Activating K-1832 Anastasia SP in Florida!

Today I got to activate another new-to-me park! Anastasia State Park (K-1832) located in St Augustine, Florida.

Today was a special day for two reasons. The first reason is I am in St Augustine Florida and the second is that I had about an hour to fit in a POTA activation. So I drop off the wife at the yoga studio and from this parking lot I have about 1 hour and ten minutes to goto a park, setup a radio, get 10 contacts, tear it all back down, grab some photos for the blog post and go back to the yoga studio. I can report that I was successful in the mission.

So I chose Anastasia State Park because of its proximity to the yoga studio. It was a 7 minute drive to the spot where I setup the radio from the yoga studio parking lot…there goes 14 minutes of my 70! Part of the game so we are off!

There is a park access fee to use Anastasia State Park. It is 4$… Not bad for such a lovely place complete with a snack shop and even a restaurant from what I could tell. Not to mention THE BEACH! Did I mention it has BEACH ACCESS?!?!? Well, it is some of the most beautiful beach I have seen in the mainland USA to be quite honest about it.

The scene above was down the street from where I setup for the activation. This is the life! As you can see the salt water (The Atlantic Ocean) was also in close proximity so propagation should be good! It also had good “facilities” at this location too as I had just finished drinking a bunch of coffee… lol This is not a perk I am used to having at most locations. There is a restroom at the canyons edge back home at Cloudland Canyon next to the parking lot but my usual spot at the frisbee golf course has no such luxury so I was glad to see it today. Sometimes its the little things that make all the difference…

The location I chose was next to the shop where you rent small watercraft like kayaks and such. Since it was a Monday morning there were practically no people there. In the photo above you can see the sand dunes at the beach in the background. This is a good spot for POTA. Salt water has a reputation for being one of the best ground planes in radio and I normally dont have access to salt water so I get really excited when I can operate near salt water.

The parking area is on the side of the road (notice the wind swept trees, isnt that cool?) and backs up to a fence so I backed in and set up the 20 meter hamstick on the truck. Since time was of the essence here, I opted for a single radial and ran it over the fence and out into the recreational space on the other side. I threw the nanoVNA on it right quick and the SWR was good at 1.3:1 so on the air I went! I opted to hop straight way on 20 meters as this band usually has the highest percentage of operators of all the bands. This proved to be a wise decision too as I secured the activation in short order thanks to the plentiful hunters that sought me out today.

I get setup in the truck and power on the radio to a very active band, also giving me hope! So I start calling and it doesn’t take long to get a reply. Then the gates open! Wow! There were so many hunters! I actually got a little overwhelmed and couldn’t send code for squat!!! (Apologies to all of you guys and gals where I butchered your call sign trying to send decent code) So I just took a deep breath and started with the loudest stations and cleared the pileup in a little while. Since I was in Florida and not at home I could hear stations that are normally deaf to my radio and antenna combination. I logged several Tennessee contacts today and even one or two from the west coast!

I might modify this operating position just a little more with time, but it is almost perfect now. I would like to make a small stand that sits in front of the armrest that will hold the N3ZN key and PICO keyer allowing me to move the logbook a little more forward. Currently the bottom of the page is hard to reach for my old back as it is almost behind me. Lol. But other than that, this staion setup is going to end up being my wintertime POTA activation setup for the upcoming winter.

Looking at the QSO map shows that the skip distance today for my hamstick lies in the 500 to 1200 mile range and the second hop is coming down on the west coast. The signal reports on these stations (west coast) today were rough. I struggled to copy the call sign on one for certain and probably both. Still got them into the logbook though so we are good. But it did reveal to me how much energy is lost in that second “hop”. It was significantly weaker copy on those stations. I am going to speculate that it was probably 6 full S units of signal weaker. I dont use the S meter as a strict reference but today I found myself comparing signals such as these weak ones running in the S2-3 range and the Tennessee stations booking in at S9!

When I am back at my home the west is still difficult but at those times I normally have both counterpoise wires setup and this seems to alter the takeoff angle a little and I will get Utah, Colorado and Arizona and even the Dakotas sometimes so the other counterpoise seems to make a big difference in lowering the take off angle some to improve propagation to those areas for me. I am also fortunate to be where there is an abundance of ham radio operators so I can easily secure my activation due to the sheer density of hams most of the time. Actually I have only failed to secure the activation one time and that was my fault entirely, not because of a lack of hunters, but me not calling where they were hunting… Anyway, that is another story and is in the blog somewhere if you would like to read that sometime.

Looking back over the log and seeing all those Tennessee contacts makes me happy to know that I was able to activate a park in Florida even if it was only for an hour, it was still a great time and I was able to get a bunch of people into the log that day that is always a good reason to activate! Till next time…

73

WK4DS - David