Howdy Ron & the rest of you all,
   I've been called a lot of things in my life but never before intrepid :)  I 
just keep putting one foot in front of the other and seem to get a few things 
done.  Today I got in the load of wood, struggled with the intermittent phone 
system, discussed my reality with the power folks, and made plans with the 
insurance folks.  Then I cleaned out a bunch of buckets and found their lids.  
The local beaver family had a fun time watching me chop a hole in their pond 
while I gathered enough water for a few days.  No, not for drinking, I went to 
town and bought that!  I saw a few brown noses poking out of a breathing hole 
with their little eyes watching me.  There were no tail slaps; they enjoyed my 
company and were curious about my activity.  I've been invited back to sit with 
them a spell.  Since they were so kind as to lend me some of their water I am 
sure their knowledge will be valuable to me as well.  
    I did not know the winds were that high.  I did know it was quite a blow.  
I had been in a few hurricanes and quite close to tornados but this was all 
straight line wind.  It did vary in direction from one side of the storm to 
another.  I've only walked a few acres of the property but it is easy to tell 
when the trees fell from their direction.  I have not found the tree which used 
to hold my primary HF antenna.  I have found half of the antenna with two 
mounting points still intact.  Now to find a third tree in the devastated 
section of the property.  When the county folks cut through the property toward 
the lookout they said they cut fifty trees in the eighty feet from my shed to 
the edge of the clearcut.  Everyone else simply looked at the pile and turned 
around :)
   The hemlock is still in the eaves.  I would not let my nephew cut it even 
though he was eager and willing.  I looked at it and thought how it would crush 
whatever got in its path.  Green hemlock, sixty feet long and thirty to twenty 
inches in diameter.  I put in a lot of effort getting this drywall up.  One 
slip and the entire corner of the house would be rubble.  I'll wait for a crane!
   During the storm I did go out on the porch in a protected alcove.  Using my 
flashlight I was able to see the branches flying sideways.  Some of them were 
larger than four inches in diameter.  The surrounding timber was cracking and 
flying.  The sound was quite intense from the howling to the exploding timber.  
Then there was the constant staccato sound of limbs hitting the roof.  The 
largest number of windows in the house are in the lee of a small rise and the 
shed where I store the wood.  This helped prevent any loss of glass.  Other 
than the series of branches poked through the ceiling the building remained 
tight.  It took quite a while to stop shaking enough to solder the next 
connection after the tree hit the house, the drywall exploded throughout the 
house, and the shrapnel from shattering branches to stop ricocheting off the 
walls.  Good thing I wear glasses because I was peppered with a lot of this.  
No holes in me though ;)
   For the rest of the night any little creaking sound sent more adrenalin 
through my system.  I did not sleep more than a few minutes.  During the middle 
of the storm the wind died down and I went outside to inspect the roof.  The 
woodstove had moved and the stovepipe was at an angle.  I feared the tree was 
in the path of the hot gases and I would have to douse my only heat source.  I 
climbed the ladder and found my J-pole still intact.  I crossed through the 
limbs and found the top for feet of triple wall stove pipe bent and thrown 
eastward.  The wet hemlock branches were not very close to the remaining pipe 
so I kept the fire low until morning.  Since the VHF antenna was still good I 
tried a series of local repeaters until I found a kind soul who called my 
sister in Vancouver.  My nephew came out the next day to clear the roof, patch 
and cover holes, and see if my hair had changed color!
   I am hoping I can get a spare G5RV up for this next week.  Yes, I know it is 
Christmas eve, I think that is quite an appropiate time to gather together for 
a short while on the air and count our blessings.  I have to go back and thank 
the beaver people too.  They were kind; as were so many others.  A few days 
after this incident I was due to teach an ECOMM class to the local ARES folks.  
I knew Pat would want me to continue learning how to teach after her prodding 
and coaching.  I was not going to let a little wind give me an excuse to bail 
out on my class!  After I finished the four hour session I got a nice round of 
applause.  I think they like me :)  
   Ron, luckily I did not set up those antennas you gave me.  They are in good 
shape in the lee of the shed.  If they had been where I intended to put them 
they would be scrap metal now.  Same goes for the roof work I had hoped to get 
done late this summer.  I would be up there repeating my work again next dry 
season.  As for the drywall?  Only a few whole sheets need to be removed.  The 
rest of the holes should only take a bit of patching.  The remaining bits of 
the G5RV tune on 20 meters for some odd reason.  I will try running a bit of CW 
tomorrow so I do not forget how.  My power source for the Internet, and 
everything else, is a bank of Trojan T-105s.  I bought an inverter to move 
files from my 400 watt desktop computer to this laptop for class.  Once the 
phone lines were fixed I got it up and running on the Internet thanking Tom for 
his running ECN yesterday.  

Now to find a spare antenna tree :)

Thanks folks for your kind wishes and simply wondering where I was and how I 
was doing.
   Until Sunday,
      73,
           Kevin.  KD5ONS  (Net Control Operator with no antenna, YET! :)

-----Original Message-----
>From: Ron D'Eau Claire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Dec 18, 2006 5:25 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: [Elecraft] The Intrepid KD5ONS (WAS:  ECN Report for 18 Dec 2006)
>
>We had hurricane force (100 mph range) winds throughout northwest Oregon.
>One state highway (Hwy 6) that runs near Kevin's QTH to the coast had an
>estimated 600 trees fall onto it that night, most of them in a 10 mile
>section, according to the state forestry who removed them. These were almost
>all healthy Douglas fir trees that have withstood many, many winter storms. 
>
>Kevin, being on a hilltop, got the worst of the winds. Those of us at lower
>elevations were spared that. Here in Forest Grove, about 20 miles from Kevin
>and down at 300 feet elevation, we had winds only hitting about 70 mph. Even
>so lots of trees and large limbs were flying. Those trees are *heavy*. Just
>a year ago, early in the morning of January 1st 2006, our neighbor across
>the street had a pair of 60 foot Douglas fir fall onto his house, moving an
>entire 2500 sq foot two story home crooked on its foundations. They just
>finished the rebuilding a couple of months ago. Nothing landed on it this
>time! 
>
>Many thousands of people in the countryside around the area, like Kevin, are
>still without power. It's expected to be several days more before all the
>repairs are completed.
>
>My hat's off to he intrepid mountain men like Kevin who live in the high
>forest lands. I have enough trouble keeping that hat on my head and my feet
>dry down here in town! 
>
>Now, it says something about the way our world is changing. A mountain man
>like Kevin is isolated up there, no power, no light, heat only by the wood
>he chops, yet he has internet access! 
>
>Ron AC7AC 
>
>  
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Matthew D. Pitts
>Sent: Monday, December 18, 2006 1:47 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: [Elecraft] ECN Report for 18 Dec 2006
>
>
>Tom,
>
>Thanks for the message from Kevin. I'm glad to hear that he's all right 
>physically, though I can imagine that he's shaken up by the situation. Pass 
>along my well wishes the next time you have a chance to talk to him; I'm 
>sure I'm not the only one on the list that would like him to know that we're
>
>thinking of him.
>
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