Okay..looks like we all stumbled into AM dxing..here is mine!
 
It is March in suburban New Jersey and this 8 year old kid is home sick with 
the flu or some such thing. Mom went out to get some meds and I am home 
alone...it was a long time ago when kids could be home for a bit...unsupervised!
 
My trusty RCA 6 transistor radio batteries are shot, so I go downstairs to 
snatch the kitchen radio, an antique Emerson, tan bakelite finish...AM only of 
course, long spindly wire hanging out of the rear.
 
On the way upstairs...I must have bumped the dial, because when I plugged it 
in, WABC 77 from New York was not there...where was it? What did I do? I had no 
idea ( I was 8!!) about channels or frequency etc. All I knew is we turned the 
big brown dial on and the radio glowed to life in a minute or so and WABC's 
Herb Oscar Anderson, the Morning Mayor came on...ah the smell of warming 
bakelite in the morning...!
 
Anyway, I twisted the dial all over the place but could not find WABC, the 
plastic face of the dial was broken, so even if I knew what 770kc was, I could 
not see it. There was a hole where about 600-1200kc was. I did not find WABC, 
but I did find a station in Philly, Boston, Hartford etc.....very odd...I 
thought I broke it!
 
Dad comes home and checks on sonny boy...and I relate the story of the 
radio...and his response was something that changed my life forever...something 
like, "yes son, the radio would get other cities if their stations were strong 
enough". This "B" average student figured if you lived near NYC, that you only 
get NYC stations...wrong-a-mundo!! That was only the starting point!! The world 
was waiting!
 
Hootchie mama...if that was used in those pre-Seinfeld days is what I would 
have said!!
 
I re-batteried my RCA Transistor baby and took off searching the dials...and 
heard new strange call letters, not only did I learn NYC had other stations, 
like WCBS, WABC, WHN and WINS...but out of towners, like WBZ, WTIC, 
KYW...and....and..WKBW from Buffalo, New York!!! That was it for this 8 year 
old...I had discovered something no one else knew about...my magic radio was 
now really a magic carpet that allowed me to listen to ball games from far off 
KMOX in St. Louis, WBAL in Baltimore, and when the wind was right, from 
Chicago!! I also discovered that if I held that spindly wire coming out of the 
back of the radio...the weak signal got stronger! And if I attached sister's 
Slinky to it...wow...good thing I was not electrocuted!
 
Imagine my displeasure of sorts, when I found in the Sunday Newark Star Ledger, 
a column devoted to "DXing", which I learned was what I was doing. Others were 
in on my secret, but I also learned what I was... I was a "DXer"! At 8, you 
have no titles, or caste system nicknames...so DXer was special... The Newark 
News article spoke of the NNRC, the Newark News Radio Club...I write to them 
and in a matter of days...comes my sample copy of one of the recent 
publications...OMG...there are others like me out there...and these guys really 
pull in stations!
 
Talking about this to my friends went nowhere...they did not understand what I 
was telling them..."hey guys...we can hear Harrisburg, PA on our transistor 
radios"!! ZZZZZZZZ was probably the retort, or why would we want to??...only my 
cousin who lived nearby found it interesting too!
 
Needlesss to say, that cold, windy March day in the NJ suburbs changed my life! 
All future vacations, no matter where the family went, I was dropped off at 
WXXX in some far away place...in those golden days, CE's at the stations loved 
the inane questions an 8, 9, 10 year old could fashion...and they let me read 
weather reports, commercials and even introduce songs!!!
 
It crafted my future career in broadcasting, and later TV, which is where I am 
today. And it all started from that 20 foot climb up those steps in my house 
dragging the aged Emerson radio with me!

George Santulli
Lovettsville, VA 
> Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 12:01:32 -0700
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [IRCA] [NRC-AM] 30 years of skywave DXing
> 
> Rick,
> 
> Thanks for bringing back those great memories of the "glory days" of DX'ing 
> the 
> AM band!
> 
> I had a similar experience with a clock radio picking up "exotic" DX. It was 
> mid-October in 1975 and I was in my first full semester of seminary in Fort 
> Worth, TX. Having moved there from Shreveport, LA, I wasn't yet familiar with 
> all of the radio stations in that part of Texas. I thought I had my Zenith 
> clock radio set so that when I woke up from my nap, I could listen to 
> WFAA-570.
> 
> Well, when the alarm sounded and the radio came on, it wasn't WFAA. I 
> listened 
> on and heard the "KFI 640" station ID. Talk about surprised! I was listening 
> to KFI Los Angeles on my little Zenith clock radio - and the signal was as 
> clear 
> as a bell!!
> 
> I grabbed a sheet of paper and a pencil, wrote down some log details, and 
> sent a 
> reception report. I received a KFI QSL card about a month later, signed by 
> Bernie Koval, the Chief Engineer. I still have the QSL card in my files.
> 
> That reception would probably never happen today ... sigh!
> 
> Thanks & 73,
> 
> 
> Stephen H. Ponder, N5WBI
> Houston, Texas, USA - EL29kn
> E-Mail: [email protected]
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