Ron wrote:

>It's too bad we no longer have the Novice license and bands,
>because it gave everyone a place to congregate while developing
>CW skills.

That's so very true!  

I was a Novice almost 40 years ago.  The Novice bands were congested but 
magical segments of 80/40/15 meters, with 75 watt limits, crystal-control 
requirements, and non-renewable licenses.  Almost everyone met there was just 
getting started, and we were motivated at least by the desire to master 13 wpm 
for a higher license class, whether or not we ever intended to tap a key again 
after getting that license.  We were all of us similarly nervous, stressed, and 
unskilled at each contact, at first anyway.  

After developing a love of Morse operation (to the point of obtaining a 
commercial radiotelegraph license), I still really enjoyed returning to the 
Novice bands every once in a while to meet some of the new folks who were just 
getting into HF ham operation.

The magic of the Novice bands seemed to start failing when higher power and VFO 
operation were sanctioned and when Novice licenses became renewable.  Ham clubs 
started teaching Morse reception only, since there was now no test of sending 
skills.  This resulted in graduates capable of getting the Tech license, but 
who were scared to death of getting on the HF bands for a Morse QSO.  Novice 
magic then fell very sharply after the first no-code Tech licenses were issued 
in the early 1990s.  Death was almost total after the license destructuring of 
2000.  That, and cell phones, finally buried the last of the Novice band magic.

I miss the old Novice bands more than *any* other lost aspect of ham-radio 
yesteryear.

>Maybe I'm just out of date, but the world of Ham radio I was introduced to
>in the 1950's stressed cooperation over competition. I still cringe when I
>see the term "radiosporting" since sports virtually always put competition
>first.

My thoughts exactly.  Contesting (and DXing) have fostered extremely bad habits 
among many operators.  I've been a radio hobbyist since 1964, but I have never 
understood the extreme sense of accomplishment that some of these folks seem to 
develope from an essentially pointless activity.  Even Field Day has been 
transformed into little more than just another contest, in stark contrast to 
the intent of the first Field Days of the 1930s.

>Some people seem to practice "contesting" even when there is no contest.
>Their CW skills don't involve being able to do more than complete a
>high-speed exchange of name, RST and QTH followed by "73 dit-dit".

Amen, Brother Ron!

>They remind me that "Novice" operators come in all guises.

That's a bit unfair to the Novice operators I knew!  Most Novices were *not* 
lids, at least by intention! <g>

73,
Mike / KK5F
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