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Hi Everyone,

I hope this finds you well during these stormy days.

2023 has proven to be an active tornado year. January was the second most active January on record for tornadoes, with 168 preliminary tornado reports, second only to January 1999, which had 214 tornadoes nationwide. Storms continued through February and March, including a severe weather outbreak on March 2 & 3.

AccuWeather, an American media company that provides commercial weather forecasting services worldwide. predicts 1,055 to 1,200 twisters will touch down across the United States throughout 2023, slightly below the historical average of 1,225.

The devastation we see sin Mississippi and Arkansas goes to underscore the danger and vulnerability we all face from a tornado that season is far from over.

The threat is real and ongoing, so make sure you have a plan in place and a safe place in mind, both at home, school and at work should a tornado threaten you or your loved ones.

Pay attention to forecasts – possible tornado threats are usually forecast many days in advance.

Pay attention Watches and Warnings – have multiple reliable ways to receive them wherever you
may be located, whether at home or at work. Also remember that tornado watches include the wording “in and close to the watch area.” Just because your county is not in the watch doesn’t necessarily mean you should let your guard down.

Pay attention to the conditions around you – brief spin up tornados can occur between radar
scans or in areas of problematic radar coverage, either due to the distance from the radar, signal obstructions or atmospheric conditions affecting the radar returns.

Do understand that with the exception of the NWS, state and local authorities, and local news media, not everyone will give you good valid information or instructions as to what to do in an emergency and social media is perhaps one of the worst sources, as everyone is an “expert” online and on Facebook.

Beware of well-meaning misinformed people.

Heed the advice of learned authorities and reliable sources, as they know what is or may be about to happen and any overriding circumstances and conditions that may be present that may alter the usual recommended actions.

Stay safe!

See: Tornado Safety (Online Tornado FAQ) (noaa.gov)


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Amateur Radio Testing Opportunities

One cloudy day in November 1977 I sat in Jim Bonner, K4UMD’s ham shack nervously scribbling as he sent Morse Code at 5 WPM. He read my chicken scratches, smiled and said “well if anyone ever asks if you passed the 5 WPM test, you can tell them you did.” Then he then handed the written test, which I crawled through and after rereading the tests and my answers, I handed it back to him. He then read the answers and said, “I think you passed, but the FCC has to grade it”.

New hams stress out that the FCC hasn’t issued their license yet. “I mean honestly, it’s been 48 hours since I took the test.”

In 1977 I checked to mailbox every day for a month anxiously waiting for the FCC’s verdict – pass or fail. Then on December 27, 1977, I saw an oblong envelope from the FCC in Gettysburg, PA that said “WD4NYL”.

It seemed miraculous. I really had passed the blooming thing. WD4NYL. I’ve never forgotten the feeling when I saw that, and I guess for sentimental reasons I never changed call signs. It’s “vintage” now.

Getting into ham radio was one of the best decisions I’ve made in life. 99% of the people I have met have been some of the nicest folk you could ever meet. The remaining 1% lunatic portion may have, well, actually there is no “may” about it, have raised my blood pressure and at times tempted me to get a voodoo doll from the French Quarter of New Orleans, but, they couldn’t stop me.

Today, entering ham radio is easier than ever before, with online resources and unlike the 70’s and 80’s where we waited for the FCC’s three visits to Birmingham (“dates to be determined”), or travelling to Atlanta, there are frequent testing opportunities by multiple groups.

If you have never gotten your ham radio license, which you need to legally transmit on a ham radio, and to gain the knowledge of how things do and do not work and how to communicate effectively, there are several opportunities which will be available to you in the near future.

Amateur radio license examinations will be held on the following dates:

April 8, 2023 – Jasper, Walker County
Sponsor: Walker County ARES
Location: American Red Cross
Time: 9:00 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

April 15, 2023 – Helena, Shelby County
Sponsor: KF4IOL Fellowship ARC
Location: Helena Sports Complex
Time: 1:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

April 15, 2023 – Pell City, St. Clair County
Sponsor: Pell City VE Team
Location: Pell City Public Library
Time: 11:30 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

April 22, 2023 – Pinson, Jefferson County
Sponsor: CAVEC
Location: Pinson Valley High School
Time: 9:00 AM
http://www.cavechamexam.com/pinson-al-exam-site-info.html

May 6, 2023 – Columbiana, Shelby County
Sponsor: Central Alabama ARC
Location: Columbiana Church of Nazarene
Time: 2:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

May 13, 2023 – Jasper, Walker County
Sponsor: Walker County ARES
Location: American Red Cross
Time: 9:00 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

May 14, 2023 – Birmingham, Jefferson County
Sponsor: ARA Group
Location: BARC Meeting Location – Birmingham
Time: 2:00 PM
https://www.aragroup.org/calendar/calendar.htm

May 15, 2023 – Helena, Shelby County
Sponsor: KF4IOL Fellowship ARC
Location: Helena Sports Complex
Time: 1:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

May 20, 2023 – Pell City, St. Clair County
Sponsor: Pell City VE Team
Location: Pell City Public Library
Time: 11:30 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

May 27, 2023 – Pinson, Jefferson County
Sponsor: CAVEC
Location: Pinson Valley High School
Time: 9:00 AM
http://www.cavechamexam.com/pinson-al-exam-site-info.html

June 6, 2023 – Columbiana, Shelby County
Sponsor: Central Alabama ARC
Location: Columbiana Church of Nazarene
Time: 2:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

June 10, 2023 – Jasper, Walker County
Sponsor: Walker County ARES
Location: American Red Cross
Time: 9:00 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

Jun 11, 2023 – Hoover, Shelby County
Sponsor: ARA Group
Location: Hoover, Shelby County
Time: 2:00 PM
https://www.aragroup.org/calendar/calendar.htm

June 17, 2023 – Helena, Shelby County
Sponsor: KF4IOL Fellowship ARC
Location: Helena Sports Complex
Time: 1:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

June 17, 2023 – Pell City, St. Clair County
Sponsor: Pell City VE Team
Location: Pell City Public Library
Time: 11:30 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

June 27, 2023 – Pinson, Jefferson County
Sponsor: CAVEC
Location: Pinson Valley High School
Time: 9:00 AM
http://www.cavechamexam.com/pinson-al-exam-site-info.html

July 1, 2023 = Columbiana, Shelby County
Sponsor: Central Alabama ARC
Location: Columbiana Church of Nazarene
Time: 2:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

July 8, 2023 – Jasper, Walker County
Sponsor: Walker County ARES
Location: American Red Cross
Time: 9:00 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

Jul 9, 2023 – Birmingham, Jefferson County
Sponsor: ARA Group
Location: BARC Meeting Location – Birmingham
Time: 2:00 PM
https://www.aragroup.org/calendar/calendar.htm

July 15, 2023 – Helena, Shelby County
Sponsor: KF4IOL Fellowship ARC
Location: Helena Sports Complex
Time: 1:00 PM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

July 15, 2023 – Pell City, St. Clair County
Sponsor: Pell City VE Team
Location: Pell City Public Library
Time: 11:30 AM (Walk-ins allowed)
Learn More

July 22, 2023 – Pinson, Jefferson County
Sponsor: CAVEC
Location: Pinson Valley High School
Time: 9:00 AM
http://www.cavechamexam.com/pinson-al-exam-site-info.html

The Tuscaloosa County VE Group (not affiliated with TARC) is currently scheduling test sessions on an “as needed” basis.

If you are interested in testing, whether to obtain a new Technician license or to upgrade your existing license, contact us Allan or Bridget Thompson via email ks4yt@yahoo.com or telephone at 205-919-7505.

Tuscaloosa Amateur Radio Club (tclarc.org)

For information on exams near you if you are not in the Jefferson Shelby County areas see:
Find an Amateur Radio License Exam in Your Area (arrl.org)

Online Exam sessions do exist, created April 30, 2020, as a byproduct of COVID19 restrictions.

Ham radio license tests are administered by Volunteer Exam Coordinators (VECs) that are approved by the FCC to administer the exam.

There is some setup required with a webcam, a Zoom meeting, and possibly a qualified proctor – it all depends on which VEC you choose to administer your exam. Each VEC will have their own detailed requirements and instructions.

Before you get in touch with a VEC to try to schedule your exam, make sure you have studied for the exam and can easily score the 74% required to pass.

See: https://hamradioprep.com/

The only concern I have about the online approach is that it totally omits mentoring or “Elmering” process / opportunities where hams learn from each other, which in my mind is a two way street. Older hams mentoring the younger hams using their experience and younger hams mentoring us old goats, as the younger hams know how to integrate computer technology in ways us old goats, or at least this old goat, can barely comprehend. We need each other.

That’s were the value of getting involved with the ham radio clubs come in.

That said, online sources, per the ARRL site are:

W9TWJ VETEAM
Contact: Tanner Jones
Email: W9TWJ@arrl.net
Sponsor: Unsponsored
Website: https://w9twj.com/exams/
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/W9TWJ

KA4KBX VETEAM
Contact: Gary Pike
Email: vetesting@yahoo.com
Sponsor: KJ4PJE PARC
Website: https://parcradio.org/pages/online.html
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/KJ4PJE

N0ZRD VETEAM
Contact: Gordon Hanson
Email: N0ZRD@mnyarc.org
Sponsor: MNYARC/KOLTC.org
Website: https://exam.mnyarc.org
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/N0ZRD

KK7GKO VETEAM
Contact: ‘Gene’ Cecil McDole
Email: genemcdole2@gmail.com
Sponsor: PARC-US
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/PARC-US

KB7UTV KC7QJO VETEAM
Contact: Lawrence Simon
Email: larry@simonlj.net
Sponsor: Las Vegas VE Team
Website: https://www.lvhamtest.us/video-supervised-license-exam-sessions/
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/KC7QJO

W4WRE VETEAM
Contact: Rodney Webb
Email: W4WREares@gmail.com
Sponsor: Lakeway ARC – W2IQ
Website: http://www.hamonlinetests.com/
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/W4WRE

NL7CW VETEAM
Contact: Brandin Hess
Email: testing@aarg.club
Sponsor: Last Frontier Volunteer Examiner Club, Inc.
Website: https://aarg.club/?page_id=14
Exam Website: https://hamexamgen.com/schedule.php

WB9ZPH VETEAM
Contact: Janet Crenshaw
Email: wb9zph@gmail.com
Sponsor: WB9ZPH
Website: https://sites.google.com/site/wb9zph
Exam Website: http://hamstudy.org/sessions/wb9zph

AD6ZH VETEAM
Contact: Morris Jones
Email: ad6zh.mj@gmail.com
Sponsor: Silicon Valley VE Group – register on website or email team for an appt.
Website: http://www.svve.org

N9LHS VETEAM
Contact: Linda Straubel
Email: straue75@gmail.com
Sponsor: Daytona Beach ARA – contact team (7:30pm testing Mon-Thurs)
Website: https://www.dbara.org/about/testing-sessions/
Exam Website: https://www.dbara.org/about/testing-sessions/

N2YGK VETEAM
Contact: Alan Crosswell
Email: alan+exams@columbia.edu
Sponsor: Columbia University VE Team ARC
Website: https://www.w2aee.columbia.edu/content/remote-license-exams
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/W2AEE

AH0A VETEAM
Contact: Joseph Speroni
Email: ah0a@arrl.net
Sponsor: Emergency Amateur Radio Club – ZOOM video session
Website: http://earchi.org/
Exam Website: http://hameducation.org/register/

WF9S VETEAM
Contact: Atsunobu Tama
Email: liaison@ve-kobe.matrix.jp
Sponsor: ARRL VE Kobe
Website: http://www.ve-kobe.matrix.jp/
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/wf9s

KM6ZQB VETEAM
Contact: Heather Parker
Email: parker_prince@yahoo.com
Sponsor: San Diego ARRL VE Team
Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/KM6ZQB-D
Exam Website: http://hamstudy.org/sessions/arrl/km6zqb

K4WVZ VETEAM
Contact: David Robinson
Email: davidmrobinson15@gmail.com
Sponsor: Sun City W4SPC – email team for an appointment

KT4V VETEAM
Contact: Ken Zieleck
Email: zieleck@gmail.com
Sponsor: Carteret Cnty ARS – email team for an appointment
Website: http://www.w4ymi.org/

WW1RF VETEAM
Contact: Allan Ryan
Email: testing@barnstableARC.org
Sponsor: Barnstable ARC – on demand testing, EMAIL team for an appointment
Website: https://www.barnstablearc.org/?q=node/12

KD8JBS VETEAM
Contact: Benjamin Murray
Email: kd8jbs@arrl.net
Sponsor: Williams County ARC
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/kd8jbs

K3BV VETEAM
Contact: Peter Dernikos
Email: info@vea.org.au
Sponsor: Book a time slot BEFORE registering on exam website.
Website: http://www.vea.org.au/book-us-online-exam
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/K3BV/

N8JMW VETEAM
Contact: Jacqueline Welch
Email: n8jmw2@gmail.com
Sponsor: Geauga ARA
Website: https://geaugaara.org/
Exam Website: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/N8JMW
Additional ARRL VE Teams
For additional ARRL teams offering remote online exams visit: https://hamstudy.org/sessions/arrl/remote

Becoming a ham operator is one of the wisest decisions I made.

Whether you become a ham due to interests in radio technology, severe weather or emergency preparedness, I invite you to join the fun.

And, with all these testing opportunities available why wait?

For more information see:

Amateur Radio – Becoming A Licensed Operator

https://alertalabama.sharepoint.com/:w:/s/ALERTOperationalMembers/EZqBOkJRHoFKkyTtjXWiCvoBUsxigEGL_NQD1Nv0XLNKqA?e=t7fVrh

Getting Licensed (arrl.org)

I hope to see you on the air!

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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 2022 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 2022, 9781 tornadoes were reported. From 1950 – 2022 there were causing, as of 2022, 1946 deaths and as of 2013, 29,090 injuries.

As of 2017, Oklahoma leads the nation in killer violent tornados, having had 64, followed by Iowa with 54, Texas with 53, Kansas with 48 and Alabama 44.

As of 2015, Alabama ranks fourth in the number of April tornadoes, following Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. They along with Illinois belong to the “over 400 club” having had over 400 tornadoes since 1950.

As of 2017 Alabama leads the nation in F5 & EF5 tornadoes, having had 9, followed by Oklahoma and Kansas with 8, and a two-way tie for third between Iowa and Texas with 6.

As of 2016 Alabama leads the nation in tornado deaths with 633, followed by Texas with 552 and Mississippi with 477.

The counties most likely to be struck by violent EF5 tornadoes are Lawrence, Limestone, Morgan, Madison and Marion, all of which have been struck three times.

Tuscaloosa has been stuck by four F4 & EF4 tornadoes including 1932, 1975, 2000 & 2011.

The suburbs of Birmingham, including Oak Grove, Pleasant Grove, McDonald Chapel and Smithfield have been struck by two F4 & EF4 tornadoes in 1956 & 2011 and by two F5 tornadoes in 1977 & 1998.

My Grandfather, who passed away in 1958, once said “someday a big tornado is going to go right up Jones Valley and tear everything up”.

Indeed, there is no logical or climatological reason why and an EF4 or EF5 tornado hasn’t struck or won’t strike the densely populated areas of Birmingham, including the high rises of downtown.

Whether it is due to “Divine Providence” or “random chance” otherwise known as “luck”, Birmingham has been spared.

When will that luck run out?

The Top 10 Counties for Tornadoes from 1950 – 2021 are:

Jefferson 105
Mobile 100
Baldwin 97
Cullman 95
Tuscaloosa 83
Madison 80
Marshall 72
Dekalb 68
Limestone 65
Walker 57

A large percentage of the Mobile and Baldwin County tornadoes were in association with landfalling tropical systems.

There is no basis to the myth that mountains can block tornadoes, and yet there is the strange coincidence that from the southern terminus of the Appalachian Mountains at Tannehill State Park in Tuscaloosa & Bibb Counties northeastward through Jefferson, Shelby, Blount, St. Clair, Marshall, Etowah, Dekalb and Cherokee Counties there are roughly twice as many tornadoes on the windward side of the Appalachian mountain range than on the leeward side.

But no matter where you might be reading this, always beware of the storms of April.

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 -26.8 is in Pisces, The Fish.

At the beginning of the month Mercury, magnitude -1.6, is in Pisces, The Fish, lies tow in the evening twilight. He with be half lit, or at “dichotomy” on April 8 and reach his highest point in the sky on April 9.

He reaches high highest point in the sky, or “Greatest Eastern Elongation “, reaching a peak altitude of 18° above the horizon at sunset on April 12 and his greatest visual separation from the Sun also on April 12.

He will then progressively get lower each night until finally disappearing from the night sky by months end.

Venus, magnitude –4.0 in Aries, The Ram, is the brilliant “Evening Star” dominating the Wester skies in the early evening. She becomes visible around 7:30 CDT, 31° above the horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. She will then sink towards the horizon, setting around 10 PM CDT.

Earth, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the constellation Virgo, The Virgin.

Mars, magnitude +0.9, in Taurus, The Bull, is an early evening object, becoming visible around 7:30 CDT, 74° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He then sinks towards the horizon, setting around 2 AM.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude 6.9 is in Coma Berenices, Berenice’s Hair

Jupiter, magnitude –2.1 in Pisces, The Fish, is sinking steadily towards the western horizon and will soon disappear, literally riding into the sunset. He becomes visible a little after 7 PM CDT, just 8° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness and sets 1 hour after sunset.

He will soon disappear from the evening sky and pass behind the Sun on April 11.

He will reach his furthest point from the Earth, its apogee on April 13.

Saturn, magnitude +0.9, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Uranus, magnitude +5.8, in Aries, The Ram, is moving ever closer to the sunset, becoming visible around 8 PM CDT, 28° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He then sink towards the horizon, around 10:30.

Neptune, 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) faintly shines at magnitude 17.1 in Coma Berenices.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude 18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least five 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, the Sea Monster and Serpens, The Snake.

50000 Quaoar,and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Ophiucus, The Serpent Bearer,

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, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

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

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, and asteroid unofficially called Asteroid 2018 AG37, and nicknamed FarFarOut, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.

FarFarOut is 12,246,241,135 miles or in Light Time, 18 hours, 15 minutes and 40.1951 seconds from Earth.

This object was discovered during an ongoing search for the source of the “gravity well” or the pull of gravity of a large body in space beyond Neptune that is apparently altering the path of objects in the outer solar system. The yet to be discovered Planet X, presumably is a Neptune sized planet tracing an unusual, elongated orbit in the outer solar system 20 times more distant from the Sun than Neptune.

There are 1,273,729 known asteroids as of March 22, per NASA.

5312 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of March 16, per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

April’s Full Moon will occur on April 5 at 11:37 PM CST or 04:37 UTC April 6. 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.

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur April 13 at 4:12 AM CDT or 09:12 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 15, when she will be 228,644 miles from Earth.

New Moon will occur on April 19 at 11:14 PM CDT or 04:15 UTC April 20. 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.

A Hybrid Solar Eclipse, which is an eclipse which occurs when the Moon is almost too close to the Earth to completely block the Sun and appears as a total eclipse to some parts of the world and an annular to others, will occur April 20.

The eclipse path will begin in the southern Indian Ocean and move across parts of western Australia and southern Indonesia. A partial eclipse will be visible throughout most of Indonesia and Australia.

While we are on the topic of eclipses, you should absolutely mark April 8, 2024 on your calendars, For on that date there will be a total eclipse which will pass through Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and New England. It will be a very deep partial eclipse in Alabama, Deeper than the eclipse of 2017. Two Total Eclipses will pass directly over South Alabama in 2045 & 2079, if you want to wait for them. I plan to anyway.

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.

The thin crescent moon will set early in the evening leaving dark skies for what should be an excellent show. Best viewing will be from a dark location after midnight. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Lyra but can appear anywhere in the sky.

First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur April 9 at 9:21 PM or 21:21 UTC.

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

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on April 28, when she will be 251,220 miles from Earth.

Evenings in early April offer an excellent opportunity to view the zodiacal light. Zodiacal light is a faint, roughly triangular whitish glow seen in the night sky which appears to extend up from the vicinity of the sun along the ecliptical plane. It is caused by sunlight scattered by space dust in the orbital plane of the Earth.

From the Northern Hemisphere, early spring is the best time of year to observe this elusive glow after sunset. It appears slightly fainter than the Milky Way, so you’ll need a clear moonless sky and an observing site located far from the city. Look for the cone-shaped glow, which points nearly straight up from the western horizon, after the last vestiges of twilight have faded away.

This is the time of year when the dim Little Dipper – Ursa Minor – juts to the right from the North Star, Polaris, which is the end of the Little Dipper’s handle, during late evening. The much brighter Big Dipper curls over high above it, “dumping water” into it. They do the reverse in the fall.

Now that it’s spring, the signature fall-and-winter constellation Cassiopeia is retreating down after dark. But for mid-northern latitudes Cassiopeia is circumpolar, never going away completely. Look for it fairly low in the north-northwest these evenings. It’s standing nearly on end.


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I am looking for articles and items for the Newsletter. One might say “the wellspring of ideas runneth dry”. Put, another way, I NEED HELP!

Any items will be appreciated. Send to wd4nyl@bellsoth.net

Thanks in advance!

This month’s meeting will be on April 11 at 7PM.

The meeting will held at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Calera and remotely as was last month’s meeting. Details and instructions will be issued as the time nears.

I hope to see you there!

Mark Wells
WD4NYL
Editor
ALERT Newsletter

Mark’s Weatherlynx
Weather Resource Database
www.freewebs.com/weatherlynx

Hi Everyone,

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

This event will be held at the Trussville Civic Center on Friday March 3 from 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM and Saturday, March 4 from 8:30 AM to 4:00 PM.

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

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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Birmingham NWS Spring 2023 Storm Spotter Courses


The Birmingham NWS office is presenting several online and in person Basic Spotter Courses and 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 Tuesday, March 2 at 6:30 PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6168173799236067157

Basic Class In Person Thursday, March 9 at 6:00PM

Haleyville City Hall
911 21st Street
Haleyville, AL 35565

Basic Class Online Thursday, March 9 at 6:30PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/1961787558016220501

Advanced Online Thursday, March 23 at 6:30 PM
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6907446934845704540

Basic Class Online Thursday, March 30 at 6:00PM

Tuscaloosa County Courthouse Annex
2513 7th Street
Tuscaloosa, AL 35401

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, via the direct number, by calling 205-664-3010 and pressing option 2, online at http://www.weather.gov/bmx/submit_storm_report or amateur radio.

This knowledge 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 2022 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 – 2022 there have been 87 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.

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 20 at 21:17 UTC or 3:17 PM CDT.

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 12. 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 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.

At the beginning of the month Mercury, magnitude -0.6 in Capricornus, is hidden deep in the sunrise. He will pass behind the Sun on March 17 and will be at Apogee or his farthest point from the Earth.

He will reach his closest distance from the Sun, or Perihelion, on March 31.

Venus, magnitude –3.9 in Pisces, The Fish, becomes visible around 6 PM, 24° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting 8 PM.

Venus & Jupiter will be next to each other or be in “Conjunction” on March 1, when they will be 0.5° apart.

Venus will pass just 0.1° North of Moon March 24.

Earth, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the constellation Pisces.

Mars, magnitude +0.3, in Taurus, The Bull, is an evening object. He becomes visible around 6 PM, 81° above the southern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He reaches his highest point in the sky around 6:30, 81° above your southern horizon. He will continue to be observable until around near 1 AM, when he sinks below 10° above your north-western horizon.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude 7,2 is in Virgo, The Virgin. He will reach “Opposition” or located directly opposite the Sun on March 21.

Jupiter, magnitude –2.1 in Pisces, The Fish, becomes visible around 6 PM, 27° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting a little after 8 PM.

Saturn, magnitude +0.9, in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is lost in the glow of the Sun.

Uranus, magnitude +5.8, in southwestern Aries, The Ram, is an early evening object.

He becomes visible around 7 PM, 51° above the western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting around 11 PM.

Neptune, magnitude +7.8 in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim 14.5 in Sagittarius, The Archer.

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) faintly shines at magnitude 17.1 in Coma Berenices.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude 18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least five 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, the Sea Monster and Serpens, The Snake.

50000 Quaoar,and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Ophiucus, The Serpent Bearer,

90377 Sedna, the coldest, and at one time, the most distant known place in the Solar System, glows faintly at magnitude +20.7 in Taurus, The Bull.

225088 Gonggong, and his moon Xiangli glows dimly at +21.5 magnitude in Aquarius, The Water Bearer.

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

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, and asteroid unofficially called Asteroid 2018 AG37, and nicknamed FarFarOut, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.

FarFarOut is 12,246,241,135 miles or in Light Time, 18 hours, 15 minutes and 40.1951 seconds from Earth.

This object was discovered during an ongoing search for the source of the “gravity well” or the pull of gravity of a large body in space beyond Neptune that is apparently altering the path of objects in the outer solar system. The yet to be discovered Planet X, presumably is a Neptune sized planet tracing an unusual, elongated orbit in the outer solar system 20 times more distant from the Sun than Neptune.

5272 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of February 21, per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on March 3 when she will be 252,208 miles from Earth.

March’s Full Moon will occur on March 7 at 6:42 AM CST or 12:42 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.

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

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur March 14 at 9:10 PM CDT or 03:10 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 March 19, when she will be 225,370 miles from Earth.

Vernal Equinox occurs at 21:17 UTC or 3:17 PM CDT on 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”.

New Moon will occur on March 21 at 11:25 AM CDT or 17:25 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 March 28 at 9:33PM or 03:33 UTC. During the Quarter Moons the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on March 31 when she will be 251,606 miles from Earth.

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 7 at 7PM.

The meeting will held at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Calera and remotely as was last month’s meeting. Details and instructions will be issued as the time nears.

I hope to see you there!

Mark Wells
WD4NYL
Editor
ALERT Newsletter

Mark’s Weatherlynx
Weather Resource Database
www.freewebs.com/weatherlynx

Hi Everyone,

Our spring tornado season is just around the corner and now is the time to review your plans and procedures for those storms to come.

Take this time to brush up on your skills. Do not wait until the sirens sound. For by then it may be too late.

In preparing, you should ask yourselves these questions:

Is my family shelter (and everyone should have one) ready?
Is my equipment, both antennae & radios working?
Are the batteries charged?
Are my communications channels still functional? Including RF, Internet & telephone resources.
Can I reliably receive weather watches and warnings?
If you are on the NWSChat or Slack Chat, is your password up to date?
Is your training and knowledge fresh, or do you need to do a quick review?

Are you prepared both at home and at work?

In preparing, remember that keeping yourself and your family alive and intact during and after the storms is your number one priority.

Here’s hoping that your February will be peaceful and safe.

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2022 Tornado Statistics


In 2022 Alabama was the second most active year for tornadoes on record, with 98 tornadoes, second only to the Super Outbreak of 2011.

The Top 10 years for Alabama tornadoes are:

1. 2011 – 145 Tornadoes
2. 2022 – 98 Tornadoes
3. 2008 – 94 Tornadoes
4. 2019 – 82 Tornadoes
5. 2009 – 80 Tornadoes
6. 2005 – 77 Tornadoes
7. 2020 – 71 Tornadoes
8. 2006 – 69 Tornadoes
9. 2021 – 67 Tornadoes
10. 2016 – 65 Tornadoes


One might ask why there has been such an increase in tornadoes in the 21st century?

Several factors might be at play including:

1. Improvements in NWS radar allowing detection of smaller tornadoes and refinement of detection techniques.
2. NWS & Broadcast media Storm Spotter training classes providing more trained “eyes on the sky”.
3. social media basically increases the number of spotters, whether they have received formal training or not. Which is where filtering of reports becomes crucial.
4. Broadcast media improvements, with reporters in the field, tower cams, etc.
5. An actual shift in Tornado Alley from the Midwest to the Mississippi & Alabama area.

One thing to consider is that there may be more tornadoes occurring in the less densely populated areas of Alabama than we realize, as the area thinly spread with spotters.

The complicated thing is that the western counties lie on the extreme range of the radar sites. Sumpter & Pickens County and for that matter Kemper & Noxubee County in Mississippi are covered by the Jackson MS, Columbus AFB, Mobile & Birmingham NEXRAD sites, but all at long range. The curvature of the Earth prevents a near ground level view. We can see what may be happening in the mid-levels of thunderstorms, but what is happening at the lower levels is an educated guess.
That’s why when I am elected President in 2024, one of my first Executive Orders, in addition to declaring the Crimson Tide a National Treasure, will be the establishment of a NEXRAD site either in York Alabama or Meridian Mississippi (depending on how many people voted for me in each – yes, I’m a crook) to plug that coverage gap.

That and each office will get a fleet of portable NEXRAD units that they can plunk down wherever they want, crank up a tower and after the storms pass move them on to the next area of interest.

In 2022 there were 43 EF0, 39 EF1, 14 EF2 and 2 EF3 Tornadoes.

The Birmingham County Warning Area had 50 Tornadoes
The Huntsville County Warning Area had 8 Tornadoes
The Mobile County Warning Area had 37 Tornadoes
The Alabama portion of the Tallahassee Warning Area had 2 Tornadoes

Monthly tornado totals were:

32 in March
20 in April
12 in November
11 in October
9 in February
7 in January
4 in May
3 in December
0 in June, July, August & September

There were 16 injuries and 3 fatalities

43 0ut of 67 counties had at least one tornado.

The Top 10 Counties for Tornadoes from 1950 – 2021 are:

Jefferson 105
Mobile 100
Baldwin 97
Cullman 95
Tuscaloosa 83
Madison 80
Marshall 72
Dekalb 68
Limestone 65
Walker 57

A large percentage of the Mobile and Baldwin County tornadoes were in association with landfalling tropical systems.

And 2023?

January 2023 has already set a new record for tornadoes, with 28 having occurred as of January 22.

So, with the year still very young, stay prepared, keep a jaundiced eye towards the sky, and remember that the question isn’t IF severe weather is coming, but WHEN.

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Mark’s Almanac

February, or Februarius, as the Romans called it, is named after the Latin term februum, which means “purification”. Ancient Rome celebrated the Februa purification ritual on February 15, which was Full Moon on the old lunar based Latin calendar.

February was not originally included in the Roman calendar, which began in March, but was added, along with January by Numa Pompilius around 713 BC, and until 450 BC was considered the last month of the year.

February was originally 29 days long, but one day was taken and added to August, so that Emperor Augustus’s month would be equal to Julius Caesar’s month of July. Now only Leap Year, which will next occur in 2024, has 29 days.

Ground Hog Day is on February 2 & believers will watch that flea bitten danged old Yankee Punxsutawney Phil and True Southern Gentleman Birmingham Bill, to see if they see their shadows. If so, prepare for six more weeks of winter.

How did we come up with Groundhog Day anyway?

It is said by one theory that the first day of Spring is about six weeks after Groundhog Day, on March 20 or 21. 1000 years ago when the world used the Julian calendar, Spring Equinox fell on March 16, which is exactly six weeks after February 2. So, if the groundhog saw his shadow on Groundhog Day there would be six more weeks of winter. But, if he didn’t, there would be only 42 more days of winter left instead. Get the calculator out and you will find that 42 days equals six weeks, so Groundhog Day may have started out as a practical joke.

The modern 21 Century version blurs this into saying that if a groundhog emerges from its burrow and fails to see its shadow, winter will soon end. If not, it will return into its burrow, and the winter will continue for 6 more weeks.

It is believed that the Germans in Pennsylvania brought Groundhog Day with them.

Morgantown, Pennsylvania storekeeper James Morris’ diary entry for Feb. 4, 1841 states “Last Tuesday, the 2nd, was Candlemas day, the day on which, according to the Germans, the Groundhog peeps out of his winter quarters and if he sees his shadow he pops back for another six weeks nap, but if the day be cloudy, he remains out, as the weather is to be moderate.”

So, how accurate is the little goomer?

Well, Groundhog Day believers claim a 75% to 90% accuracy rate. The National Climatic Data Center, on the other hand, says it’s more like 39%.

But you know how Heathens can be.

If the NCDC is right, maybe they can still use the critter anyway, by flipping the theory around, so if he predicts warmth, you go with winter & vice versa.

I think this is called “Inverse Forecasting”. Or it should be anyway.

In the Southern Hemisphere February is the equivalent of August. But, for us, February is a cold month with more snow falling in February than in any other month.

Statistically speaking, there is a 70% chance of snow flurries, and a 57% chance of snow up to one inch. There is a 13% chance of over one inch, and a 3% chance of 4 inches or more.

There is hope on the horizon though, as the worst of winter weather is usually over by February 15.

North Atlantic Tropical activity is at a minimum. From 1851 to 2022 there has been only one Tropical Storm to occur, 70 MPH Tropical Storm #1, which affected Florida on February 2 & 3, 1952.

Days grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon rapidly increases from 39.5 degrees at the beginning of the month to 48.6 degrees at the end. Daylight increases from 10 hours 35 minutes on February 1 to 11 hours 26 minutes on February 28.

Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:

February 1 Sunrise 6:44 AM Sunset 5:18 PM
February 14 Sunrise 6:33 AM Sunset 5:31 PM
February 28 Sunrise 6:17 AM Sunset 5:43 PM

Looking skyward, the Sun, magnitude -26.8 is in Capricornus.

At the beginning of the month Mercury, magnitude 0.00 in Sagittarius, The Archer, is emerging into the morning sky as it approaches greatest elongation west. From Birmingham, he is visible low in the southeast in the dawn sky, rising a little after 5:09 AM, a 1 hour and 36 minutes before the Sun, and reaching an altitude of 11° above the south-eastern horizon before fading from view as dawn.

Mercury’s 88 day orbit around the Sun will carry it to its furthest point to the Sun, or “Aphelion” at 0.47 AU or Astronomical Units, or 43,689,000 miles, on February 15.

Unlike most of the planets, which follow almost exactly circular orbits around the Sun only varying in their distance from the Sun by a few percent, Mercury has a significantly elliptical orbit.

His distance from the Sun varies between 0.307 AU or 28,537,000 miles at ”Perihelion”, the closest approach to the Sun, and 0.47 AU at Aphelion, his furthest distance from the Sun. This variation, of over 50%, means that his surface receives over twice as much energy from the Sun at Perihelion as compared to Aphelion.

Venus, magnitude -3.8 in Aquarius, The Water Bearer, shines brilliantly low in the west-southwest in evening twilight. Look for her far to the lower right of bright Jupiter above.

She becomes visible around 5:30, 15° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. She will then sink towards the horizon, setting 1 hour and 43 minutes after the Sun, or about a half hour after twilight’s end.

Earth, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the Constellation Hydra.

Mars, magnitude -0.5 in Taurus, The Bull, shines very high toward the south in early to mid-evening.

He becomes visible around 5:30 PM, 58° above the eastern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He then reaches his highest point in the sky, or “Culmination” around 8:00 PM, 80° above the southern horizon. He will continue to be observable until just after 2 AM, when he sinks below 8° above the north-western horizon.

Mars is fading, from magnitude –0.6 to –0.1 and shrinking as the Earth recedes from Him.

Mars will pass 1.1° South of the Moon on February 27.

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude 7.8, is in Virgo, The Virgin.

Jupiter, magnitude –2.2, in Pisces, The Fish, shines high in the southwest in twilight, becoming visible around 5:30 PM, 49° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting around 10 PM.

Jupiter will pass 1.2 North of the Moon on February 22.

Saturn, magnitude +0.9 in Capricornus, is hidden in the glow of the Sun and will pass behind the Sun or be in “Conjunction” on February 16 and will then emerge very low in the east-southeast morning twilight in late February.

Uranus, magnitude 5.8, is in Aries, and is high in the south-southwest in early evening. He becomes visible a little after 6:00 PM, 72° above the southern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness, at his highest point in the sky. He will continue to be observable until around 11 PM, when he sinks below 21° above the western horizon.

In binoculars Uranus is a little pinpoint “star” and in small telescopes with sharp optics, high power, and a spell of good seeing, a tiny, fuzzy ball.

Neptune, magnitude 7.8, in Aquarius-Pisces border, is about 11° to the lower right of Jupiter. He becomes accessible just after 6 PM 31° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting 3 hours and 46 minutes after the Sun at 9:00 PM.

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim 14.5 in Sagittarius, The Archer.

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) faintly shines at magnitude 17.2 in Coma Berenices or “Berenices Hair”.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude 18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least five 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 Serpens, The Snake.

50000 Quaoar, and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Ophiuchus, The Serpent Bearer.

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, 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.

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12.4 billion miles or 18.5 light hours from Earth, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.
.
5241 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of January18, per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on February 4, when she will be 252,572 miles from Earth.

Full Moon will occur February 5 at 12:30 PM CST or 18:30 UTC. The Moon will be located on the opposite side of the Earth as the Sun and its face will be fully illuminated. February’s Full Moon is “Full Snow Moon” in Native American folklore as the heaviest snows usually fall at this time of year. Since the harsh weather made hunting difficult, some tribes called it “Full Hunger Moon”.

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur February 13.

During a Quarter Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.
The Moon will be at Perigee or her closest approach to Earth on February 19, when she will be 222,617 miles from Earth.

New Moon occurs February 20 at 1:08 AM or 07:08 UTC when the Moon will 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 February 27.

During the Quarter Moons the Moon is only 10% as bright as a Full Moon.

Perhaps the biggest astronomical news of the month is Comet ZTF (C/2022 E3).

Comet ZTF (C/2022 E3) Is a relatively bright comet visible in binoculars and a pretty sight in modest telescopes in clear non-light polluted skies. Social media would have you believe that this is the ”comet of the century”, but we all know how social media can be.

Observers with dark, moonless skies may spot the comet with the naked eye as it sails between the Big and Little Dippers.

Current visual magnitude estimates put Comet ZTF at between magnitude 6.5 and 7.0. It should peak around magnitude 5.5 in early February.

I can tell you straight up, that you need to be away from city lights to really see this.

The least light polluted skies in Alabama are in a crescent shaped area of west Alabama from west of Tuscaloosa to near the Mississippi border and north and south of that line. An especially good area is southwest Alabama from south of Tuscaloosa to north of Mobile. Another area is southeast of Montgomery towards Eufaula.

Light Pollution Map – DarkSiteFinder.com

But, anywhere away from the pea soup, streetlamp, LED – “Leaves Eyes Damaged” headlight infested cities will help.

You will probably have to use “averted vision”, a trick astronomers use to see faint objects.

Averted vision is a technique for viewing faint objects which uses your peripheral vision instead of looking directly at the object.

This technique compensates for fact that the retina of the human eye has virtually no rods, the cells which detect dim light in black and white near the focal point of the eye, but, has mostly cone cells, which serve as bright light and color detectors and are not as useful during the night.
This situation results in a decrease in visual sensitivity in central field of vision at night.

But by looking as an object a little off to the nasal side of the field of view, which avoids the possibility that the object will be imaged on the blind spot, which everyone has at approximately 15 degrees on the cheek side of the field of vison, you can use the most light sensitive part of the eye, which is around 20 degrees off the center of vision.

For right-eyed observers it is best to shift to the right, and for left-eye observers it is best to shift to the left.

I have used this technique for many years and though it can be frustrating not being able to look directly at an object, as they tend to disappear from view when you look directly at them, it does work, and the object appears brighter. This is especially useful for observing diffuse objects such as galaxies, comets and nebulae.

You should give your eyes time to adapt to the dark. It can take typically 7 minutes for your eyes to become used to darkness and up to 30 minutes to become totally adjusted to the dark conditions of observing.

Care should be taken not to ruin this dark adaptation by being exposed to bright lights, such as headlights from passing cars, flashlights, or moonlight. Lights with red filters will not harm the eyes sensitivity.

Relaxing your eyes also helps. By straining at objects or squinting eyes we place stress on them which makes it harder for the eye to refocus on objects. By relaxing our eyes when we look through a telescope or by using an eye patch, we can improve our vision.

An eyepatch also helps preserve dark adapted eyesight. There is a theory that the reason so many pirates are depicted as wearing eyepatches is not that they typically had the worst of luck in combat with all of them losing an eye, but rather they were preserving their “night eye” so that when they went below the deck, which was very poorly lit, they could still see.

Comets are binocular objects rather than telescope objects. Binoculars have greater light gathering power than telescopes, which tend to over magnify objects. Plus, you have twice the light data reaching your brain with binoculars since you are using both of your eyes.

7 X 50 binoculars are usually recommended, though I prefer my 7 X 35 binoculars instead, as they give me a broader field of view, and I find they are easier to spot objects with.

To me 7 X 35 binoculars are the equivalent of a “Rich Field Telescope”. A Rich Field Telescope is designed to present the maximum possible number of stars within its wide field of view and is used for viewing larger objects such as star clusters.

Using such a telescope to sweep along the Milky Way on a dark moonless night, is one of the most beautiful sights that you will ever see. It is almost like being “up there”. I could get lost for hours drifting among the stars

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One event to mark on the calendar is the BirmingHAMfest, Friday and Saturday March3 & 4 at the Trussville Civic Center .

Doors open at 4:00 p.m. on Friday and close at 7:00 p.m. The hamfest will reopen at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday and close at 4:00 p.m. with the grand prize drawing.

BARC :: BirmingHAMfest :: March 3-4, 2023

This month’s ALERT meeting will be on 7 PM February 14 at the NWS Forecast Office at the Shelby County Airport.

Finally, we are in need of weather, radio & emergency communications related articles for this newsletter. Any help at all will be appreciated.

Mark Wells
WD4NYL
ALERT Newsletter

Hi everyone & Happy New Year!

I hope you had a safe and happy holiday season. Santa was good to me with James Bond DVDs and LOTS to eat, which seeing that my New Year’s Resolution was to become the Fat of The Land, worked out perfectly.

I usually don’t make New Years Resolutions as they are a recipe for failure. Sometimes I wlll make “anti-resolutions”, resolving to do things I wouldn’t do in a million years, and failing to achieve these anti-resolutions, I remain on the “straight and narrow” path.

I prefer “goals”.

Some of my goals for 2023 in no particular order are:

1. Make a dent in the mountain of books which are causing my house to tilt to the east.
2. Go camping
3. Get on the air more often.
4. Take time for ME, as I am the worst to burn the candle at both ends and the middle too.
5, Finally figure out the mystery which is LOTW – Logbook Of The World. Which has me stymied thus far.

I know there are many videos covering LOTW on YouTube, but, then we come back to Resolution #4 and finding that elusive beast called time.

One thing I have learned is that whatever you do don’t suggest that the LOTW logging program is anything but the greatest invention since air on antisocial media, or as James Spann calls it “Facebag”, or you will surely catch grief.

Some folks take this hobby way too seriously. It is a hobby. A hobby. One of many.

There is a term that has come into vogue called “sad hams” – hams that find fault with anything or everything under the sun. This term is totally inaccurate. They aren’t sad at all, they are happy. Very happy making everybody else miserable.

So what do you do? You act like a duck, and let it run off your feathers, realizing that social media paints an inaccurate version humanity. Most people are not turnip heads.

And, most importantly of all, don’t become like them.

What are your goals for the New Year?

Whatever your goals, I hope 2023 is kind, peaceful and prosperous for you!


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Ham Radio Contests

Ham radio contests can be a divisive issue.

On the one hand there are those who, like me have limited time they can get on the air as life and its responsibilities have a habit of eating away at my “play time”, get on the air and find every frequency occupied by “CQ Contest, CQ Contest”. Which can be totally annoying if you are just wanting to “chew the rag”.

Contesters counter with the true statement that 60, 30, 17 & 12 meters are intentionally contest free. And, those are very good bands.

Though I am “not a contender” and never submit a log, I actually enjoy contests & see the usefulness of them.

For one thing, they amuse me. They confirm what I have seen in 45 years of hamming. Many times, you can tune above and below a ham band and hear those frequencies literally crawling with “utility” and Shortwave broadcasters, but, the ham band in between is “dead”. A black hole in the RF spectrum.

Contest time comes, a switch is flipped and that black hole that was sucking all RF from, say 14.000 – 14.350 MHz disappears and an anthill of operators is stirred up. The contest’s time ends and suddenly crickets rule the world of 20 meters again.

The band was open the entire time, everyone just assumes it is dead and stay off the air.

Another reason I like contests is the fact that the multitudes of humanity piling in one on top of another help dispel the persistent myth that “ham radio is dying because {insert your favorite whine}”. It’s been dying since I first heard of the realm since 1973, for various versions of the same reason you hear today, but the persnickety beast just refuses to die.

With contests you get to hear states and especially rare DX stations that you otherwise might not ever hear or hear so rarely that it is a miracle, and 1000 stations are clawing through a pileup the size of Mt. Everest trying to reach them.

With contests DX stations that might ordinarily pass you by because your signal is putrid & puny, like mine, WANT to work you and so you can rack up contacts for the DXCC and other various awards.

I like contests because even if you have to repeat your callsign nine times before they get it right your signal report is always “59”, which for our non-ham readers means “a perfect readability strong signal”. Even if I know the report is a total illusion, it stokes my ego, making me and my station feel like a Big Dawg, even if it is a chihuahua.

Contests help give you an idea of the effectiveness and quirks of your station. For instance, I know that 15 meters is my best bet to reach Europe, 10 meters for western stations and South America, 20 meters is for the Midwest and so on. It gives me an idea of the actual antenna pattern I am encountering, as opposed to the theoretical pattern I would have if I had a “by the book” antenna setup, which due to my treeless yard and city restrictions, I do not have.

Because over the years all the trees in my yard have come down, either due to storms, safety reasons or woodpeckers, I am treeless. To compensate, I have a G5RV antenna that is shaped like the letter L with the feedline connected to the longer leg of the letter and a 170 foot random wire antenna strung along a privacy fence shaped like a large question mark.

 

As to city restrictions, I live in Homewood.

How many ham or CB towers do you see in Homewood? None. Why is that?

Per the City of Homewood Ordinances:

“Sec. 18.5-5. – Towers.

(a)Minimum area. The area for the antenna support structure shall be of a minimum area that can contain the tower in the event of a storm or structural failure. The tower shall not endanger the public or adjacent property owners. The minimum area of an antenna support structure site shall be defined as follows: From the outer perimeter of the base of the tower a distance equal to one hundred fifty (150) percent of the height of the tower shall be extended in all directions. The site area must be contained within the property boundaries of the site owner.”

I don’t know of any yard in Homewood that can contain even a 50 foot tower, because they can’t fit basically a 150 foot (75 feet either side of the tower) dead zone into their lots. In my case I could probably put a 15 foot tower up and wear a hard hat for when I bump and impale myself on the droopy radials.

So, I have a chihuahua station.

I envy the 1000 watt mastiffs I hear. Maybe someday I’ll be able to let my inner dog out.

Contests give life to lesser used bands such as 160 & 6 meters and the VHF & UHF bands, which usually are thought of in terms of repeaters not distant contacts.

So, if you find a contest in progress, you might check online for the rules or exchange requirements, or just listen a while and you generally will get the gist of what is going on and just hop in.

The following lists are my Target List of contests that particularly interest me, usually due to DX opportunities, as in “non-Continental US stations” and state contests for those needing a particular state.

In case you didn’t know, there is currently a debate that the term “DX” should not include Canada, since supposedly Canadians don’t consider the United States as DX. That’s news to me and the ARRL DXCC list.

It doesn’t really matter to me, as I don’t chase awards and am not really sure how many “DX” stations I have actually worked. Someday I will dig out 45 years’ worth of logbooks and find out. They are paper logs and should be ok. If I had computerized them way back when, the oxide from the floppy disks would have corroded into powder long ago, even if I found a computer still compatible with the operating system used in those days. This is why I recommend that if you use a logging program, use a paper log too also as a backup. Operating systems change, storage systems become obsolete and eventually they are no longer supported. Paper and pen last decades and doubles as a journal of your ham radio journey. Something you will value in years to come.

My definition of “DX”, by the way, according to Mark’s Rule #3 is “if I can’t see the other stations antenna, it’s ‘DX’”, therefore Arizona is DX to me. And, since Mark’s Rule #2 is “ My Station My Rules”, there ya go.

What is Mark’s Rule #1? “Don’t act like a jabroni”.
The following list is by no means a complete list. For an in-depth list of the various contests and the homepages of the contests I will be listing, go to the WA7BNM Contest Calendar WA7BNM Contest Calendar: Home

Also, the dates given should be confirmed at the above address and Contest Calendar (arrl.org) as some were marked “tentative” while researching this article.


Mark’s Contest Calendar


January 1 Straight Key Night
January 7 ARRL Kids Day
January 14 North American QSO Party – CW
ARRL VHF Contest
January 25 Australia Day
January 27 CQ 160 Meter Contest – CW
ARRL Winter Field Day
February 4 10-10 International – Winter – USB
British Columbia QSO Party
North American Sprint – CW
February 11 Asia-Pacific Sprint – CW
February 18 ARRL International DX – CW
February 24 CQ 160 Meter Contest – LSB
March 4 ARRL International DX
March 11 Idaho QSO Party
March 25 CQ Worldwide WPX Contest – SSB
April 9 New Mexico QSO Party
North Dakota QSO Party
April 16 ARRL Rookie Roundup – SSB
Quebec QSO Party
Ontario QSO Party
May 6 10-10 International – Spring – CW
7th Call Area QSO Party
New England QSO Party
May 14 Canadian Prairies QSO Party
CQ Worldwide WPX Contest – CW
June 10 Asia-Pacific Sprint – SSB
ARRL June VHF Contest
June 17 SMIRK Contest (6 Meters)
ALL Asia DX Contest – CW
June 24 ARRL Field Day
July 1 RAC Canada Day
July 8 International Amateur Radio Union HF Worldwide
July 15 CQ Worldwide VHF
August 5 10-10 International – Summer – USB
European HF Contest
ARRL 220 & Up Contest
North American QSO Party – CW
August 19 North American QSO Party – SSB
August 26 Hawaii Contest Party
W/VE Island QSO Party
September 2 All Asia DX Contest – SSB
Colorado QSO Party
September 9 ARRL September VHF Contest
North American Sprint – CW
Alabama QSO Party
September 16 Washington State Salmon Run
New Hampshire QSO Party
New Jersey QSO Party
September 18 144 MHz Fall Sprint
September 23 Maine QSO Party
October 1 California QSO Party
October 7 Oceania DX – Phone
Arizona QSO Party
South Dakota QSO Party
Nevada QSO Party
Arizona QSO Party
October 10 10-10 International 10-10 Sprint
October 14 Oceania DX – CW
Asia Pacific Sprint
October 21 10-10 International – CW
October 28 CQ Worldwide – SSB
November 4 ARRL Sweepstakes – CW
November 18 ARRL Sweepstakes – SSB
November 25 CQ Worldwide – CW
December 2 ARRL 160 Meter Contest
Skywarn Appreciation Day
December 9 ARRL 10 Meter Contest
December 16 ARRL Rookie Roundup – CW


2023 State & Province QSO Parties


Alabama Alabama QSO Party Sep 9 – 10
Alaska (None – just pray a lot) X
Alberta Canadian Prairies QSO Party May 13 – 14
Arizona 7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
Arizona QSO Party Oct 7 – 8
Arkansas Arkansas QSO Party May 20 – 21
British Columbia British Columbia QSO Party Feb 5 – 6
California California QSO Party Oct 7 – 8
Colorado Colorado QSO Party Sep 2 – 3
Connecticut New England QSO Party May 6 – 7
Delaware Delaware QSO Party May 6 – 7
Florida Florida QSO Party Apr 29 – 30
Georgia Georgia QSO Party Apr 8 – 9
Hawaii Hawaii QSO Party Aug 26 – 28
Idaho Idaho QSO Party Mar 11 – 12
7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
Illinoi Illinois QSO Party Oct 22 – 23
Indiana Indiana QSO Party May 6 – 7
Iowa Iowa QSO Party Sep 16 – 17
Kansas Kansas QSO Party Aug 26 – 27
Kentucky Kentucky QSO Party Jun 3 – 4
Louisiana Louisiana QSO Party Apr 1 – 2
Maine New England QSO Party May 6 – 7
Maine QSO Party Sep 23 – 24
Manitoba Canadian Prairies QSO Party May 13 – 14
Maryland Maryland-DC QSO Party Aug 12 – 13
Massachusetts New England QSO Party May 6 – 8
Michigan Michigan QSO Party Apr 15 – 16
Minnesota Minnesota QSO Party Feb 4
Mississippi Mississippi QSO Party Apr 1 – 2
Missouri Missouri QSO Party Apr 1 – 2
Montana 7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
Nebraska Nebraska QSO Party Apr 8 – 9
Nevada Nevada QSO Party Oct 14 – 15
7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
New Hampshire New England QSO Party May 6 – 7
New Hampshire QSO Party Sep 16 – 17
New Jersey New Jersey QSO Party Sep 16 – 17
New Mexico New Mexico QSO Party Apr 8 – 9
Nevada Nevada QSO Party Oct 14 – 15
New York New York QSO Party Oct 21 – 22
North Carolina North Carolina QSO Party Feb 26 – 27
North Dakota North Dakota QSO Party Apr 8 – 9
Nova Scotia NSARA Contest Mar 5
Ohio Ohio QSO Party Aug 26 – 27
Oklahoma Oklahoma QSO Party Mar 11 – 12
Ontario Ontario QSO Party Apr 15 – 16
Oregon 7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania QSO Party Oct13 – 14
Quebec Quebec QSO Party Apr 16
Rhode Island New England QSO Party May 6 – 7
Saskatchewan Canadian Prairies QSO Party May 13 – 14
South Carolina South Carolina QSO Party Feb 25 – 26
South Dakota South Dakota QSO Party Oct 14 – 15
Tennessee Tennessee QSO Party Sep 3 – 4
Texas Texas QSO Party Sep 16 – 17
Utah 7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
Vermont New England QSO Party May 6 – 7
Vermont QSO Party Feb 4 – 5
Virginia Virginia QSO Party Mar 18 – 19
Washington Washington State Salmon Run Sep 16 – 17
7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7
West Virginia West Virginia QSO Party Jun 17 – 18
Wisconsin Wisconsin QSO Party Mar 12 – 13
Wyoming 7th Call Area QSO Party May 6 – 7


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Mark’s Almanac

January is named for the Roman god Janus, the god of gates and doors, and so openings and beginnings.

January receives more sunlight than December, but the equilibrium between incoming solar heat and the heat radiated into space by the northern snowfields does not peak until late January and early February, six weeks after winter solstice. So, the weather continues to cool, with January 8 – 20 being the coldest part of the year.

Typically, in January there is a 53% chance of up to one inch of snow and a 25% chance of over one inch of snow.

There is has been less snowfall this year than normal, as usually we see except for the southern tip of Nova Scotia, all of Canada and roughly one half of the Continental US, or “CONUS”, are usually covered with snow. Canada’s Hudson’s Bay is frozen, as is the ocean water between Baffin Island and Greenland.

https://www.nohrsc.noaa.gov/snow_model/images/full/National/nsm_depth/202112/nsm_depth_2021122205_National.jpg

Barometric pressure is highest in January.

Though the Atlantic Hurricane Season officially ended November 30, every now and then Mother Nature will give us a surprise as there have been 5 tropical storms and 3 Category 1 hurricanes from 1851 to 2022. This includes an unnamed hurricane in 1938 in the Eastern Atlantic & Hurricane Alex which in 2016 effected Bermuda and the Azores.

Birmingham January climatology per Intellicast is monthly rainfall 5.45” inches and snowfall 0.7”. Average high temperature is 53 degrees and the average low 32 degrees. Record high of 81 degrees occurred in 1941 and a record low of -6 degrees in 1985.
Barometric pressure is highest in January.

Days grow longer as the Sun’s angle above the noonday horizon steadily increases from 33.5 degrees at the beginning of the month to 39.2 degrees at the month’s end. Daylight increases from 9 hours 59 minutes on January 1 to 10 hours 33 minutes on January 31.

Sunrise and sunset times for Birmingham are:

January 1 Sunrise 6:52 AM Sunset 4:50 PM
January 15 Sunrise 6:51 AM Sunset 5:02 PM
January 31 Sunrise 6:44 AM Sunset 5:17 PM

Looking skyward, at the beginning of the month, the Sun, magnitude -26.8 is in Sagittarius, The Archer.

At the beginning of the month Mercury, magnitude –0.7, in Sagittarius. The Archer, is hidden in the glow of the Sun.

Mercury will pass between the Earth and The Sun, of be in “Inferior Conjunction” on January 7.

By mid-month he will have emerged into the predawn morning sky and will reach his highest altitude in the sky on January 24, and his greatest angle above the eastern horizon or “Greatest Elongation West” on January 30, when he will be 25.0° above the eastern horizon.

This is the best time to view Mercury since it will be at its highest point above the horizon in the morning sky. Look for the planet low in the eastern sky just before sunrise.

Venus, magnitude –3.9, in Sagittarius, The Archer, is emerging from behind the Sun and will become visible around 5 PM CST, a low 8° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness.

She then sinks toward the horizon, setting an hour later at 6 PM.

Venus will pass and exceedingly close 0.3°South of Saturn on January 22 and just 3.5°North of Moon on January 23.

Earth, magnitude -4.0, as viewed from the Sun, is in the Constellation Cancer, The Crab.

Earth will reach her closest distance to the Sun on January 4, when the planet will be 0.98329 Astronomical Units or 91,403,000 miles from the Sun.

Mars, magnitude -1.3 in Taurus, The Bull is visible as a morning object. He becomes visible at 5 PM 30° above the eastern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness.

He will reach his highest point in the sky around 9:30 PM CST, 81° above the southern horizon and will continue to be observable until around 4 AM, when he sinks below 7° above the north-western horizon.

Mars will pass a close 0.5° North of the Moon on January 3 and an even closer 0.5° North of Moon on January 30.

Mars will pass behind the Moon at 10:27 PM CST.

Mars is currently 250 times farther from us than the Moon. Physically, Mars is twice as large as the Moon in diameter.

Time Matters…

As on Earth, time on Mars is divided into days based on its rotation rate and years are based on its completed orbits. Sols, or Martian solar days, are only 39 minutes and 35 seconds longer than Earth days, and there are 668 sols (687 Earth days) in a Martian year.

For convenience, Sols are divided into a 24-hour clock. Each landed Mars mission keeps track of “Local Solar Time,” or LST, at its landing site, because Local Solar Time relates directly to the position of the Sun in the sky and thus the angle from which camera views are illuminated. The time of day, Local Solar Time, depends upon the lander’s longitude on Mars.

Unlike Earth, there is no large leisurely-orbiting moon to give Mars “months,” and while there have been many imaginative calendars suggested for Mars, none is in common use.

The way that scientists mark the time of Mars year is to use solar longitude, abbreviated “Ls”.
Ls is 0° at the vernal equinox, the beginning of northern spring, 90° at summer solstice, 180° at autumnal equinox, and 270° at winter solstice.

So what is the date on Mars?

1/1/2023 on Earth is 1/5/0037 on Mars.

Scientists chose Year 1 to correspond with the year of a global dust storm widely observed in 1956. A more recent paper defined the existence of a Mars Year 0, starting on May 24, 1953, and defined previous years as having negative numbers.

An online calculator for converting Terran time to Martian time is available at Convert Earth Date to Martian Solar Longitude Ls (jussieu.fr)

Dwarf Planet Ceres, magnitude 8,2, is in Virgo, The Virgin.

Jupiter, magnitude –2.4, in Pisces, The Fish, is an early evening object, now receding into evening twilight. He becomes visible at 5 PM CST, 55° above the southern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. Being at his highest point in the sky at 5 PM, he will continue to be observable until around 10:30 PM, when he sinks below 7° above the western horizon.

Jupiter will be at his closest distance from the Sun, or Perihelion, on January 20, when he will be 4.95101 Astronomical Units, or 460,225,131 miles from the Sun.

Jupiter will pass within 1.8° North of the Moon on January 25.

Saturn, magnitudes at +0.9, in Capricorn, The Sea Goat, will soon pass behind the Sun at solar conjunction. He becomes visible around 5:30 CST, 28° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting around 8:00 PM.

Saturn will pass 3.8° North of the Moon on January 23.

Uranus, magnitude 5.7, in Aries, The Ram, is an early evening object. He becomes visible around 6 PM CST, 56° above the south-eastern horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will reach he highest point in the sky at 8PM CST, 72° above the southern horizon. He will continue to be observable until around 1 AM, when he sinks below 21° above the western horizon.

Neptune, magnitude 7.8, at the Aquarius-Pisces border about 8° west of Jupiter, is an early evening object. He becomes accessible around 6 PM CST, 49° above the south-western horizon, as dusk fades to darkness. He will then sink towards the horizon, setting by 11 PM.

Dwarf Planet Pluto, with his five moons shines at a dim 14.5 in Sagittarius, The Archer.

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) faintly shines at magnitude 17.2 in Coma Berenices or “Berenices Hair”.

Dwarf Planet 136199 Eris and her moon Dysnomia is barely visible in the most powerful telescopes at magnitude 18.7 in Cetus the Sea Monster.

At least five 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 Serpens, The Snake.

50000 Quaoar,and his moon Waywot shines at magnitude +18.6 in Ophiuchus, The Serpent Bearer.

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, 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.

Currently the most distant observable known object in the Solar System, Asteroid 2018 AG37, nicknamed “FarFarOut”, which is 12.4 billion miles or 18.5 light hours from Earth, glows at a barely detectable +25.5 magnitude in Lynx.
.
5235 planets beyond our solar system have now been confirmed as of December 20, per NASA’s Exoplanet Archive http://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/


The Quadrantids Meteor Shower will occur Tuesday & Wednesday, January 3 & 4. This is an above average shower producing between 40 to 100 meteors per hour radiating from the constellation Bootes, in the area near the end of the handle of the Big Dipper and the head of Draco the Dragon.

The shower runs annually from January 1-5. It peaks this year on the night of the 3rd and morning of the 4th. This year the nearly full moon will block out most of the fainter meteors. 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 Bootes but can appear anywhere in the sky.

This shower favors the Northern Hemisphere because its radiant point, or the point where the meteors appear to originate in the sky, is so far north on the sky’s dome.

This shower is believed to be produced by dust grains from burnt out comet 2003 EH1, which may also be the remainder of comet c/1490 Y1, which was lost to history after a prominent meteor shower was observed in 1490, possibly due to the breakup of the comet.

Full Moon will occur Friday, January 6, at 5:09 PM CST or 23:09 PM UTC. The Moon will be located on the opposite side of the Earth as the Sun and its face will be fully illuminated.

January’s Full Moon is “Wolf Moon” in Native American folklore. This was also called “Wulf-Monath” or “Wolf Month” by the Saxons, because at this full Moon, packs of wolves howled in hunger outside of the villages.

It has also been called “Old Moon” and “Moon After Yule”.

The Moon will be at Apogee or its farthest distance from Earth on January 8, when she will be 252,562 miles from Earth.

Last Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Eastern side illuminated, will occur January 14, at 8;13 PM CST or 02:13 UTC, January 15.

During a Quarter Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.
New Moon occurs January 21 at 2:55 PM CST or 20:55 UTC when the Moon will 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.

The Moon will be at Perigee or its closest approach to Earth on January 21, when she will be 221,562 miles from Earth.

First Quarter Moon, or when the moon has only the Western side illuminated, will occur December 28 at 9:20 AM or 15:20 UTC. During a Quarter Moon the Moon’s magnitude is -10.0.
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This month’s meeting will be on January 10 at 7PM at the National Weather Service Forecast Office at the Shelby County Airport.

I hope to see you there!

Mark Wells
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