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ALERT Newsletter

Hi Everyone,

I hope this finds you well as we ease into summer!

Have you seen or HEARD our plague of cicadas?

In Birmingham and Homewood, I have not heard or seen a single red eyed bug. But, while attending my school reunion held near Alabaster, the drone of the blasted things lived up to their billing as “deafening”. I never had one land in my hair, but one did come perilously close.

So, in a year where we have had an eclipse, an aurora and a LOUD chorus of cicadas, what other adventures await us as the year progresses on?

All I can say is “buy a bug net” as wish you a happy, safe and drama free summer!


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2024-2025 officers for ALERT!

The results of the 2024 are in and your Officers are:

• President: Johnnie Knobloch, KJ4OPX
• Vice President: Casey Benefield, NZ2O
• Treasurer & Membership: Bill Rodgers, K4FSO
• Secretary: Justin Glass, N0ZO

Thank you for your dedication and willingness to serve!


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2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season Begins

The Atlantic Hurricane Season officially begins June 1. The National Hurricane Center, to err on the side of caution in case there was an early arriving storm, began issuing outlooks on May 15.

NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center has issued 2024 outlook, released May 23, and is calling for the most intense Atlantic hurricane ever. NOAA predicts a likely range of 17 to 25 named storms, of which 8 to 13 could become hurricanes, including 4 to 7 major hurricanes.

This is the most storms NOAA has ever predicted in a preseason outlook.

NOAA provides these ranges with 85% confidence in an intense season. A 10% chance of an average hurricane season, which normally produces 14 named storms, of which 7 become hurricanes, including 3 major hurricanes and 5% chance of a below normal season.

As mentioned last month, Colorado State University is calling for an “extremely active” season, with 23 named storms.

CSU says there is a 62% chance of the US having a major hurricane landfall, as opposed to the “normal” 43% chance. The call for a 42% chance of the Gulf Coast and Florida Panhandle having a major hurricane landfall and 34% chance that the East Coast and Florida Peninsula will be struck.

Accuweather predicts a “well above average” or “explosive”, season and the UK Tropical Storm Risk,com outlook calls for a “hyper-active” season.

Out of 20 major hurricane season outlooks, all but 2 call for an above average season, calling for 50% more hurricanes than normal.

La Niña conditions are forecast to return this summer around the peak of hurricane season, During La Niña wind shear dies down, which helps promote tropical activity. Add to this
sea-surface temperatures that are well above historical average across much of the Atlantic basin, especially across the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean and the Atlantic, and you have the prime ingredients for an exceptionally active year.

In the grand scheme of things, it doesn’t really matter how many storms form, what matters is where they end up arriving. A year with 28 storms that never reach land isn’t overly significant, where a year with only one named storm and it being a repeat of Katrina, Camille or Andrew is.

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The following is an annual tradition, and the only Newsletter rerun that you ever see. As it seems to grow a little longer year by year. And it possibly making the length of the newsletter somewhat oppressive, I considered omitting this, as I don’t want the Newsletter to become a novel. But, since I do think the information is of value, and hopefully of interest, I’m including it. And, so without further ado, I present:


Mark’s Hurricane Guide 2024

With the 2024 North Atlantic Hurricane Season beginning it is a good time to review our preparedness plans.

The source for much of this information is the late John Hope of the National Hurricane Center and later The Weather Channel.

While at the NHC, Hope developed a theory called the John Hope Rule. It consists of two parts. Part 1 states: “If a system is not a bona fide tropical storm before crossing the Windward Islands, or the Lesser Antilles, it will not survive the trek across the Eastern Caribbean Sea. If the wave is still present, formation in the Western Caribbean is possible.” Part 2 states: “If the structure of a wave or storm is good, never discount it or write it off”.

I call that “The Oops Rule” for when something shouldn’t have developed, but it does it anyway.


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Hurricane Impact & Hurricane Response

Alabama is impacted by hurricanes in three ways:

1. Direct Impact – Where the core of the storm or the rain / wind field strikes or passes through a portion of Alabama. Examples being Hurricane’s Fredrick, Opal, Ivan, and Katrina.

2. Indirect Impact – where the core is not over Alabama, but the feeder bands are passing through and causing havoc. Rita’s feeder bands being a good example, which dropped 21
tornadoes over west Alabama in a 4-hour period.
3. Distant Impact – A storm that is not even near Alabama but affecting our weather. Such as with Olivia, a Pacific Hurricane which was off Western Mexico. Her moisture was captured by the jet stream, crossed the Sonora desert, the Arklatex region & dumped monsoon type rains on Alabama & Mississippi, causing flooding.

ALERT typically will activate during scenarios 1 & 2. ALERT’s coverage would concentrate on monitoring D-Star directly and using a liaison station to monitor HF offsite on 3.965 MHz or the backup 40-meter frequency of 7.243 MHz

Then as the storm moves northward into the BMX County Warning Area the focus would then shift to the individual county Skywarn Nets, as we would do during a “normal” callout.

HF Gulf Coast Nets to monitor are:

Primary State ARES Frequencies & Nets for Gulf of Mexico & regular meeting times.

3.965 MHz Alabama Emergency Net Mike 4:00 PM Sunday*
3.940 MHz Florida Amateur Single Sideband Net 6:00 PM
3.975 MHz Georgia Single Sideband Net 7:30 PM
3.910 MHz Louisiana Traffic Net 6:30 PM
3.862 MHz Mississippi Section Phone Net 6:00 PM
3.873 MHz Texas Traffic Net 6:30 PM

* Note that this is also the frequency of the Alabama Traffic Net Mike, meeting daily at 6:00 PM Central Time & Sunday’s at 8:00 AM Central Time and the Alabama Day Net, which meets daily at 10:00 AM Central Time.

Wide Coverage Nets

14.235 MHz Hurricane Watch Net As Needed
3.935 MHz Central Gulf Coast Hurricane Net 1:00 UTC

The Hurricane Watch Net is only activated when a storm is within 300 miles of a populated land mass. Normally you shouldn’t check into this net, but only listen. Only check in if you have a legitimate need to do so. A legitimate need being emergency or priority traffic or if the NCS specifically calls for a station in Central Alabama, only then should you pick the microphone up. Occasionally, if there is a lull in activity, they may give a call for general check-ins. But don’t be surprised if they don’t. Helping stations in the affected area is their primary concern.

Once upon a time a, which if I remember correctly was in 1988 when Gilbert, was rearranging Jamaica, the NCS asked “do we have any stations in the affected area, the affected area only?” Some fellow from Zero-land, piped in and very slowly drawled out “This is Kay Zero Que Arr Emmm, Homer over in Tulsa Oklahoma, just wanting to tell you fellers what a fine job, a fine job you fellers are doing. And, if I can be of any help, any help at all just let me know. This is Homer, K0QRM, over in Tulsa Oklahoma on frequency and standing by on the side.”

What harm was done? You might ask.

First, it hampers any emergency traffic trying to reach the net.

Fifteen distress calls probably could have been received and handled in the time it took Homer to ooze over “on the side”.

Secondly, it exacerbates the problem of NCS operator fatigue. Sometimes the adrenalin rush of the moment can keep an NCS sharp and “in the game” as it did with Ivan when I was on the air at K4NWS for 16 hours straight, but, minus that adrenalin rush, when it’s just station after station, checking in hour after hour, just so they can say they checked in, it can wear an NCS out.

So, learn from a bad example. Don’t do this.

Some Internet resources you should have in your toolbox include:

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/ – The National Hurricane Center out of Coral Gables, FL

http://www.hwn.org/tools/streaming-audio.html – Hurricane Watch Net Streaming Audio.
Note that the audio feed is only active when the net is active.

http://derecho.math.uwm.edu/models/ & http://www.ral.ucar.edu/hurricanes/realtime/current/
– Hurricane Forecast Models

Satellite imagery? We’ve got it!

https://rammb-slider.cira.colostate.edu/
HurricaneZone.net – Tropical Cyclone HQ™
Navy/NRL TC_PAGES Page
Sector Images: Gulf of Mexico – NOAA / NESDIS / STAR
Sector Images: Caribbean – NOAA / NESDIS / STAR
Sector Images: U.S. Atlantic Coast – NOAA / NESDIS / STAR
Sector Images: Tropical Atlantic – NOAA / NESDIS / STAR


Radar Sites? Try these!

Barbadoes Radar
Weather Radar: Barbados – meteoblue

Cuba Radar
Tiempo Actual, Red de Radares Meteorológicos de Cuba (insmet.cu)

Leeward Islands – Guadeloupe & Martinique Radar
ANIMATION SATELLITE et RADAR de PRECIPITATION par Météo-France (meteofrance.gp)

Mexico Radar
Live Weather Radar – Mexico | RainViewer

Puerto Rico Radar
NWS Radar (weather.gov)

United States Dual Pol Radar
COD NEXRAD: LOT

(Note that the COD site will default to Illinois. Chose the radar site you want from the radar site map on the upper right side of the screen. To find the map look for the first icon under “NEXRAD Base Reflectivity & click the icon. A map of the US with every NEXRAD site in the continental US, Alaska, Hawaii, Guam and Puerto Rico.

For the most reliable storm information, the National Hurricane Service and the local National Weather Service Forecast Offices for your area and the areas affected should always be your prime source.

The local offices know the historical conditions, topographical factors and the local quirks which make up the microclimate of the area, which may influence or alter situations on a local level, which a forecaster 500 miles away, no matter how good they may be, might not have a clue about.

Major media sources can be trusted, however, internet sources, especially social media prophets and gurus should never be substituted for official sources.

Social media reports and websites, until one knows their sources, the timeliness of their information, their track record of veracity and in some cases their motives, should, for one’s own safety, be viewed with a jaundiced eye and treated with the same caution as you should with all internet sources. Don’t just believe everything you read. Even if you agree with it or want it to be true. And, that applies to a very wide spectrum of subjects, as you cruise down the Disinformation Superhighway.

Don’t spread information without it being verified from authentic sources, no matter how flashy or how convincingly it may be presented. Your credibility and very possibly the safety of others is at stake.

That includes my wise weather prognostications also.

Just remember that some who would have you believe their “expert opinions” are also the same ones who would have you believe that King Charles is a shape shifting lizard dude. And, though I have always suspected that my second-grade teacher, “Mrs. Martin” aka “Madre De Satanás”, might have actually been one, in the case of the King, it is still yet unproven.


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Hurricane Tracking Gleams And Glints From Mark’s Crystal Ball

I’ve always enjoyed trying to second-guess the National Hurricane Center. It’s fun! Many times our forecasts agree, they have outguessed me an honorable number of times & every now and then, when Divine Providence intervenes, I have beaten them.

The following are some random hints and items I have stored in my dusty brain, which every now and then come into play as I gaze into my tropical crystal ball.

The first thing I will touch on is the name itself – “Hurricane” and its origin.

Some believe the name originated from “huracan” which was the Carib peoples of Northern South America term for “evil wind”. Others credit the Mayans of Central America and believe that is originates from “Hurakan”, the Mayan god of wind, storm and fire. According to the Mayan Creation Myth, Hurakan caused the Great Flood after the first humans angered the gods. According to the myth, he lived in the windy mists above the floodwaters and repeatedly called forth the earth until land came up from beneath the seas.

Whichever its origin, it is known that the names Hurican and Hurikan predate the appearance of Europeans on the horizons of what would become known as the “Americas”, stretching back into the dim mists of antiquity.

The Spanish word for “Hurricane” is “Huracan” to this day.

A couple of terms which you have undoubtedly heard of is “El Niño” & “La Niña”.

El Niño or more precisely the “El Niño Southern Oscillation” (ENSO), is a planetary-scale climate variation caused by interactions between the atmosphere and the Central and Eastern Pacific Ocean, which in turn affects the tropical climatology of the Gulf of Mexico and the North Atlantic Ocean.

El Niño refers to unusually warm ocean temperatures that occur every 2–7 years around Christmas time along Peruvian coast, extending into equatorial eastern and central Pacific Ocean, while La Niña refers to unusual cooler temperatures. A normal temperature is referred to as “neutral”.

Though many factors are used in making seasonal hurricane forecasts, El Niño & La Niña weigh heavily in the process.

The warm El Niño favors stronger hurricane activity in the central and eastern Pacific basins due to lower vertical wind shear, weaker trade winds and greater instability, while suppressing it in the Atlantic basin due to stronger wind shear tearing and shredding the thunderstorm columns of storms trying to form, stronger trade winds hampering large scale organization and greater atmospheric stability.

The cool La Niña does the opposite suppressing hurricane activity in the central and eastern Pacific basins and enhancing activity in the Atlantic basin.

2024 is La Niña year, which is one of the reasons why 2024 is expected that we will have a vigorous tropical season.

Some other hurricane facts are:

The maximum number of tropical systems that the Atlantic Basin (which includes the Gulf and Caribbean) can simultaneously contain, and support is five storms.

If major tropical systems get too close to one another they don’t merge as thunderstorms often do. The upper-level winds associated with each storm counteract or buffets each other preventing this from occurring.

If you have a large storm and a smaller storm enters the influence or wind field of the larger storm, the smaller storm will tend to rotate counterclockwise around the primary storm in a process called the Fujiwhara Effect.

If the smaller storm is very weak, say a tropical storm versus a Category 4 storm, it is possible that the smaller storms circulation can be totally disrupted by the larger storm and then it can be absorbed into the larger storm’s circulation. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNjUSsqJgek&feature=relmfu as Typhoon Ma-On gobbles up Tropical Storm Tokage in 2011.

Tropical systems, for all of their tremendous energy, are totally without an engine or steering mechanism, but are at the mercy of the whims of the upper-level winds. A tropical system can spin all it wants to, but unless the storms thunderstorm columns reach high enough to snag the upper-level winds, and then act as a sail, the storm is going nowhere fast. If the upper-level winds die down, the storm can drift aimlessly for days.

If the storm sits still long enough, it will begin to dissipate due to it stirring up the deeper cooler waters beneath it and it cooling the sea surface temperature below the 80 degree critical threshold needed to sustain a tropical storm. This is “upwelling”. The one exception to this rule is if it is sitting over the Gulf Stream, as the incoming current will continually replenish the warm water beneath the storm.

Air pollution or the lack thereof can influence tropical activity. NOAA has found that a 50% decrease in pollution particles and droplets in Europe and the U.S. is linked to a 33% increase in Atlantic storm formation in the past couple decades, while the opposite is happening in the Pacific with more pollution and fewer typhoons. Less pollution lets more sunlight to reach the ocean surface and vice versa.

Saharan sand blown across the Atlantic and into the Gulf will limit tropical development by blocking sunlight. This is a common occurrence which happens every spring and summer.

A well-formed storm will have a perfectly circular Central Dense Overcast or CDO, an area of thunderstorms surrounding the eye wall, with “feeder bands” of thunderstorms spiraling inward counterclockwise, parallel to the storm’s inbound horizontal winds, and “feeding” energy from the warm tropical ocean into the storm.

The winds being drawn into the eye, once arriving can only go in one direction – up – and in a well formed storm the system will be capped by high pressure, which helps evacuate these winds as they reach the stratosphere. This forms a false cirrus shield of clouds rotating in a clockwise fashion, as the winds are vented outward. If the storm has a tear drop shape or a long plume of clouds extending from the storm, this indicates heavy shearing, which will limit its growth, or shred the circulation. The storm will be veered by the shearing and try to deflect towards the direction of the plume.

A poorly organized storm can have a completely exposed center, with the cloud shield nowhere near the center. Until it starts “stacking up” it will remain a weak storm.

Intense, Category 3 or greater hurricanes will go through a process called an “eyewall replacement cycle”. In this case the eyewall contracts so small that some of the outer rain bands may strengthen and form an outer eyewall, causing the storm to weaken by robbing energy from the inner eyewall and will eventually choke it out completely and replace it, causing the storm to re-intensify.

This is a common occurrence. Less common is when you have a triple eyewall, as was the case with Typhoon June and Hurricane Juliette.

The fastest intensification from a Tropical Storm to a Category 5 Hurricane occurred with Hurricane Wilma in 2006, which in 24 hours went from 70 mph to 155 mph and then vacationed in the Yucatan.

The fastest intensification from a Tropical Depression to a Category 5 Hurricane occurred with Wilma & Hurricane Felix, which took just 54 hours to bloom and then blessed Nicaragua with its presence in 2007.

Honorable mention also goes to Hurricane Delta, which took just took just 36 hours to grow from a Tropical Depression to a Category 4 storm in October 2020.

The World Champion is Super Typhoon Hagibus which grew from a tropical storm to the equivalent of a Category 5 storm in only 18 hours in 2019.

Tropical systems cannot penetrate frontal boundaries. If a tropical system is threatening the coast, and you see that a front will be approaching the coast from the West, don’t worry about the coast, as it will either stall the storm, deflect it to the Northeast or as in the case of 2009’s Tropical Storm Danny, it can absorb a weak storm.

When looking at hurricane forecast model ensembles, RAL | Tropical Cyclone Guidance Project | Real-Time Guidance (ucar.edu) you can judge the “confidence” of the models by the grouping of the plotted tracks. If the plots are tightly grouped together, you can have “high confidence” in the reliability of the track and if the timing given by the plots agree, that also. The narrower the spread, the greater the confidence, and the wider the spread, the lesser the confidence. Some tracks will be obviously wrong, those you can dismiss. If the forecast tracks go look like they were written by a drunken spider, with paths going in every direction at once, that storm is heading nowhere fast.

One must be very cautious of jumping to conclusions when they see a forecast model indicating a tropical system and then blasting on the internet that “it’s about to get real in Mobile” and then causing people to panic and spread even more rumors online, when in fact that one model shows nothing 12 hours later. A single model can be misleading or just plain wrong. Consistency is the key. If a model consistently and persistently shows a system, then you know that THAT model thinks something will happen. But what do the other models say? Do they agree with the intensity and forecast track? Do they even show anything at all? That’s why the NHC is the best place to get your information.

The NHC issues outlooks for 2 days and 7 days. Beyond that everything is guesswork.

If a storm exists, they will issue full advisories every 12 hours and intermediate advisories every 6 hours.

One staple of NHC graphics is the “forecast cone” or “cone of uncertainty”, which represents the probable track of the center of the tropical cyclone.

The size of the cone is drawn so that about two-thirds of the time, the center of the storm will remain in the cone.

The cone does not take the size or shape of the storm into account, only where they think the center will be located. Some storms are large with damaging winds extending far beyond the cone. Some storms are compact, and the damaging winds lie within a small area in the cone. Some storms are lopsided, with nothing much happening on the western side leading people to carp about “over hyped forecasts for ratings” while the same distance away on the eastern side of the storm people are literally hanging on for dear life.

It is always to be remembered that a hurricane is not a point on a map; impacts often occur well outside of the core.

The cone indicates the forecast up to five days out from the last recorded position of the storm, with each increase in time from this initial period, the error factor grows.

Forecast Period (hours) Average NHC Forecast Track Error (miles)
12 9.1
24 26.3
36 42.0
48 56.9
72 73.8
96 109.7
120 221.7

This is why one should always get the latest information from the NHC, as they are constantly fine tuning their forecasts.

Tropical storms and hurricanes are steered by winds aloft, and the overall track can be a function of a storm’s intensity. These days, intensity forecasts still have some limitations, but there is a concerted effort to make improvements.

Theoretically Tropical Storms will lose strength over land. The 1997 version of Danny (which came up I-65 reached Birmingham and then turned East heading along I-20 towards Atlanta, as if He knew what he was doing) forgot this and strengthened while over the swamps of South Carolina and then moved into the Atlantic as a rejuvenated system heading for New England. The theory at that time was that the swamps were so warm and humid that the storm “thought” it was over the sea. Now they say it was due to the effects a frontal system closely following the storm. I always preferred the first explanation, as it seemed more logical, if not niftier.

Storms named “Danny” and I are old companions, incidentally. In 1985 I accidentally managed to intercept Hurricane Danny a few hours after it struck Louisiana. I remember the feeder bands passing with heavy rain and gusts, and then it calming and clearing in between waves. “Looks like it can’t decide whether it’s coming or going” said the old guy at a truck stop where I was refueling. I also remember making a ham sandwich for an old dog at a rest stop. Old Shep looked hungry, so I fixed him one. He woofed it down, thanked me kindly and then disappeared into the mist.

If a storm strikes just West of Alabama, expect sorry weather. If it strikes just East of Alabama, expect dry weather and lowering humidity, as the storm drags the moisture away with it.

If a 120 MPH storm is moving North at 20 MPH the wind field around the eye will be affected as follows. The winds on the Eastern side combine and are in effect 140 MPH, while the winds to the West subtract and are in effect 100 MPH. This is the “fast moving hurricane rule”.

If the Eastern Pacific Basin is active, the Atlantic Basin will be quiet & if the Atlantic Basin is active the Eastern Pacific Basin will be quiet.

Category 5 storms have never occurred in both the Atlantic & Pacific Basins in the same year.

Hurricanes can cross Central America from either the Atlantic or Pacific Basins, enter the other Basin and restrengthen and be renamed. The last being in 1996 when Category 1 Hurricane Cesar which scraped Northern South America, crossed Central America & restrengthened into Category 4 Hurricane Douglas.

Then there is the case of 1961’s Hurricane Hattie, which formed in the Caribbean, stuck Central America on Halloween, dissipated, then after reaching the Pacific, her remnants helped generate Tropical Storm Simone on November 1. Simone then turned Northwest striking Southern Mexico on November 2, dissipated and her remnants crossed Mexico, entering the Gulf of Mexico. These remnants in turn helped generate Tropical Storm Inga, which dissipated on November 8.

Alphabetical name position can’t be used as an indicator of possible storm strength. Andrew and Opal, both unruly guests, with names toward the opposite ends of the alphabet, are good examples.

Never underestimate the potential impacts of late season storms. Category 5 Hurricane Mitch was active from October 22 – November 5, 1998, with maximum sustained winds of 180 MPH. This storm struck Central America, Yucatán Peninsula & South Florida causing 6.2 billion dollars in damage and caused 11,000 deaths.

Remember that winds do not blow OUT of a hurricane; they are drawn INTO the storm in a spiraling motion. By factoring in the Coriolis Effect of the Earth’s rotation and the counter-effects of surface friction you can determine the general direction of any tropical storm or non-tropical low-pressure center using the surface wind direction as follows:

Wind Direction Storm Center Location

South North West
Southeast West
East Southwest
Northeast South
North Southeast
Northwest East
West Northeast
Southwest North


Calm winds suddenly occurring during a hurricane indicates the eye is over you. The winds will return just as suddenly, often stronger in the opposite direction.

My sister’s family was living at Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines in 1974, when Typhoon Bidang passed directly over. When the winds suddenly died down, they knew they were in the eye. Suddenly there was a knock on the door and opening it she found a delivery van with the furniture she had ordered. The Filipinos crew unloaded everything, said “thank you” and drove off into the darkness as the rear of the eyewall appeared and began blowing at full force.


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NHC Hurricane Tracking Chart PDF’s

Here are handy hurricane tracking charts from the National Hurricane Center.

For the Atlantic Ocean: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pdf/tracking_chart_atlantic.pdf
For the Pacific Ocean: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pdf/tracking_chart_epacific.pdf

Someone once asked me “why do you bother tracking the Pacific ones?” For practice, so that when the Atlantic ones do appear you are already ahead of the game experience wise.


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Mark’s Almanac

Originally the fourth Roman Month, June at one time had 29 days, until Julius Caesar in a glow of inspiration added the 30th day.

What June was named for is uncertain. Some say it was named for Juno, wife & sister of Jupiter. Juno was the goddess of marriage and a married couple’s household, so some consider it good luck to be married in this month, which is why June has become a month for so many marriages.

The beginning of meteorological Summer is June 1.

Storm activity retains many of the characteristics of spring, but more and more the pattern takes on the summer pattern of pop-up thunderstorms.

Hurricane season begins, June 1, however June hurricanes are usually small and of minor intensity, occurring roughly once every two years.

The centers for June Tropical Cyclone activity are the extreme Western Caribbean, with the storm tracks striking the Yucatan or veering toward Western Florida & the Southwestern Gulf of Mexico, with other storm tracks aiming toward the Mexican mainland.

From 1851 to 2023 there have been 102 Tropical Storms and 33 Hurricanes, of which 19 impacted the United States. The most notable June hurricane was Audrey, one of the deadliest tropical cyclones in US history, which killed 416 as it devastated the southwestern Louisiana coast in 1957.

The center of maximum tornadic activity shifts northward over Kansas and Iowa. Activity in Texas and Oklahoma dies down. There is a 5% decrease in tornadic activity over the May average & by June 4th 50% of the year’s tornadoes have occurred.

Days continue to grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon increases from 78.5 degrees at the beginning of the month to maximum of 79.9 on Summer Solstice on June 21 and then lowering to 79.6 degrees at the month’s end. Daylight increases from 14 hours 14 minutes on June 1 to the maximum daylight of 14 hours 23 minutes at Summer Solstice on June 21 and then decreases to 14 hours 21 minutes on June 30.

Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:

June 1 Sunrise 5:38 AM Sunset 7:52 PM
June 15 Sunrise 5:37 AM Sunset 7:59 PM
June 30 Sunrise 5:40 AM Sunset 8:01 PM

Before we precede, a few words about the recent aurora.

In 2003 I had a beagle named Wendy. One October night, about 9 PM, as I was feeding her, she kept staring at the northern sky. Once before she had done this and I spotted an owl sitting in the tree, so I thought maybe Hootie had come back. But, I looked and saw nothing, so I came back in.

An hour later, a TV meteorologist, possibly named Spann, said Alabama had been treated to a rare display of the Northern Lights.
In 2024 I have an Australian Shepherd / Collie named Bo. On May 11 around 9:00 PM I let him out to take care of business and he stood on the deck looking at the northern sky. Thirty minutes earlier I had gone outside trying to spy out the Northern Lights and saw scattered clouds and the skyglow of Birmingham and nothing else, so I didn’t go back.

At 9:00 PM, according to the security camera at work, the Northern Lights appeared over Birmingham and moved across the northeastern and eastern sky for 20 minutes and then disappeared, never to return.

Two things I learned from this experience: 1. I should listen to my dogs, 2. These are not necessarily “once in a lifetime” or “once in a century” events.

The solar conditions leading to the 2024 event were stronger that the 2003 event, but, not as strong as an event in March 1989.

The sunspot AR3664, which caused the auroral outbreak has survived a two week long passed behind the Sun and reappeared, bearing a new number, AR 3697 and is still spitting out X class flares as it reemerges from the southeastern limb of the Sun.

So, who knows? Maybe Bo the Dog will see the aurora again, and maybe Mark will be smart enough to pay attention this time.

I hear varying descriptions of the aurora’s actual visibility in Alabama. Pictures posted, many taken with smart phones in night mode, which are more infrared sensitive than the human eye, show an impressive display, however, naked eye reports vary from “grayish, which a little pink” to “I couldn’t see them without the phone.”

Aurora sightings in Alabama are normally red. Why is that?

The color of an aurora is dependent on the aurora’s altitude.

In the God forsaken far northern realms, aurora’s are usually green. Green auroras can reach up to 150 miles in height.

During intense solar activity there can be blue auroras up to 60 miles high and violet auroras above 60 miles, but being that low in altitude, and that high in latitude, they will not be seen in God’s country, the South.

A red aurora, which is only visible during intense solar activity, occurs at altitudes of over 150 miles. If you are seeing a red aurora, you are seeing the tops of the display. The bottom may be over Illinois. Not unlike having cirrus over Birmingham streaming from the anvils of thunderstorms over Mississippi.

Observers in the UK say that if a red aurora starts to turn yellow, the “fun is about over”, as the aurora is subsiding.

One resident of Alaska says that auroral displays come spurts of activity and vary wildly during the event and can suddenly die away.

With the sunspot group rotating our way again, there are certain numbers to watch.

One, the Kp-index, describes disturbances in the horizontal component of Earth’s magnetic field with a range of 0–9, with 1 being calm and 5 or more indicating a geomagnetic storm. It is based on the maximum fluctuations of horizontal components observed on a magnetometer during a three-hour interval.

The Other is the Bz. The north-south direction of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF), is the Bz, measured on nanoTeslas (nT). When the north-south direction of IMF flips south, the magnetic field lines connect to the earth’s magnetosphere which faces north. A rift opens that allows the solar wind to pour into our magnetosphere. The Bz becomes negative, for example –10nT, which is a good sign that auroras will start to appear.

So, cutting through the mumbo jumbo, if the Planetary Kp-Index goes into the 8 or 9 level and the Bz level goes into negative values, it’s a good sign that an aurora may appear.

All of these readings, and more may be found at Auroral activity | SpaceWeatherLive.com and
ON6ZQ | Propagation / N0NBH

We are at or near the speak of Solar Cycle 25. The “fireworks” may be far from over.

Looking skyward, the Sun, magnitude -26.7 is in Taurus, The Bull.

Mercury, magnitude -0.6 in Aires, The Ram, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

He will reach his closet distance from the Sun, or “Perihelion”, on June 13, and will pass behind the Sun, or reach “Superior Conjunction”, on June 14,

Venus, magnitude -3.9 in Taurus, The Bull, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

She will pass behind the Sun, or reach Superior Conjunction, on June 14.

Earth, and her Moon, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the constellation Ophiuchus, The Serpent Bearer.

Mars, with his moons Phobos and Deimos magnitude +1.1, in Pisces, The Fish, is emerging into the predawn sky.

At the first of the month, he rises at 3:09 AM CDT, 2 hour and 26 minutes before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 21° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:54 AM CDT.

The Northern hemisphere’s Winter Solstice will occur on the Red Planet on June 7.

At midmonth he rises at 2:43 AM CDT, 2 hours and 51 minutes before the Sun, reaching an altitude of 26° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:53 AM CDT.

By months end he rises at 2:17 AM CDT, 3 hours and 20 minutes before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 32° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:57 AM CDT.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude +8.0 is in Sagittarius The Archer.

Jupiter, and his 95 moons and (invisible from Earth) ring magnitude –2.0, in Taurus, The Bull, is hidden in the glow of the Sun as the month begins.

He reemerges in the predawn sky on June 12

At midmonth he rises at 4:19 AM CDT, 1 hours and 15 minutes before the Sun, reaching an altitude of 10° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 5:16 AM CDT.

By months end he rises at 3:32 AM CDT, 2 hours and 5 minutes before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 20° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 5:20 AM CDT.

Saturn, and his 146 moons and extensive debris ring system, magnitude +1.0, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is visible in the dawn sky.

At the first of the month, he rises at 1:39 AM CDT, 3 hours and 56 minutes before the Sun, and reaches an altitude of 36° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:56 AM CDT.

By midmonth he rises at 12:46 AM CDT, and reaches an altitude of 44° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:56 AM CDT.

At months end he rises at 11:47 PM CDT, and reaches an altitude of 49° above the southern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:59 AM CDT.

Uranus, and his 28 moons and ring, magnitude +5.9 in Taurus, The Bull, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Neptune, and his 16 moons and ring, magnitude 7.8 in Pisces, The Fish, is visible using a telescope in the predawn sky.

At the first of the month, he rises at 2:05 AM CDT, 3 hours and 30 minutes before the Sun, and reaches an altitude of 27° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:26 AM CDT.

By midmonth he rises at 1:11 AM CDT, and reaches an altitude of 37° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:23 AM CDT.

At months end he rises at 12:12 AM CDT, and reaches an altitude of 47° above the southern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 4:27 AM CDT.

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim +14.5 in Capricorn, The Sea Goat.

Dwarf Planet 136108 Haumea, her ring and moons Hiʻiaka and Namaka, shines at a faint magnitude of +17.3 in Bootes, The Herdsman.

Dwarf Planet 136472 Makemake with his moon S/2015 (136472) 1, nicknamed MK1 by the discovery team, shines faintly at magnitude +17.2 in Coma Berenices.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia, originally referred to as Xena and Gabrielle, is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude +18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least six additional bodies with the preliminary criteria for identifying dwarf planets, and though not “officially” declared as such, are generally called dwarf planets by astronomers as well.

90482 Orcus, and his moon Vanth shines at magnitude 19.1 between Hydra and Sextans, The Sextant.

50000 Quaoar, and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Scutum, The Shield.

90377 Sedna, the coldest, and at one time, the most distant known place in the Solar System, glows faintly at magnitude +20.8 in Taurus, The Bull.

225088 Gonggong, originally nicknamed Snow White by the discovery team, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

2014 UZ224 nicknamed “DeeDee” for “Distant Dwarf” is 8.5 billion miles from the Sun, at magnitude +23.0 in Eridanus, The River.

120347 Salacia, and her moon Actaea glows at magnitude 20.7 in Andromeda, The Chained Woman. Salacia is considered a “borderline” Dwarf Planet. Some astronomers saying she “most certainly is a Dwarf Planet”, while others disagreeing based on her size, saying she is too small to have compressed into a fully solid body, to have been resurfaced, or to have collapsed into “hydrostatic equilibrium”, that is to assume spherical shape like a planet.

This dark world lies beyond the orbit of Neptune, orbiting 4,164,420,166 miles from the Sun.

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12,365,836,632 miles or 18 hours, 26 minutes and 22 seconds from Earth, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.

The most distant man-made object, and the most distant known object in the Solar System Voyager 1, still operating after 46 years, 8 months and 22 days is 15,135,486,361 miles, or in Light Time, 22 hours, 34 minutes and 10 Seconds from Earth as of 8:10 PM, May 27, 2024, sailing 38,026 miles per hour through Ophiuchus the Serpent Bearer.

There are 1,351,400 known asteroids as of May 27, 2024, per NASA.

5632 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of May 21, 2024 per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

The Moon will be at Perigee, or her closest point from the Earth on June 2 at 228,732 Miles.

New Moon will occur at 7:40 AM CDT or 12:40 UTC on June 6. The Moon will be located on the same side of the Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky. This is the best time of the month to observe faint objects such as galaxies and star clusters because there is no moonlight to interfere.

First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur June 14 at 12:19 AM or 5:19 UTC.

During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.

The Moon will be at Apogee, or her farthest point from the Earth on June 14 at 251,082 Miles.

Summer Solstice will occur at 2:41 PM CDT or 20:41 UTC on June 21. The North Pole of the earth will be tilted toward the Sun, which will have reached its northernmost position in the sky and will be directly over the Tropic of Cancer at 23.44 degrees north latitude. This is the first day of summer in the Northern Hemisphere and the first day of winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

June’s Full Moon is “Strawberry Moon” in Native American folklore. This will occur on June 21 at 8:09 PM CDT or 1:09 UTC on June 22. The Moon will be located on the opposite side of the Earth as the Sun and its face will be fully illuminated. It is called “Strawberry Moon” for it signals the time to start harvesting strawberries, as it is peak strawberry ripening time. Other names are “Rose Moon” and “Honey Moon”.

During a Full Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -12.7.

The Moon will be at Perigee, or her closest point from the Earth on June 27 at 229,467 Miles.

The June Bootids Meteor Shower will occur from June 26th until July 2nd. It peaks on June 27th. Normally the shower is very weak, with a Zenith Hourly Rate or ZHR of 1 or 2, but occasional outbursts produce a hundred or more meteors per hour. The source of the June Bootids is Comet 7P/Pons-Winnecke, which orbits the Sun once every 6.37 years.

The Last Quarter moon will block out some of the faintest meteors with this unpredictable shower, but if you are patient, you should be able to catch quite a few good ones. Best viewing will be from a dark location after midnight.

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur June 29 at 4:55 PM CDT or 9:55 UTC.

Around 10 PM in mid-June, Libra the Scales will be passing due South. When Alpha Librae, the lower-right of the two brightest stars of Libra, is due south, if you look directly below it you will see nothing but horizon. But, if you were at a lower latitude, say 29°, the latitude of Orlando, or points south would see our brilliant, -0.27 magnitude neighbor Alpha Centauri above the horizon.

At 4.37 light years distance, the Alpha Centauri system is nearest star system to our own.

It is a triple star consisting of Alpha Centauri A, also called Rigil Kentaurus, Alpha Centauri B or Toliman and the closest star to the Sun, Alpha Centauri C also called Proxima Centauri, 4.24 light years from Earth.

Alpha Centauri A is a near twin of our Sun in almost every way, including age, while Alpha Centauri B is somewhat smaller and dimmer but still quite like the Sun. The third member, Proxima Centauri is a much smaller red dwarf star that travels around the A-B pair.

Proxima Centauri has three known planets: Proxima b, an Earth-sized exoplanet in the habitable zone or so called “Goldilocks Zone” – not too hot and not too cold to support some form of life if it has a suitable atmosphere. Proxima c, a super-Earth, which is possibly surrounded by a huge ring system and Proxima d, which orbits very closely to the star.

Alpha Centauri A may have a Neptune-sized habitable-zone planet, though it is not yet known to be planetary in nature and could be an artifact of the discovery mechanism. Alpha Centauri B has no known planets.

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This month’s meeting will be on June 11, at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Calera.

I hope to see you there!

Mark / WD4NYL
Editor
ALERT Newsletter

 Hi everyone, I hope this finds you doing well & that you have been enjoying these cool spring days.

Our May 14 ALERT meeting will feature our annual elections.

Positions to be decided are President, Vice President, Treasurer/Membership, Secretary and NWS Liaison/K4NWS Station Trustee.

Those recommended by the Nominating Committee and any nominations from the floor (made by a current ALERT Operational Member) and any volunteers for those positions will be voted on by secret ballot, or acclamation if no other nominations exist from the floor.

If you are a paid-up Operational Member or Supporting Member, who is a member interested in Amateur Radio, Skywarn or Emergency Communications, but doesn’t have a ham license, you may vote in the 2024-2025 ALERT leadership elections.

The positions of Public Information Officer and the non-permanent 1 year Board of Director positions will be appointed by the incoming President. The 2 year Board position was chosen last year. If a Board position we’re to be vacated during the year, the President would appoint a member to serve the remainder of the term, per ARTICLE VI, Section 2, of the ALERT Bylaws & Constitution.

The Editor of the Newsletter isn’t mentioned in the Bylaws and is merely a voluntary “labor of love” of which I have been overseeing since 2007. And, unless there is a volunteer clawing at the doors to take over, I will probably (pending Presidential approval) continue onward.

The officers will assume their positions at the July meeting.

July is also when ALERT dues are due. Remember, if you wish to respond to ALERT callouts or serve as an officer you MUST be current with your dues.

May your May be a happy one!

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Troublesome 2024 Hurricane Outlooks

Colorado State University has issued its outlook for the 2024 tropical season, which runs from June 1 to November.

EXTENDED-RANGE FORECAST OF ATLANTIC HURRICANE ACTIVITY FOR 2024 (colostate.edu)

Their forecast predicts an “extremely active” season with 23 named storms during the Atlantic hurricane season. Of those, researchers expect 11 to become hurricanes and 5 to reach major hurricane strength of Category 3 or greater, with sustained winds of 111 miles per hour or greater.

There is 62% chance for at least one major hurricane to strike the United States. The average from 1880 – 2020 is 43%.

There is 34% chance for at least one major hurricane to strike the US East coast including the Florida Peninsula. The average from 1880 – 2020 is 21%.

There is 42% chance for at least one major hurricane to strike the Gulf Coast from the Florida Panhandle to Brownsville Texas. The average from 1880 – 2020 is 27%.

AccuWeather’s 2024 Atlantic hurricane outlook also calls for an “well above average” or “explosive”, season with 20 – 25 named storms. Of those storms, 8 to 10 are forecast to become hurricanes, 4 to 7 being major hurricanes and 4 to 6 hurricanes are likely to hit the United States.

Explosive Atlantic hurricane season predicted for 2024, AccuWeather experts warn

The UK Tropical Storm Risk,com outlook calls for a “hyper-active” season with 23 named storms, 11 hurricanes and 5 “intense” hurricanes, with the US being visited by 7 tropical storms and 3 hurricanes, intensity unpredictable.

Click to access TSRATLForecastApril2024.pdf

A “Normal” season sees about 12 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes.

The 2023 Atlantic hurricane season was the fourth most active season on record with 20 named storms, 7 becoming hurricanes and of those 7, 3 becoming major hurricanes.

Of those 20, only four directly impacted the US

Hurricane Idalia struck Florida as a Category 3 hurricane in late August. Tropical Storm Harold drenched southern Texas. Tropical Storm Ophelia made landfall in North Carolina. A much weakened Lee swiped the New England coast as a tropical rainstorm before making landfall in Nova Scotia, Canada. Earlier Lee made his name as the strongest storm of the season, a 165 MPH Category 5 storm.

This year La Niña conditions are forecast to return this summer around the peak of hurricane season, During La Niña wind shear dies down, which helps promote tropical activity. Add to this
sea-surface temperatures that are well above historical average across much of the Atlantic basin, especially across the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean and the Atlantic, and you have the prime ingredients for an exceptionally active year.

The 2024 North Atlantic Basin Tropical Cyclone names are Alberto, Beryl, Chris, Debby, Ernesto, Francine, Gordon, Helene, Isaac, Joyce, Kirk, Leslie, Milton, Nadine, Oscar, Patty, Rafeal, Sara, Tony, Valerie & William.

Note that the names are used on a six-year rotation & that this list will return in 2030. Only names of catastrophic or damaging storms are retired. Which is why you will never have another Andrew, Betsy, Camille, Fredrick, Gilbert, Ivan, Katrina or Opal, to name a few ne’er-do-well storms of the past.

If so many storms occur that the 2024 list is depleted, the storm names will revert to the World Meteorological Organization supplemental list of names: Adria, Braylen, Caridad, Deshawn, Emery, Foster, Gemma, Heath, Isla, Jacobus, Kenzie, Lucio, Makayla, Nolan, Orlanda, Pax, Ronin, Sophie, Tayshaun, Viviana and Will.

The National Hurricane Center will issue their outlook in May.

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Rescue From Death Valley

On April 6, 2024, Amateur Radio Operator Caleb Gustwiller, KD8TGB, in Wauseon Ohio, after unsuccessfully attempting to contact a DX station, turned off his equipment around 5 PM to do “something else.”

At 6:30 PM he turned the equipment back on to “play some more” and he heard KO6DZX calling “Mayday, we are stuck in Death Valley and need help”.

He attempted to contact him and succeeded, but the 10 meter band changed, and the station faded away. He called a friend and had him try to contact him, with little success.

He then went on Facebook to the Parks On The Air group to see if anyone could tune in and hear the station. “Can anyone hear KO6DZX on 28.430? Saying Mayday, but we are losing them.”

A member of the group called the National Park Service in Death Valley California, and Park Rangers indicated that they might know his location and would send help as soon as they could.

Recent floods had washed out many of the roads and many sites were closed and impassable.

The Park Rangers successfully located the operator, KO6DZX, Moritz Wacker, who had had vehicle trouble and was stranded, and he was rescued safely.

Moritz had been a ham for 9 days.

So, ham radio saved a person’s day, if not his life.

Think of the odds though.

The receiving operator decided to turn the radio back on, at just the right time, on just the right frequency on a band that usually fades at sunset and heard him from 1,700 miles away.

What if he decided to watch Family Feud instead of returning to the radio?
What if he had got on 30 minutes later and found the band had closed?
What if he had moved off that completely random frequency or had switched to another band?
What if he had thought someone was just clowning around?
Thankfully he did none of those things and knew that ANY distress call HAS to be treated as legitimate. (And I have heard some bogus ones through the years)

Sounds like someone was looking after KO6DZX.

KO6DZX holds a Technician class license.

Let’s not forget that Technicians have HF privileges also.

The original purpose of the Technician license, as created in 1951, was to encourage and provide access for experimenters in the 220 MHZ and above bands. It was for hams who might not have any interest in long distance HF communications, but wished to experiment with repeaters, moon bounce and other modes.

In the early 1960’s there were two entry level ham licenses, the Novice and the Technician.

The Novice License was for “communicators” and was good for one year and later two years and was nonrenewable. You had two years to upgrade to General, or you lost your license and could not apply again. I remember as a novice knowing that the “clock was ticking” and breathing a sigh of relief in 1978 when I upgraded.
Later that year the FCC changed the rules, and the Novice license became renewable, a decision which some decried as “the death knell of Amateur Radio”, since “no one would ever bother upgrading now”.

The Technician License was for ”experimenters” – people with technical interests in technical things which is why it was called “Technician”.

Technicians had no HF privileges, nor access to 6 or 2 Meters, while Novices had HF CW and 2 Meter voice privileges.

If you wanted to both “communicate” and “experiment”, you had to have both licenses. You could hold both a Novice and Technician License at the same time, each with a different callsign. You would use the appropriate callsign depending on whether you were “communicating” or “experimenting”.

In the process of time and the invention of “incentive licensing” in 1967, there were now six classes of Licenses – Novice, Technician, Conditional, General, Advanced and Extra.

The Conditional Class was a test given by two ham “proctors” to those with “hardship cases”.
This was for those who lived 75 miles or beyond from the nearest FCC office, as tests we’re normally given at the Field Office or as with the Atlanta Field Office, occasionally the FCC staff would travel to a major city and hold testing sessions for ham and commercial licenses.

In Birmingham, the FCC would come sometime in March and sometime in August. The testing dates were not published until a week or so before the test. So, you either studied too early and started forgetting everything, or studied too late and crammed until your brain overheated.

The only sure date was the Birminghamfest, which in those days was held in May at the BJCC, and up until a few years ago was always a Saturday & Sunday Affair, as the Huntsville Hamfest is today.

As other major adjustments came over the years, Novices lost voice privileges, Technicians gained 6 and 2 Meters, and the Conditional Class was grandfathered into General Class. In 1975 Technicians gained HF Novice privileges. Technician 10 Meter voice access came in 1987, as did Novice voice privileges on 222 – 225 MHz and 1.270 – 1.295 GHz bands as is today, in the so called “Novice Enhancement” by the FCC.

In 1991 the FCC adopted the No-Code Technician, which had no Novice privileges. Existing Technicians and new ones that passed the 5 WPM CW test became Technician Pluses and had HF Novice privileges.

On April 15, 2000, after the FCC rearranged things yet again, new Novice and Advanced licenses were no longer issued, though existing licenses could still be renewed and in 2007, since all code requirements we’re dropped, No Code Technicians we’re granted Novice HF access, and all Technicians, No Code and Pluses we’re now Technicians.

So, if you are holding a Technician Class license you have access to:

80 Meters – 3.525 – 3.600 MHz – CW only (which is also the entire General & Advanced CW band)

40 Meters – 7.025 – 7.125 MHz – CW only (which is also the entire General & Advanced CW band)

15 Meters – 21.025 – 21.200 MHz – CW only (which is also the entire General & Advanced CW band)

10 Meters – 28.000 – 28.300 MHz – CW, RTTY & Data, including FT8, 200 watts PEP maximum (which is also the entire General & Advanced CW band)

10 Meters – 28.300 – 28.500 MHz – CW & Phone, 200 PEP watts maximum, which is the heart of the 10 Meter band and is shared with General, Advanced and Amateur Extra class licensees.

All frequencies above 50 MHZ.

The reason I’ve stressed “which is also the entire General & Advanced CW band” is that these frequencies are not just little itty bitty slivers, slices or “windows” of the HF bands, as was the case when I started in 1977, but they are “the whole tamale” of non-voice CW frequencies available in the 80, 40, 15 & 10 Meter bands, same as if you held the General or Advanced Class license. The only CW frequencies not available to Technicians in these bands are the bottom 25 kHz reserved for the Amateur Extra class licensees on 80, 40 & 15 Meters.

The only advantage General and Advanced Classes have on these shared frequencies is that they can run RTTY and digital signals such as FT8.

So, Technician HF privileges are a much bigger deal than is advertised or that most even think.

Color_Band_Chart_Image.jpg (989×768) (arrl.org)

CW did not fade away after the code requirement was dropped, but is more popular now than ever before.

One reason being that people have realized the fact that watt for watt, a CW signal has greater range than a SSB signal. With an SSB signal your radiated power is spread wider across the band than a CW signal. A SSB signal covers 3 kHz or 3,000 Hz vs 150 Hz for a CW signal. A CW signal is laser focused like a Maglite focuses a beam of light and so, using this comparison, is “brighter” than a SSB signal.

Also, a CW signal is at 100% power 100% of the time, whereas SSB signals only briefly reach full power on voice peaks. A CW signal squeezes every available watt into the ether.

So, a CW signal will reach farther and penetrate noise better than a voice signal. As an example, many times I have heard stations “tuning up” using a CW carrier and blasting my speaker and then they switched to voice and there was only the faintest wisp of “CQ CQ”.

So, to all Technicians I say, right now you can have the ability to “work the world” at your fingertips. So why not give it a try?

There are many online resources to help you learn CW. And, if I could learn it, being a complete dullard, you can certainly do so, and probably learn it quicker than I did. Just start slow as you need, and speed will follow. I started at 3 WPM and eventually got to 35 WPM by ear. I was younger then and my ears were not corroded as they are now, thanks to Father Time & a little too much LOUD Rock and Roll, so I prefer 13 to 18 WPM.

Plus, as I tell folk, with high speed CW, if the cat sneezes or the dog blasts gas, you miss half of the exchange. So, for me “slow is the way to go.”

Or if you want to try voice, throw up a 17 – 18 foot dipole antenna between two trees, get 10 a meter rig or a full feature HF rig, from 4 to 100 watts, and when the sunspots cooperate, and we are currently at the solar maximum of the 11 year sunspot cycle, you can “work the world”.

10 Meter Technician Class Dipole – Build a Technician Class Dipole for 10 Meters! (hamuniverse.com)

You have nothing to lose, and everything to gain! So, as someone said, “c’mon man”, give it a try!


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Mark’s Almanac

May is the fifth month & third month of the Roman calendar. May is named for the Greek goddess Maia, who was identified with, Bona Dea, the Goddess of Fertility, who was celebrated in May.

Since ancient times the first day of the month, “May Day” has been a time of celebration. In Rome it honored Flora, the goddess of flowers.

On May the fifth Mexican’s celebrate Cinco De Mayo, the celebration of Mexico’s 1862 victory over Napoleon III’s forces at Puebla. This is not, as many assume, Mexico’s Independence Day, which is actually on September 16.

Rainfall decreases in May as the Azores-Bermuda High strengthens, expands Westward over the Southeastern US & begins rerouting storm systems northward.

The door opens to the Gulf of Mexico & Gulf moisture spreads northward over the continent.

The center of maximum tornadic activity also shifts northward over the Nation’s Heartland. May is the peak tornado month, with a 42% increase over April’s amount.

Eastern Pacific hurricane season begins May 15, and although the North Atlantic hurricane season has not arrived, occasionally a tropical system will form in the Gulf of Mexico. From 1851 to 2023 there have been 27 Tropical Storms and 5 Hurricanes, including an 1863 Category 2 storm, the knowledge of which is based on historical reanalysis by NOAA’s Michael Chenoweth and Cary Mock in 2013 and posthumously given the name Hurricane Amanda, named after, a Union ship the storm washed ashore. It made landfall near Apalachicola Florida.

60% of off-season Hurricanes occur in May.

Days continue to grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon increases from 71.6 degrees at the beginning of the month to 78.4 degrees at the month’s end. Daylight increases from 13 hours 31 minutes on May 1 to 14 hours 13 minutes on May 31.

Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:

May 1 Sunrise 5:59 AM Sunset 7:30 PM
May 15 Sunrise 5:47 AM Sunset 7:41 PM
May 30 Sunrise 5:39 AM Sunset 7:52 PM

Looking skyward, the Sun, magnitude -26.7 is in Pisces, The Fish.

Mercury, magnitude +4.8 in Pisces, The Fish, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Venus, magnitude -3.9 in Pisces, The Fish, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Earth, and her Moon, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the constellation Libra, The Scales.

Mars, with his moons Phobos and Deimos magnitude +1.1, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is emerging into the predawn sky.

At the first of the month, he rises at 4:09 AM, 1 hour and 47 minutes before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 13° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 05:17.

He will reach his closest distance from the Sun or “Perihelion”, on May 8, 2024.

At midmonth he rises at 3:42 AM, 2 hours and 2 minutes before the Sun, reaching an altitude of 16° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 05:04.

By months end he rises at 3:11 AM, 2 hours and 24 minutes before the Sun and reachies an altitude of 20° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 04:55.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude +8.7 is in Sagittarius The Archer.

Jupiter, and his 95 moons and (invisible from Earth) ring magnitude –2.0, in Aries, became lost in the glow of the Sun on April 26th is hidden in the glow of the Sun.

He will pass behind the Sun, or be in “Conjunction” on May 18.

Saturn, and his 146 moons and extensive debris ring system, magnitude +1.1, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is visible in the dawn sky.

At the first of the month, he rises at 3:35 AM, 2 hours and 21 minutes before the Sun, and reaches an altitude of 20° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 05:19.

By midmonth he rises at 2:43 AM, 3 hours and 1 minute before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 27° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 05:05.

At months end he rises at 1:43 AM, 3 hours and 52 minutes before the Sun and reaches an altitude of 36° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 04:56.

Uranus, and his 28 moons and ring, magnitude +5.9 in Aries, The Ram, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

He will pass behind the Sun, or be in “conjunction”, on May 13.

Neptune, and his 16 moons and ring, magnitude 7.8 in Pisces, The Fish, is lost in the glow of the Sun for most of the month, until finally emerging into the predawn sky on May 24. rising at 2:36, 3 hours and 2 minutes before the Sun and reaching an altitude of 22° above the eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at around 04:30.

I’ll note that except for the Earth, every planet is either lost in the glow of the Sun, or just emerging into the predawn sky. This means that the solar system is currently lopsided with every planet on one side of the Sun, except for little old Earth, sitting alone on the opposite side.

There is no particular significance to this, but I find it an interesting configuration.

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim +14.5 in Capricorn, The Sea Goat.

Dwarf Planet 136108 Haumea, her ring and moons Hiʻiaka and Namaka, shines at a faint magnitude of +17.3 in Bootes, The Herdsman.

Dwarf Planet 136472 Makemake with his moon S/2015 (136472) 1, nicknamed MK1 by the discovery team, shines faintly at magnitude +17.1 in Coma Berenices.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia, originally referred to as Xena and Gabrielle, is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude +18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least six additional bodies with the preliminary criteria for identifying dwarf planets, and though not “officially” declared as such, are generally called dwarf planets by astronomers as well.

90482 Orcus, and his moon Vanth shines at magnitude 19.1 between Hydra and Sextans, The Sextant.

50000 Quaoar, and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Scutum, The Shield.

90377 Sedna, the coldest, and at one time, the most distant known place in the Solar System, glows faintly at magnitude +20.8 in Taurus, The Bull.

225088 Gonggong, originally nicknamed Snow White by the discovery team, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

2014 UZ224 nicknamed “DeeDee” for “Distant Dwarf” is 8.5 billion miles from the Sun, at magnitude +23.0 in Eridanus, The River.

120347 Salacia, and her moon Actaea glows at magnitude 20.7 in Andromeda, The Chained Woman. Salacia is considered a “borderline” Dwarf Planet. Some astronomers saying she “most certainly is a Dwarf Planet”, while others disagreeing based on her size, saying she is too small to have compressed into a fully solid body, to have been resurfaced, or to have collapsed into “hydrostatic equilibrium”, that is to assume spherical shape like a planet.

This dark world lies beyond the orbit of Neptune, orbiting 4,164,420,166 miles from the Sun.

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12,304,868,885 miles or 18 hours, 20 minutes and 55 seconds from Earth, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.

The most distant man-made object, and the most distant known object in the Solar System Voyager 1, still operating after 46 years,7 months and 10 days is 15,123,350,964 miles, or in Light Time, 22 hours, 33 minutes and 15 Seconds from Earth as of 1:28 PM, April 15, 2024, sailing 38,026 miles per hour through Ophiuchus the Serpent Bearer.

There are 1,351,400 known asteroids as of April 15, 2024, per NASA.

5609 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of April 10, 2024 per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur May 1 at 6:27 AM or 11:27 UTC.

During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.

The Moon will be at Perigee or its closest distance from Earth on May 5, when she will be 225,661 miles from Earth.

The Eta Aquarids Meteor Shower, an above average shower, peaks May 6 & 7. It can produce up to 60 meteors per hour at its peak, but most of the activity is seen in the Southern Hemisphere. In the Northern Hemisphere, the rate can reach about 30 meteors per hour, which is still a decent shower. It is produced by dust particles left behind by comet Halley, due to return in a mere 39 years in the summer of 2061. The shower runs annually from April 19 to May 28. It peaks this year on the night of May 6 and the morning of May 7. The nearly New Moon means dark skies for what should be an excellent show this year. The best viewing will be from a dark location after midnight. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Aquarius but can appear anywhere in the sky.

New Moon will occur on May 7 at 10:24 PM CDT or May 8 at 3:24 UTC. The Moon will be located on the same side of the Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky. This is the best time of the month to observe faint objects such as galaxies and star clusters because there is no moonlight to interfere.

First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur May 15 at 6:49 AM or 11:49 UTC.

During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.

The Moon will be at Apogee, or her farthest point from the Earth on May 17 at 251,432 miles.

Full Moon will occur May 23th at 8:55 AM CDT or 13:55 UTC. The Moon will be located on the opposite side of the Earth as the Sun and its face will be fully illuminated. May’s Moon is “Flower Moon” in Native American folklore, because of the abundance of spring flowers. It has also been called “Corn Planting Moon” & “Milk Moon”.

During a Full Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -12.7.

May’s second Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur May 30 at 12:13 PM or 18:13 UTC.

In the Northern Sky the Big Dipper, part of Ursa Major, the Great Bear, begins the month upside down, “spilling its water” on Polaris, the North Star, which is the tip of the handle of the Little Dipper or Ursa Minor, the Little Bear.

Interestingly, the Big and Little Dippers are arranged so that when one is upright, the other is upside down. In addition, their handles appear to extend in opposite directions. The Big Dipper is by far the brighter of the two, appearing as a long-handled pan, while the Little Dipper resembles a dim ladle.

The Big Dipper is called by other names across the world. In the Netherlands it’s the “Saucepan”, “The Plough” in England and “The Great Wagon” in other parts of Europe.

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This month’s meeting will be on May14 at 7 PM.

The meeting will be held at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Calera.

I hope to see you there!

Mark Wells
WD4NYL
Editor
ALERT Newsletter

Articles and suggestions are welcome!

Hi everyone,
 
On November 23, 1965 an eclipse of the sun began blotting out the sunlight over Southeast Asia. This was during the Vietnam War. As the ancient custom of the villagers in that area was to shoot flaming arrows towards the Sun to reignite the Sun’s fading embers, a dilemma was encountered. 
 
At a certain South Vietnamese Army base, they didn’t any arrows available to shoot, but then it occurred to them that they did have some heavy artillery pieces, and so they began shooting them towards the Sun.  They did indeed successfully reignite the Sun…but, also in the process managed to blow to smithereens a friendly village some miles down the road.
 
The moral of this true story is this:  When our eclipse occurs on the 8th, don’t go and do likewise.
 
Also, don’t pay attention to Internet Prophets Of Doom.
 
In August 2017 millions of Sungazers converged on a narrow path from coast to coast for the “Great American Eclipse of 2017”.  Towns with a normal population of 10,000 suddenly had 500,000 visitors.  In that strip, cell phone networks were overloaded and jammed, stores were emptied of goods, gas stations bled dry, and the entire infrastructure stressed beyond the breaking point.  The locals were not prepared for the arrival of a few million intimate friends.
 
Fast forward to 2024.  FEMA is recommending that people within the eclipse zone keep their phones and electronic devices charged, buy necessities ahead of time, have food, medicine and gas and basically prepare for an exact repeat of 2017. 
 
The conspiracy theorists are having a ball – “the government thinks something is going to happen, umm hmmm”.
 
And, it is true, they do. They think millions of Sungazers will converge on a narrow path for the latest “Great American Eclipse” overloading phone lines, stores, gas stations and kicking the infrastructure in the butt – again.
 
But, some people are truly upset.
 
On one forum a gentleman asked if he should disconnect and ground all his antennas to protect them “from the effects” of the eclipse.  One person replied, “If you recall your third grade science class, it’s the moon casting a shadow on the Earth.” Sort of harmless.
 
I suggested “get on the air”.  If I wasn’t stuck at work that is exactly what I would do.  I would like to see how the eclipse affected radio propagation. Better? Worse? Not at all? Or as one ham told me after a previous eclipse “that’s the craziest propagation I’ve seen in 50 years of ham radio”.
 
Whether you try to get on the air or safely observe the eclipse, I hope you enjoy this rare event.
 
Just keep your eye peeled for those green eyed goomers from Neptune that the government isn’t telling you about.  
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Alabama POTA Event
 
One activity that I like to participate in is POTA or Parks On The Air. 
 
With POTA Amateurs set up stations in parks, State Parks, National Forests and National Wildlife Reserves and basically operate like a mini Field Day.
 
Activators set up and operate the stations and Hunters seek them out.  It is not a contest, though it resembles one.  It almost has a domestic DXpedition feel.  Hunters give their signal report and state and the Activator gives a signal report and park number.
 
On April 6 Alabama POTA operators will be heading for the woods for the first annual Alabama Parks Of The Air event.
 
If you have HF capability listen for “CQ POTA” and give it a try.  I think you will find this a fun aspect of ham radio.
 
This event will start at 12:00 UTC April 6 and ends at 23:59 UTC on April 7.
 
For more information go to:
 
Parks on the Air | POTA | Parks program for amateur radio.
 
Alabama Parks on the Air – Alabama Parks on the Air (alparks.org)
 
 
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Where Do I Go? – Part 2
 
In the January Newsletter we discussed HF ham radio frequencies that one can listen to with a decent general coverage receiver. This month we will cover VHF & UHF frequencies.
 
The following list is primary VHF ham radio frequencies within a 75 mile radius of K4NWS at the National Weather Service in Calera.
 
There are 39 counties in the Birmingham County Warning Area or CWA, but many are well beyond VHF radio range using standard analog 2 meter FM.  For this reason, I have limited this list to a roughly 75 mile radius of the Shelby County Airport.
 
These should be, and at times have been within range of K4NWS, realizing that K4NWS uses an omnidirectional antenna, not a beam, and that we, as all ham stations, are at the mercy of terrain, weather, “atmospherics” and Murphy’s Law.
 
A good example of our limitations is Chambers, Cleburne & Randolph county.  They lie within this 75 mile limit, but are blocked by the Appalachian Mountains, so hearing them directly is very problematic, if not impossible, though they could very probably hit Mt. Cheaha on 147.090 MHz. 
 
The problem here is that we can’t guarantee we will be listening to Mt. Cheaha at just the right time, or stay there hoping someone will pop up.  We may be talking to Blount or Tuscaloosa County instead.
 
This is when D-Star, Spotter Chat and Slack Chat becomes invaluable, as they have better range and have the capability to fill in the gaps.
 
 
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County VHF Ham Frequencies Within 75 Mile Radius Of K4NWS
 
Autauga County, AL
             Central Alabama Skywarn                 146.840   123.0 Hz 
             Alabama Emergency Net Golf           146.840   123.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM
Bibb County, AL
             Bibb County ARC                               145.390    103.5 Hz
 
Blount County, AL
Blount Co ARC Net                             146.700     91.5 Hz   Sunday 8:00 PM
Public Safety Amateur Radio Group 147.375     77.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM
Calhoun County, AL
Calhoun County ARES/Races           146.780    100.0 Hz  Monday 7:00 PM
             Alabama Emergency Net Whiskey    147.090    131.8 Hz  Monday 8:00 PM
 
Cherokee County, AL
             Cherokee County Skywarn                147.320    100.0 Hz  Tuesday 7:00 PM *
                                                                                            Currently Off The Air
Chilton County, AL
                                                                           147.105    123.0 Hz
Clay County, AL
                                                                           147.255    131.8 Hz
Coosa County, AL
                                                                           145.330    179.9 Hz
Cullman County, AL (Huntsville CWA)
              Cullman ARES Net                              145.310   100.0 Hz Sunday 6:30 PM
 
Dallas County, AL
           145.720   100.0 Hz
                                                                            147.040   146.2 Hz  
Elmore County, AL
              Central Alabama Skywarn                  146.840   123.0 Hz 
              Alabama Emergency Net Golf            146.840   123.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM
 
Etowah County, AL
              Alabama Emergency Net Yankee       147.160   100.0 Hz    Tuesday 8:30 PM   
 
Fayette County, AL
             Fayette County ARC                             147.200   110.9 Hz Thursday 8:30 PM
 
Greene
             West Alabama Emergency Net            146.820    118.8 Hz Sunday 8:30 PM
 
Hale
                                                                            147.220    77.0 HZ   
                                                                     
Jefferson County, AL
             Jefferson County ARES Net                146.880    88.5 Hz Tuesday 9:00 PM
             Central Alabama Simplex Net             146.580      –         Sunday 8:00 PM
             Healthcare Community ARC               146.760    88.5 Hz Birmingham Monday 8:00 PM
                                                                                             94.8 Hz Southwest
                                                                                           114.8 Hz East
                                                                                           131.8 Hz West
             
Lee County, AL
             East Alabama ARES Net                       147.150   123.0 HZ Sunday 4:00 PM
 
Lowndes County, AL
             Central Alabama Skywarn                    146.840   123.0 Hz 
             Alabama Emergency Net Golf              146.840   123.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM
 
Macon County, AL
             Central Alabama Skywarn                    146.840   123.0 Hz 
             Alabama Emergency Net Golf              146.840   123.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM 
 
Montgomery County, AL
Central Alabama Skywarn                    146.840   123.0 Hz 
             Alabama Emergency Net Golf              146.840   123.0 Hz   Thursday 7:00 PM
 
Perry County, AL 
                                                                             147.375    123.0 Hz
Pickens, AL
           West Alabama Amateur Radio Club      145.430    110.9 Hz Wednesday 8:30 PM
 
Randolph County, AL
                                                                             145.430    141.3 Hz
                                                                             147.270    141.3 Hz
 
St Clair County, AL
            Alabama Emergency Net Alpha            145.190   156.7 Hz Tuesday 7:00 PM
            St Clair ARES                                         145.130   103.5 Hz Tuesday 8:00 PM
 
Shelby County, AL
            Shelby County ARES Net                      146.980     88 .5 Hz Tuesday 8;0PM
 
Talladega County, AL
            Talladega Net                          147.740   131.8 Hz Thursday 8:00 PM
 
Tallapoosa County, AL
            Lake Matin Skywarn                               146.060   179.9 Hz
 
Tuscaloosa County, AL
           West Alabama Emergency Net               146.820    118.8 Hz Sunday 8:30 PM
 
Walker County, AL
Walker County ARES             147.390    110.9 Hz Thursday 8:00 PM
 
Winston County, AL
           West Alabama Emergency Net               146.820    118.8 Hz Sunday 8:30 PM
 
Statewide                                                             146.520    Simplex
 
Alabama EMA in Clanton                                    220.500    100.0 Hz
 
 
Notes:
 
When activated, K4NWS continuously monitors 220.500 MHz.  Once, during Skywarn Appreciation Day, the NWS office in Peach Tree City (Atlanta), WX4PTC, called Birmingham K4NWS via 220 MHz after linking through two 440 MHz repeaters in Georgia and Alabama.  They had to initiate this link, but it proved it could be done.
 
I have included Cullman County, even though they are in Huntsville’s CWA, as it is within my 75 mile limit.
 
Now for the disclaimers.  I know I have missed some nets and repeaters.  If I missed your net or repeater, I apologize. Let me know (kindly) and I will include it.
 
Likewise, if I have included a net or repeater that you hate because you think it is occupied by a bunch of snaggle toothed, flop eared, mule faced, high smelling, low down polecats, I apologize.  I don’t know your local situation, and even if I did, ALERT can’t take sides or favor one group over the other. Even if they are a bunch of snaggle toothed, flop eared, mule faced, high smelling, low down polecats
 
We are the Switzerland of Amateur Radio. We are just looking for storm reports for the NWS, to help assist in their job of protecting lives and property. We are a safe haven. 
 
 
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Mark’s Almanac
 
The Romans called April “Aprilis”, probably from the word “aperire”, which means, “to open”.  This time of year being when buds open.  It was originally the second month of the Roman calendar, before Roman King Numa Pompilius added January & February in 700 BC.
 
Freezing weather comes to an end as Birmingham’s average last freeze is April 1, while Tuscaloosa’s is March 26.  The record for the latest freeze date is April 21, 1953 for Tuscaloosa and April 23, 1986 for Birmingham.
 
Snowfall is still possible though, as April 3, 1987’s 5 inches proves.  The latest trace of snow was April 25, 1910.
 
April is less wet than March & rain becomes more localized and less widespread in nature. The sun heats the lower atmosphere near the ground and since the upper atmosphere is still cold, the warm air rises, reaches the dew point line, forms clouds & then it may rain.  April is the first time in the spring season that favors local convective activity, which is why you have “April Showers”.
 
North Atlantic Tropical activity remains at a minimum.  From 1851 to 2023 there has never been a Hurricane and only two Tropical Storms – Ana in 2003 and Arlene in 2017 which affected only shipping.
 
April is peak tornado month, with wide scale outbreaks possible.  There are 2 ½ times the number of tornadoes as in March.  25% of the year’s tornadoes will have occurred by April 28.
 
From April 1950 to 2023, 2994 tornadoes were reported in Alabama.  From 1950 – 2023 there were 688 direct and indirect deaths, and as of 2013, 8,402 direct and indirect injuries.  
 
Days continue to grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon rapidly increases from 61.1 degrees at the beginning of the month to 71.3 degrees at the end.  Daylight increases from 12 hours 32 minutes on April 1 to 13 hours 29 minutes on April 30.
 
Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:
 
April 1  Sunrise  6:35 AM  Sunset 7:08 PM  
April 15 Sunrise  6:17 AM  Sunset 7:18 PM  
April 30 Sunrise  6:00 AM  Sunset 7:29 PM  
 
Looking skyward, the Sun, magnitude -26.7 is in Pisces, The Fish.  
 
Mercury, magnitude +1.0, is in Pisces, The Fish, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.
 
He will pass between the Sun and the Earth or be in “Inferior Conjunction” on April 11.
 
Mercury will reach his furthest point from the Sun, or “Aphelion” on April 30.
 
Venus, magnitude –3.9 in Aquarius The Water Bearer, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.
 
Earth, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the constellation Virgo, The Virgin.
 
Mars, with his moons Phobos and Deimos, magnitude +1.2, in Aquarius The Water Bearer, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.
 
Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude 8.8 is in Sagittarius The Archer.
 
Jupiter, and his 95 moons and (invisible from Earth) ring, magnitude –2.1 is in Aries, The Ram.
 
At the beginning of the month. he becomes visible low, 25° over the Western Horizon as dusk fades into darkness.  He sets 3 hours and 16 minutes after the Sun.
 
By midmonth he is very low on the horizon, 15°, as duck into darkness. He sets 2 hours 14 minutes after the Sun.
 
He becomes lost in the glow of the Sun on the 26th.
 
Saturn, and his 146 moons and extensive debris ring system,  magnitude +1.1, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is lost in the glow of the Sun.
 
Uranus, and his 28 moons and ring, magnitude +5.8, in Aries, The Ram, is lost in the glow of the Sun.
 
Neptune, and his 16 moons and ring, magnitude +7.8 in Pisces, The Fish, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.
 
Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim +14.5 in Capricorn, The Sea Goat.
 
Dwarf Planet 136108 Haumea, her ring and moons Hiʻiaka and Namaka, shines at a faint magnitude of +17.3 in Bootes, The Herdsman.
 
Dwarf Planet 136472 Makemake with his moon S/2015 (136472) 1, nicknamed MK1 by the discovery team, shines faintly at magnitude +17.1 in Coma Berenices.
 
Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia, originally referred to as Xena and Gabrielle, is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude +18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.
 
At least six additional bodies with the preliminary criteria for identifying dwarf planets, and though not “officially” declared as such, are generally called dwarf planets by astronomers as well.
 
90482 Orcus, and his moon Vanth shines at magnitude 19.1 between Hydra and Sextans, The Sextant.
 
50000 Quaoar, and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Scutum, The Shield.
 
90377 Sedna, the coldest, and at one time, the most distant known place in the Solar System, glows faintly at magnitude +20.9 in Taurus, The Bull.
 
225088 Gonggong, originally nicknamed Snow White by the discovery team, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.
 
2014 UZ224 nicknamed “DeeDee” for “Distant Dwarf” is 8.5 billion miles from the Sun, at magnitude +23.0 in Eridanus, The River.
 
120347 Salacia, and her moon Actaea glows at magnitude 20.7 in Andromeda, The Chained Woman. Salacia is considered a “borderline” Dwarf Planet. Some astronomers saying she “most certainly is a Dwarf Planet”, while others disagreeing based on her size, saying she is too small to have compressed into a fully solid body, to have been resurfaced, or to have collapsed into “hydrostatic equilibrium”, that is to assume spherical shape like a planet.
 
This dark world lies beyond the orbit of Neptune, orbiting 4,164,420,166 miles from the Sun. 
 
Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12,281,965,797 miles or 18 hours, 18 minutes and 49 seconds from Earth, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx. 
 
The most distant man-made object, and the most distant known object in the Solar System Voyager 1, still operating after 46 years,6 months and 25 days is 15,128,894,186 miles, or in Light Time, 22 hours, 33 minutes and 34 Seconds from Earth as of 621 PM, April 30, 2024, sailing 38,027 miles per hour through Ophiuchus the Serpent Bearer.
 
There are 1,351,400 known asteroids as of April 30, 2024, per NASA.  
 
5602 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of April 26, 2024 per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/
 
Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur April 1 at 10:15 PM CDT or 08:15 UTC.
 
During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.
 
The Moon will be at Perigee or her closest approach to Earth on April 7, when she will be 222,919 miles from Earth. 
 
New Moon will occur on April 8 at 11:22 PM CDT or 18:22 UTC. The Moon will be located on the same side of the Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky. This is the best time of the month to observe faint objects such as galaxies and star clusters because there is no moonlight to interfere.
 
Because this New Moon will occur at her closest approach to Earth, this will be a Super New Moon.
 
On April 8th there will be a Total Solar Eclipse. This is a rare event for observers in the United States. The last total solar eclipse visible in the continental United States occurred in 2017 and the next one will take place in 2045. 
 
The path of totality will begin in the Pacific Ocean in Eastern Mexico and travel Northeastward through the United States and exit over Newfoundland & Labrador.
 
The total eclipse will be visible in parts of Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Indiana, Ohio & New York.
 
A partial eclipse will be visible in most of North America. Alabama will have a deep 85.85% eclipse.
 
NASA Map and Eclipse Information 
Where & When (nasa.gov)
 
Live stream:
LIVE Stream: Total Solar Eclipse April 2024 (timeanddate.com)
 
Event times are as follows (note that Alabama will get only a partial eclipse, do not directly look at the Sun):
 
Beginning      Max eclipse  Ending Coverage
Birmingham    12:40 PM   2:00 PM           3:17 PM     85.85%
 
 
How do you safely view a solar eclipse?
 
The way NOT to view an eclipse is by staring at the sun, or even worse looking at the sun with unfiltered binoculars or a telescope.  To do so is to invite a lifetime of blindness.
 
It is NEVER safe to directly view the partial phases of any solar eclipse, or the maximum phases of an annular solar using the unprotected or naked eye. Even when 99% of the Sun’s surface is blocked during the partial phases of a solar eclipse, the remaining crescent is intensely bright and cannot be safely viewed without eye protection. 
 
NOT recommended is viewing through smoked glass, old photo negatives, exposed x-ray film or stacked sunglasses, as they may very well block the visible light, but, will still allow infrared and ultraviolet light to pass unimpeded to cook what’s left of your retinas.
 
Some of the safe methods are as follows:
 
Pinhole Projection
 
The simplest and most inexpensive method for safely viewing a solar eclipse is called “pinhole projection”. A pinhole or small opening in a piece of cardboard is used to project an image of the eclipsed Sun onto a screen (white piece of cardboard) placed a couple feet behind the pinhole. The white cardboard is moved back and forth until a good focus and size is obtained.  Making a pinhole projection box to safely watch a solar eclipse is a fun project for kids. 
 
As mentioned in the preceding article, projected images of the eclipsed Sun can be seen on the ground as sunlight passes through leaves or even seen on the ground by loosely interlacing your fingers and allowing sunlight to pass through small openings between your fingers. Another amusing projection method is to use a kitchen straining spoon or a pasta colander. Anything with tiny holes can be used to project the partially eclipsed Sun’s image: a straw hat, a cheese grater, a lawn chair having a loose weave fabric, etc.
 
Binocular Projection
 
Any pair of binoculars can be used to project a pair of images of the eclipsed Sun onto a piece of white cardboard. After focusing the binoculars on a distant object, just point the binoculars up at the Sun, but not aiming them with your eyes, and project their images onto a piece of stiff white cardboard placed 1-2 feet behind them. The farther away the screen is from the binoculars, the larger the projected image of the Sun. This takes a bit of practice to get the pointing just right so try it out on a sunny day before the eclipse.  
 
The same can be done with a tripod mounted telescope.
 
WARNING: Never look directly through the binoculars at either the Sun or the partially eclipsed Sun. 
 
Welder’s Glass
 
Though they give the Sun an unnatural green color, a widely available filter for safe solar eclipse viewing, and endorsed by NASA, is a number 14 welder’s glass. These filters normally protect a welder’s eyes from the intensely bright glare of a welding arc. They come in a variety of shades with number 14 being the darkest – be sure to get a number 14 for eclipse viewing. 
 
Welder’s glass filters are available through welding supply outlets and through retailers on the Internet. 
 
Again, only number 14 welder’s glass filters are safe to use for looking directly at the Sun. Stacking two number 7 filters will not duplicate a number 14 filter, get a number 14.  
 
Also, there is a welder’s filter that has a variable density. It changes darkness depending on the brightness of the welding arc (or light source) that it’s pointed towards. These variable density filters are NOT SAFE for looking at the Sun. 
 
Eclipse Glasses
 
Though it may already be too late to obtain, in recent years inexpensive eclipse glasses have become increasingly popular for safely viewing of solar eclipses. They usually consist of specially manufactured filters mounted in a simple cardboard frame. Eclipse glasses allow you to look directly at the eclipsed Sun since the filters safely protect your eyes from any harmful rays.
 
However, this method I would approach with the greatest of caution, as many sources are selling counterfeit “eclipse glasses”.  
 
NASA has issue a warning about these fake glasses, and named a few companies that are trustworthy providers of lenses or glasses. 
 
Here’s what you need to look for:
 
• The glasses should have certification information, with a designated ISO 12312-2 international standard.
• The actual manufacturer’s name and address should be printed somewhere on the glasses.
• Don’t use glasses that are wrinkled, scratched, or more than three years old.
• Don’t use regular sunglasses, no matter how dark they are.
 
The following are some tips to safely use eclipse glasses and filters. 
 
Stand still and cover your eyes with your eclipse glasses or filter before looking up at the bright Sun. After glancing at the Sun, turn away and remove your filter — do not remove it while looking at the Sun. 
 
If you travel to an area where you can view the total eclipse, within the path of totality, remove your solar filter only when the Moon completely covers the Sun’s bright face and it suddenly gets quite dark, to experience totality. But as soon as the bright Sun begins to reappear, replace your solar viewer to glance at the remaining partial phases.
 
First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur April 15 at 1:23 PM or 06:23 UTC.
 
During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.
 
The Lyrid Meteor Shower which, runs annually from April 16 – 25, peaks on the evening of April 22 and morning of April 23.   This is a minor shower, with only 12 to 24 meteors per hour. These meteors sometimes produce bright dust trails that last for several seconds.
 
This shower is produced by dust particles left behind by comet C/1861 G1 Thatcher, which was discovered in 1861.
 
Unfortunately, the glare of the full moon will block out all but the brightest meteors this year. But if you are patient, you may still be able to catch a few good ones. Best viewing will be from a dark location after midnight. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Lyra, but can appear anywhere in the sky.
The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on April 19, when she will be 252,044 miles from Earth.
 
April’s Full Moon will occur on April 23 at 6:51 PM CST or 23:51 UTC. This full moon was known by early Native American tribes as the Pink Moon because it marked the appearance of the moss pink, or wild ground phlox, which is one of the first spring flowers. This moon has also been known as the Sprouting Grass Moon, the Growing Moon, and the Egg Moon. Many coastal tribes called it the Fish Moon because this was the time that the shad swam upstream to spawn.
 
This moon has also been known as the Full Crow Moon, the Full Crust Moon, the Full Sap Moon, and the Lenten Moon.
 
During a Full Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -12.7.
 
 
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This month’s meeting will be on April 9 at 7PM. 
 
The meeting will held at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Calera.
 
Mark Wells
WD4NYL

Hi Everyone,

The Birminghamfest 2024 is almost here, and I hope you can attend.

This event will be held at the Trussville Civic Center on Friday March 15 from 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM and Saturday, March 16 from 8:30 AM to 4:00 PM.

The address is:

5381 Trussville-Clay Road
Trussville, AL 35173

There will be forums, vendors, ham radio testing and a flea market with parts and equipment needing a new home.

Among the various forums are:

ALERT/NWS – 9 AM – 10 AM in the Fireside 2 Room
ARRL/ARES – 10 AM – 11 AM in the Fireside 2 Room
ARRL AL Section – 11 AM – to Noon in the Fireside 2 Room
Alabama WX Preparation (Fox 6) – 11 AM – Noon in the Fireside 3 Room
Jefferson County ARES – Noon – 1 PM in the Fireside 1 Room

Admission is $10, which includes 1 prize ticket. Children under 12 will be admitted for free.

For more information go to http://birminghamfest.org/


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Alabama Traffic Net Mike Update

The Alabama Traffic Net Mike, which meets nightly on 3.965 MHz at 5:30 PM, will be changing its meeting time to 6:00 PM Central Time. This will be a permanent change unless band conditions present a problem.

If you have HF capability, I encourage you to support this net, as it is Alabama’s phone traffic net in the National Traffic System. During emergencies this frequency is the home of the Alabama Emergency Net Mike.

3.965 MHz LSB is Alabama’s HF frequency and it’s ham voice to the outside world.


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Birmingham NWS Spring 2024 Storm Spotter Courses


The Birmingham NWS office is presenting several online and one in person Basic Spotter Courses and an online Advanced Spotter Course this spring. These online classes allow individuals to complete the courses in the comfort of their own home or office using GoToWebinar.

By attending any course, which are free and runs about 2 hours, individuals or a group of individuals will become SKYWARN Storm Spotters.

Unless you are in need of or just want to attend a refresher Course, you do not need to attend more than one Basic SKYWARN Course, as the material covered is the same; however it is required you to attend at least one Basic SKYWARN Course before taking the Advanced SKYWARN Course.

These courses are two-way, meaning you will be able to interact with the meteorologist leading the training. You will be muted while training is in-progress, and unmuted when applicable (e.g., for questions); or, you can use the built-in chat feature.

How do you Attend an Online SKYWARN Spotter Class?

To avoid being hurried, give yourself at least 15 minutes prior to
the start of the class to complete the following steps:

1. Via the schedule below, register by clicking the link
corresponding to the class you’d like to attend.

2. Select the ‘join webinar’ button on the registration page or
in your confirmation email and follow the prompts.

3. Enjoy the class and ask questions.

The current schedule is as follows:

Basic Class Online Thursday, February 29 at 6:30PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6300674854341889882

Basic Class Online Wednesday, March 6 at 6:30 PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/5155626952501655645

Basic Class In Person Thursday, March 7 at 6:00PM to 8PM
Northport Police Department
3721 26th Avenue
Northport, AL 35473

Basic Class Online Thursday, March 14 at 6:30PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/2247228481522559579

Basic Class Online Thursday, March 20 at 1:00 PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/8713725744822051926

Advanced Online Thursday, March 26 at 6:30 PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3265170640177956951

These classes will help you provide the NWS the vital “ground truth” information they need to verify radar indications, target their attention and help you relay reports in a clear manner to the NWS

If you are within NWS Birmingham’s 39 county coverage area and when you can do so safely, send the NWS a report. Include photos if you are able to. Remember, be concise and accurate with your report — who, what, when, and where. Please do not relay reports based on what you are seeing/hearing on television or on your app.

Send a report via:

Submit a Storm Report (weather.gov)

https://www.facebook.com/NWSBirmingham

On Twitter, tag The NWS in a Tweet or send a direct message. Include #alwx on your social media report and include a photo if possible

Call the NWS directly at 205-664-3010, option 2

Amateur Radio
Report:

Hail (any size):
Measure the largest hail stone or compare it to a common item.

0.25″ or less – pea
0.50″ – mothball
0.75″ – dime/penny
0.88″ – nickel
1.00″ – quarter (severe threshold)
1.25″ – half dollar
1.50″ – walnut/ping pong ball
1.75″ – golf ball
2.00″ – hen egg
2.50″ – tennis ball
2.75″ – baseball
3.00″ – tea cup
4.00″ – grapefruit
4.50″ – softball
Strong or damaging winds
What was damaged and to what extent?

Healthy trees snapped or uprooted
Large tree branches blown down
Power poles downed
Structures damaged (businesses, homes, outbuildings, etc.)
Rotating wall cloud, funnel cloud, or tornado
Be sure to confirm rotation and include the direction and distance of these features from your location.

 


Flooding:

Focus on water 6″ or more in depth that is rapidly flowing or standing water that is 3′ or more deep. Is the flood water threatening life or property? Are waterways/streams and creeks rapidly rising?

Severe Thunderstorm criteria (any combination of the following):

Winds of 58+ mph
Hail of 1″ in diameter or larger
A tornado

The knowledge gained by participating in these classes helps SKYWARN Net Control stations filter reports, by giving them knowledge of what reporting stations are trying to describe. This way they can tell if the report is a valid report, an invalid report by an overly excited operator or a valid, but poorly described report, which without this knowledge would be mistakenly dismissed.

For further information on these classes visit: http://www.weather.gov/bmx/skywarnschedule


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Mark’s Almanac

Originally called Martius, March is the third month & first month of the Roman calendar. March is named for Mars, the god of war, and was the start of the military campaign season.

The beginning of “Meteorological Spring”, which is based on changes in temperature and precipitation, not the solar angle, is March 1

March is a wet month. Most floods occur in March and rainfall averages around 6 inches.
Tornadic activity sharply increases in March with there being an increase of 2.2 times the number of tornadoes over the February amount. The focal point for this tornadic activity is the Gulf States.

March is the hail maximum for the Deep South. This is due both to the number of thunderstorms & due to the freezing level still being near the surface. This allows hail to form at lower altitudes and reach the ground intact, as opposed to summer months, when the freezing level is higher and near surface level temperatures are higher melting the hail into liquid before impact.

North Atlantic Tropical activity remains at a minimum. From 1851 to 2023 there has been only one Hurricane to occur. A 100 MPH unnamed Hurricane which affected the Lesser Antilles in March 6- 9, 1908. Some sources also cite a pre-Civil War Tropical Storm also occurring, but others do not.

South Atlantic Tropical activity doesn’t have a sharp peak as the North Atlantic season does in September, however currently March has a thin lead in activity, as from 1957 – 2024 there have been 88 identified Tropical or Subtopical Storms, including the only known South Atlantic Hurricane – Hurricane Catarina which struck Brazil March 28, 2004.

Brazilian authorities at first were unwilling to admit that Catarina was a hurricane, for up until that time is was considered impossible for the South Atlantic to generate a tropical system, due to wind shear, cold sea surface temperatures and the lack of storm systems from which a storm could develop. With extensive damage from an impossible storm looking at them, they finally reluctantly agreed that maybe NOAA’s opinion was right.

As I write this Tropical Storm Akara, which formed February 20 off the coast of Brazil, has just dissipated.

Meanwhile, back in Alabama…

Killing frosts are gone and the last average frost is on March 16.

March is a snow month for Alabama & there is a 45% chance of snow up to one inch, and an 8% chance of one inch or more.

The good news is that there is hope on the horizon as Spring will arrive at Vernal Equinox on March 19 at 10:06 PM CDT or 03:06 UTC March 20.

The Sun will shine directly on the equator and there will be nearly equal amounts of day and night throughout the world. This is also the first day of fall, or Autumnal Equinox, in the Southern Hemisphere.

Remember to get the eggs out, as it is said that you can stand eggs on their ends at the hour of equinox.

You might also think about the Aurora, for Auroras love equinoxes. At this time of year, the interplanetary magnetic field or IMF can link up with Earth’s magnetic field, prying open cracks. Solar wind then pours in to fuel displays of the aurora borealis with no geomagnetic storm required. Researchers call this the Russell-McPherron Effect, named after the physicists who first described it in the 1970s

If you do see them be cautioned though, for among some northern Native American tribes it is said that as you are looking at the northern lights do not wave sing or whistle at them. Alerted to your presence the spirits of the lights will come down and take you away.

This month sees the return of Ruby Throated Humming Birds and the Giant Yellow Sulfur Butterflies that migrated south during the Fall and the clouds of pollen that we love so well.

Days grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon rapidly increases from 49.0 degrees at the beginning of the month to 60.7 degrees at the end. Daylight increases from 11 hours 28 minutes on March 1 to 12 hours 30 minutes on March 31.

Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:

March 1 Sunrise 6:16 AM Sunset 5:44 PM
March 15 Sunrise 6:58 AM Sunset 6:55 PM
March 31 Sunrise 6:36 AM Sunset 7:07 PM *Daylight Savings Time

Why the sunrise is later midmonth as opposed to the first and the last of the month is due to a combination of the quirks in the Earth’s orbit, it’s axial tilt and it being near equinox affecting the length of day based on sunlight as opposed to the measurement of time based on the Earth’s rotation.

Daylight Savings Time begins at 2 AM on March 10. So, remember to “spring forward” one hour. This, of course means I will lose one hour of “beauty sleep”, which is something I desperately need.

I don’t particularly care for Daylight Savings Time. I share the same opinion I found on the “Republic Of Lakotah” website:

When told the reason for daylight saving time the old Native American said…“Only a white man would believe that you could cut a foot off the top of a blanket and sew it to the bottom of a blanket and have a longer blanket.”

Saint Patrick’s Day is Thursday March 17, and you might better participate by wearing a Touch O’ The Green or you will be plagued by leprechauns and gnomes. Not a pleasant experience, I can assure you.

Looking skyward, the Sun, magnitude -26.8 is in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

Mercury, magnitude -1.4, in Aquarius The Water Bearer, is lost in the glow of the Sun until midmonth when he reemerges into the evening sky.

On the 15th he will rise at 7:10 PM CST, at an altitude of 9° above the western horizon setting 1 hour and 3 minutes after the Sun at 7:57 PM.

Mercury’s 88 day orbit around the Sun will carry him to his closest point to the Sun or “Perihelion”, 28,816,300 miles from the Sun on March 17.

He will reach his greatest altitude above the horizon and greatest separation from the Sun, or “Greatest Eastern Elongation” on March 24, when he reaches 12° above the western horizon.

His evening visit will be brief though, as he will lower back into the glare of the Sun, disappearing from view on the 28th.

Venus, magnitude –3.9, in Capricornus, The Sea Goat, is very low in the predawn morning sky as she is lowering ever closer toward the horizon and the glow of the Sun.

At the first of the month, she rises at 5:06 AM CST, 1 hour and 6 minutes before the Sun, and reaches an altitude of 9° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn breaks at 5:57 AM CST.

She will disappear into the Sun’s glow on March 7.

She will reach “Aphelion” or her furthest distance from the Sun, 67,857,739 miles from the Sun on March 19.
Earth and her Moon, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in Virgo, The Virgin.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude +9.0, is in Sagittarius, The Archer.

Mars, with his moons Phobos and Deimos, magnitude +1.3, in Capricornus, The Sea Goat, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Jupiter, and his 95 moons and (invisible from Earth) ring, magnitude -2.2, is in Aries, The Ram, is an early evening object and is receding into the evening twilight.

At the beginning of the month, he will become visible around 5:59 PM CST, 53° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will continue to be observable until around 10:23 PM, when he sinks below 7° above the horizon.

By midmonth he becomes accessible around 7:10 PM CDT, 42° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will continue to be observable until around 10:40 PM CDT, when he sinks below 7° above the horizon.

By the end of the month, he will become accessible around 7:22 PM CDT, 30° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness and will continue to be observable until around 9:53 PM, when he sinks below 7° above the horizon.

Saturn, magnitude +1.0, and his 146 moons and extensive debris ring system, is in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Uranus, magnitude +5.8, and his 27 moons and ring, in Aries, The Ram, is an early evening object, becoming visible around 6:42 PM CST, 52° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will continue to be observable until around 11:04 PM, when he sinks below 21° above the western horizon.

By midmonth he will become visible around 7:53 PM CDT, at an altitude of 39° above the western horizon, as dusk fades into darkness. He will continue to be observable until 11:11 PM CDT, when he sinks below 21° above the western horizon.

At month’s end he becomes visible around 8:06 PM CDT, at an altitude of 24° above the western horizon. He will continue to be observable until around 11:12 PM CDT, when he sinks below 21° above the western horizon.

Neptune, magnitude +7.8, and his 14 moons and ring, in Pisces, The Fish, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

He will pass close to the Sun or be in Conjunction on March 17,

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim +14.5 in Capricorn, The Sea Goat.

Dwarf Planet 136108 Haumea, her ring and moons Hiʻiaka and Namaka, shines at a faint magnitude of +17.4 in Bootes, The Herdsman.

Dwarf Planet 136472 Makemake with his moon S/2015 (136472) 1, nicknamed MK1 by the discovery team, shines faintly at magnitude +17.1 in Coma Berenices.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia, originally referred to as Xena and Gabrielle, is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude +18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least six additional bodies with the preliminary criteria for identifying dwarf planets, and though not “officially” declared as such, are generally called dwarf planets by astronomers as well.

90482 Orcus, and his moon Vanth shines at magnitude 19.1 between Hydra and Sextans, The Sextant.

50000 Quaoar, and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Scutum, The Shield.

90377 Sedna, the coldest, and at one time, the most distant known place in the Solar System, glows faintly at magnitude +20.9 in Taurus, The Bull.

225088 Gonggong, originally nicknamed Snow White by the discovery team, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

2014 UZ224 nicknamed “DeeDee” for “Distant Dwarf” is 8.5 billion miles from the Sun, at magnitude +23.1 in Eridanus, The River.

120347 Salacia, and her moon Actaea glows at magnitude 20.7 in Andromeda, The Chained Woman. Salacia is considered a “borderline” Dwarf Planet. Some astronomers saying she “most certainly is a Dwarf Planet”, while others disagreeing based on her size, saying she is too small to have compressed into a fully solid body, to have been resurfaced, or to have collapsed into “hydrostatic equilibrium”, that is to assume spherical shape like a planet.

This dark world lies beyond the orbit of Neptune, orbiting 4,164,420,166 miles from the Sun.

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12,239,800,450 miles or 18 hours, 15 minutes and 6 seconds from Earth, , glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.

The most distant man-made object, and the most distant known object in the Solar System Voyager 1, still operating after 46 years, 5 months and 19 days is 15,142,427,4210 miles, or in Light Time, 22 hours, 34 minutes and 47 Seconds from Earth as of 12:42 PM, February 24, 2024, sailing 38,027 miles per hour through Ophiuchus the Serpent Bearer.

There are 1,308,871 known asteroids as of February 24, 2024, per NASA.

5587 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of February 24, 2024 per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur March 3, at 9:25 AM CST or 11:25 UTC.

During a Quarter Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.

New Moon will occur on March 10 at 4:02 AM CDT or 9:02 UTC. The Moon will be located on the same side of the Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky. This is the best time of the month to observe faint objects such as galaxies and star clusters because there is no moonlight to interfere.

You have heard of a “Supermoon”, which occurs when a Full Moon occurs at her nearest point to the Earth. When a New Moon occurs near her closest point to Earth, it is known as a Super New Moon.

This month’s New Moon is a Super New Moon.

The Moon will be at Perigee or its closest approach to Earth on March 10, when she will be 221,764 miles from Earth.

First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur March 16 at 11:11 PM CDT or 6:11 UTC.

During a Quarter Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.

Vernal Equinox occurs at 10:06 PM CDT or 03:06 UTC March 20. The Sun will shine directly on the equator and there will be nearly equal amounts of day and night throughout the world. This is also the first day of fall, autumnal equinox, in the Southern Hemisphere.

The name “Vernal” comes from the Latin vernālis, which means “of those things pertaining to the spring”.

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on March 23 when she will be 252,458 miles from Earth.

March’s Full Moon will occur on March 25 at 2:01 AM CDT or 9:01 UTC. This full moon was known by early Native American tribes as “Worm Moon”. So called because the rains disturb the earthworms & they are seen wiggling around after the rains.

This moon has also been known as the Full Crow Moon, the Full Crust Moon, the Full Sap Moon, and the Lenten Moon.

This month’s Full Moon is a Micromoon, as it is occurring as the Moon is at her farthest distance from the Earth.

During a Full Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -12.7.

There will be a Penumbral Lunar Eclipse March 25. A penumbral lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes through the Earth’s partial shadow, or penumbra. During this type of eclipse, the Moon will slightly darken, but not completely. The eclipse will be visible throughout all North America, Mexico, Central America, and South America.

The eclipse will begin at 11:53 PM CDT or 4:53 UTC
Maximum eclipse will occur at 2:12 AM CDT or 7:12 UTC
The eclipse ends at 4:32 AM CDT or 9:32 UTC

Eclipses usually come in pairs. The second eclipse with be the Great North American Eclipse, a total eclipse which will cut through the central US on April 8, which in Alabama will be a partial solar eclipse.

Celestial carnivores are emerging from hibernation. After dinnertime at this time of year, five carnivore constellations are rising upright in a ragged row from the northeast to south. They’re all seen in profile with their noses pointed up and their feet (if any) to the right. These are The Great Bear, Ursa Major in the northeast, with the Big Dipper as its brightest part, Leo the Lion in the east, Hydra the Sea Serpent in the southeast, The Lesser Dog, Canis Minor higher in the south-southeast, and The Greater Dog, bright Canis Major in the south.

Sirius, shining at magnitude −1.46, the brightest nighttime star, blazes high in the south on the meridian, in Canis Major by about 8 or 9 p.m. Using binoculars, you will find a fuzzy spot 4 degrees south of Sirius, directly below it when the constellation is directly South. Four degrees is somewhat less than the width of a typical binocular’s field of view.

That dim little patch of gray haze is open star cluster Messier 41, a small gravitationally bound group of 100 stars about 2,200 light-years away and moving away from us at 869 miles per second. Sirius, by comparison, is only 8.6 light-years away.

Canopus, shining at magnitude -0.72, making it the second-brightest star after Sirius, lies 36° almost due south of Sirius. That’s far enough south that it never appears above the horizon if you are above latitude 37° N, such as southern Virginia, southern Missouri and central California. Luckily we lie south of that latitude, with our horizon lying, in the case of Central Alabama, around latitude 33°.

Canopus is located in the southern constellation Carina, The Keel, part of the defunct constellation Argo Navis, the ship of Jason and the Argonauts who searched for the Golden Fleece.

The constellation of Argo was introduced in ancient Greece. However, due to the massive size of Argo Navis and the sheer number of stars that required separate designation, Nicolas Louis de Lacaille divided Argo into three sections in 1763, including Carina, the Hull or Keel, Puppis, the Poop Deck, and Vela the Sails.

In the 19th century, these three became established as separate constellations, and were formally included in the list of 88 modern IAU constellations in 1930.

Canopus, 313 light years away, crosses low above the horizon, due south just 21 minutes before Sirius and is worthy of a peak.

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This month’s meeting will be on March 12 at 7PM.

The meeting will held at the National Weather Service Forecast Office at the Shelby County Airport in Calera.

I hope to see you there!

Mark Wells
WD4NYL
Editor
ALERT Newsletter

ALERT / National Weather Service Birmingham Coverage Area

  • ALERT covers the BMX county warning area. Presently, this includes: Autauga, Barbour, Bibb, Blount, Bullock, Calhoun, Chambers, Cherokee, Chilton, Clay, Cleburne, Coosa, Dallas, Elmore, Etowah, Fayette, Greene, Hale, Jefferson, Lamar, Lee, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo, Marion, Montgomery, Perry, Pickens, Pike, Randolph, Russell, Shelby, St Clair, Sumter, Talladega, Tallapoosa, Tuscaloosa, Walker, Winston