a volcanic island in the middle of the Bering Sea was a bit much for this old
                Ham. If you have ever seen the TV reality show Deadliest Catch, you’ll understand the Bering is
                the roughest body of water on the planet due to the freezing Arctic currents coming down
                through the Bering Straits mixing with the warm currents coming up from the South Pacific
                Ocean.
                I’d thought I was done with expedition adventures as I was not well known in that world and had
                no other experience except my Parks on the Air activations to local parks in and around NY, NJ
                and PA which in themselves are like Mini expeditions, but I was always in control and could
                leave at any time by simply driving home. Not so with a real Expedition where one is very far
                from home and civilization in general.
                Then, sometime in January of 2023 I got a message from the team leader of the Kiska
                adventure, Yuri – N3QQ, who has put together many difficult expeditions over the years with the
                Russian Robinson Club, sometimes impossible ones, asking what I thought about a trip to the
                South Pacific. He had eyes on an expedition to a little piece of land sticking out of the ocean
                called Rose Atoll off American Samoa. I said Sure and he and I began our inquiries. After many
                emails and phone calls to the US Fish and Wildlife Service which manages the Atoll we learned
                that another group had been given permission for an expedition there and we’d have to wait until
                2026 as they only allow visits at 3 year intervals. I was upset but Yuri said “Don’t Worry, we’ll
                find another place” so I let it go and had almost forgotten about another expedition when an
                email came in mid-February.
                This time it was not a “Let’s try to go here” but rather “We are set to go to an island off Cuba”
                for the 30th anniversary of his club, the Russian Robinson Club, of which I’d become a member
                after activating Kiska Island the year prior.
                At first I was a bit apprehensive due to what I, as a US citizen, had heard about Cuba all my life.
                The stories we’re told are of crime, corruption, scary prisons and the likes. Yuri assured me that
                was just propaganda and when he was there for the 20th anniversary in 2013 it was a great place
                with great people.
                I asked How can I go there, or yourself for that matter, if there are sanctions prohibiting anyone
                from the US from traveling there. He said he had a plan and just trust him, which I did.
                Upon learning I’d need a passport I realized mine had long since expired so I scrambled to renew
                it and prayed I’d get it on time. With great luck I received the new one by mid-March and filled
                out some paperwork which gave me a limited travel visa and booked my flights.
                Now I began to feel both excited and anxious as I had never traveled outside the US since 1985
                and still had, in the back of my mind, fears about Cuban rebels kidnapping me for ransom
                thinking I’m some rich American.
                As it got closer to departure day I grew more and more apprehensive; what should I bring, how
                much money will I need, don’t want to bring too much to be robbed, too little to be short if
                needed. Only cash is good there – they do not accept US credit cards because they will not get
                paid thanks to the sanctions imposed by our US Dept. of State.
                There was no turning back though, I’d booked my flights and Yuri had secured a small hotel for
                us in a city called Moron, a quaint little town reminiscent of the 1950s with old, beautiful
                buildings in pastel colors and old American cars straight out of the movies.
                I was met at the airport there in Camaguey (the G is silent) by the two local Cuban Amateurs that
                were to operate with us by agreement with the Cuban Telecommunications Administration. To
                my surprise these were two of the nicest people I’d ever met, and I’ve been around plenty of
                people in my life. Jose CO2XN and Raul CO8ZZ had secured a taxi for us and had already
                loaded their equipment so we threw my bags in the back and headed out. We drove for almost
                two hours to get to Moron where I checked in and chatted with the amazingly pleasant woman,
                Mavel, who ran the small rooming house. After some coffee we then headed to the hotel where
                other members of the RRC were staying on the Island of Cayo Coco itself. They came from
                Russia so they had no restrictions on what hotel they could stay in. It was a magnificent resort on
                the beach in the Caribbean Sea.
                We met in the lobby and proceeded to one of the rooms they’d secured for the Shack, right there
                on the beach. The remaining equipment came shortly after with Yuri, who’d come from
                Washinton State via Canada. We spent the next day building antennas (mostly resonant VDAs
                and an inverted L for 80 meters) literally yards from the shoreline. VDA antennas work best
                when adjacent to water. We set up two FT8 stations with 1KW Juma amps and two Human
                Mode stations with SPE Expert 1.5K-FA amps. We eventually got up a 6 meter yagi and put a
                radio and amp into it for FT8 and CW.
                I am a phone operator so I was designated the primary SSB Op with Jose as my partner which
                was good because he could take the pileup after I was exhausted, as he is an experienced
                contester who can handle any pileup like a champion, and I’d take it from him when he couldn’t
                talk anymore.
                The first few days were slow thanks to a Sun fart but by the fourth day the bands opened wide,
                and we had pileups so heavy from 10 down to 40 meters you’d think we were on the moon!
                Having operated only from the NY metro area for years I was thrilled by the propagation
                characteristics afforded from an island just north of the Equator and was taking calls from China
                to Siberia and everything between, all strong in signal strength and reports back were 10 and 20
                over 9 for us, thanks to KW plus amps and antennas on the beach. Another of our team, Vlad
                R9LR, even set up a satellite station on the roof and took over 100 contacts in a few short hours.
                This was a far cry from the frigid environment of Kiska Island, sleeping in tents with howling
                winds all the time! Being on Cayo Coco Island was surreal, with comfortable beds, full
                restrooms, cooked food with coffee and drinks at our desire. Back at Yuri’s and my hotel, our
                hostess cooked us delicious meals as well, and we took advantage of the little pool there during
                the night before sleeping comfortably.
                We spent as much time on the radio as possible until there were no more callers, then after a few
                hours the conditions would come back, and it was off to the races with massive pileups. Many
                callers began sending videos and audio recordings of how we sounded in different parts of the
                world, and it made us feel good, that we’re making people happy who had recently experienced
                disappointment with a previous expedition that was unable to operate as planned.
                We closed with just under 14 thousand contacts, evenly split between FT8 and SSB/CW, which
                was great in our eyes. Sure, others make bigger numbers but given the atmospheric conditions
                we did OK.
                Another bonus was that upon learning where we’d be operating – the hotel used for stations was
                government owned and within a Cuban National Park, I had it added to the Parks on the Air
                database with its own unique identifying number so besides being an IOTA entity, NA-086, it
                was now also POTA entity CO-0005. This brought the power of almost 38,000 global POTA
                members into the fray and perhaps that is why the pileups were thousands deep for hours on end.
                One of our friends that sent a recording said it seemed as if every ham on the planet was calling
                us at the same time and even working spread split was rough in pulling out calls.
                Being very active in POTA with hundreds of activations, I knew many of the calls coming in and
                most of them knew me and would ask “Is that You James?” to which I’d reply jokingly Yes, you
                caught me – I cannot hide anywhere with my unique voice, operating style and strong Brooklyn
                accent. Sometimes I’d stop the pile short and briefly chat with friends I knew well but that
                wouldn’t last long as the waiting callers would “Prompt” me to get back to it and take more calls.
                All in all, I had a great time and met some wonderful people, especially our two local Hams Jose
                and Raul who I became fast friends with to where I was invited to come in March to operate with
                the Las Tunas Contest Crew for the ARRL SSB DX contest at their club station on a different
                beach.
                My feelings for Cuba are now such that I can’t wait to return and will do my best to honor their
                invitation.
                I must thank my friends Yuri, N3QQ and the President / founding member of the RRC,
                UA9OBA (also named Yuri) who was there for the big anniversary celebration, for letting me
                have this amazing experience as a recent member of RRC, for which I am grateful.
                My parting words to them as we headed to our respective airports going home was the ubiquitous
                phrase “Where do we go Next?”
                James Gallo, KB2FMH
                73 and Good DX…
                73 Al 4L5A

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