W6TRW Field Day 2024

When: Saturday-Sunday June 22 – 23, 2024

Where: Friendship Park, San Pedro/ RPV

Event Schedule: Club Set-Up starts Saturday 22 June 2024 8:00am
Weekend of 22-23 June 2024

Begins at 1800 UTC Saturday ending at 2100 UTC Sunday

Want to participate? Contact Greg Shreve KE6YEX, greg.shreve2@ngc.com or 310-809-0649 (cell/text) for info.

Click here for W6TRW Field Day information

Click Here for Photos of Past W6TRW Field Days

We’re always looking for help setting up stations, towers, and antennas, operating during the event, and dismantling the site afterward. To volunteer, click on the Contact tab above to send a message to acting Field Day Chair, Greg Shreve, Dylon Mutz, and Mark Knight.

ABOUT:

ARRL Field Day is the single most popular on-the-air event held annually in the US and Canada. On the fourth weekend of June of each year, more than 35,000 radio amateurs gather with their clubs, groups or simply with friends to operate from remote locations.

Field Day is a picnic, a campout, practice for emergencies, an informal contest and, most of all, FUN!
It is a time where many aspects of Amateur Radio come together to highlight our many roles. While some will treat it as a contest, other groups use the opportunity to practice their emergency response capabilities. It is an excellent opportunity to demonstrate Amateur Radio to the organizations that Amateur Radio might serve in an emergency, as well as the general public. For many clubs, ARRL Field Day is one of the highlights of their annual calendar.
The contest part is simply to contact as many other stations as possible and to learn to operate our radio gear in abnormal situations and less than optimal conditions.

We use these same skills when we help with events such as marathons and bike-a-thons; fund-raisers such as walka-thons; celebrations such as parades; and exhibits at fairs, malls and museums — these are all large, preplanned, non-emergency activities.

But despite the development of very complex, modern communications systems — or maybe because they ARE so complex — ham radio has been called into action again and again to provide communications in crises when it really matters. Amateur Radio people (also called “hams”) are well known for our communications support in real disaster and post-disaster situations.

For more information, visit http://www.arrl.org/field-day.