Mike Coslo wrote in message ...
My life's experience has been that for every hobby or avocation,
there
is a large group of people that "would do it except for....". What
they
are actually tell you when they say this is " I have a passing
interest
in this. But I'm not so interested that I will become a participant".
BANG! Drove that nail with a single blow, Mike!
Whether it is the Morse code requirement, or the cost of a rig or
effort of putting up an antenna, or the cost of a telescope or the
need
to travel to remote areas that are dark enough or the fact that you
have
to stay up all night to observe, etc, etc.
This is true of *any* activity. Heck, when I was training for the
marathon 20 years ago, I met plenty of folks who said they wanted to
run a marathon - if only it wasn't 26.22 miles long...
People in amateur astronomy also obsess about the graying of the
hobby,
and how do we get the kids involved? Fact is, a scope that can
actually
be used for any kind of passable observation costs a fair amount of
money.
Is it really so much money, Mike? I've heard that there are some folks
who make their own 'scopes, down to the grinding of lenses and mirrors
and such. And of course there are used telescopes. But the telescope
itself is probably the least of the issues.
And ohhh geee, the dufusses that wanted to get the little kids
interested in observing seem to have forgotten that Mommy and Daddy
don't want little Buffy or Jody (and by extension, Mommy or Daddy) to
be
staying up all night and traveling to remote sites.....
Here's another issue:
If someone wants to look at the moon, planets and stars, the libraries
and bookstores are full of books with pictures that no amateur could
hope to equal. The 'net is an even more amazing resource. Look at the
pictures of Saturn coming from Cassini - this is gonna be one heck of
a summer for planetary science! And no staying up late, no special
equipment, no disappointments due to clouds or rain or cold. No real
knowledge of things like where to point the 'scope or how to interpret
what is seen, either.
Of course looking at pictures taken by others is not the same thing as
seeing something directly. But for most people, it's 'close enough'.
In ham radio, a person not only has to have the interest, they have
to
be willing and able to spend a fair amount of discretionary income on
a
rig, put up an antenna, (if they are even allowed to) and all the
other
things we have to do to get on the air.
The biggest investments aren't monetary. It's the time and effort.
Any wonder why lots of the new guys are the shack on the belt types?
For kids, usually dependent upon M&D for their money, M&D are often
happy to spend 100-200 dollars on a HT. They might not look so
happily
upon laying out $800-3000 for an hf rig, and putting up that antenna.
All the young hams in my area are repeater people, save for Field
day.
37 years ago I was one of those young hams, and got no help from the
parental units. Today's kids are no different. The big difference
today is that for too many folks the antenna is a really big deal.
Heck, look how many *adult* hams can't figure out how to put up an
effective HF antenna these days...
Finally, the comparison of ham radio to the internet is amusing at
best. There is almost not technical comparison between the two.
Beyond
the technogeeks such as myself, that spend a fair amount of time
keeping
other peoples computers on the stinkin' Internet, the technical
acumen
level is mighty darn low. How much ability is needed to surf porn?
Since the advent of GUIs the whole point of personal computing has
been to make it easier for *everyone* to use them. That's what has
driven the industry for 20+ years.
My points are that blaming the lack of growth (which is an arguable
thing in the first place) on the Morse code test is kind of like
saying
that a frog with no legs that can't jump when you tell it to jump, is
deaf.
I wish I knew where that one came from!
It is a hobby for the dedicated and relative few.
Here's a datapoint for ya:
In 1972 I graduated from a suburban Catholic boys' high school. This
was in a solidly middle-class area, at a school that stressed math and
science (AP courses available in those days were calculus, physics,
chemistry, and history). My graduating class was over 600. IIRC
exactly three of us graduates were hams. Of those three, only I am
still licensed.
The girls' high school next door (literally) was slightly larger - and
had no hams at all. Out of maybe 5000 kids in grades 9 through 12
there were perhaps 9 or 10 licensed hams.
The reasons for the scarcity were many. For example, many
extracurricular activities competed for our time and energy. (Like
this blonde 11th grader who - no, wait, wrong newsgroup...). There was
no organized school activity until we kids started a radio club of our
own, which rose and fell on the efforts of us kids. More than a few
kids back then though amateur radio was "square" - its conservative
political nature (K7UGA) and military ties made more than a few look
askance.
Most of all, those were the boom times for cb. For less than the cost
of a half-decent used receiver like a Drake 2B, one could head over to
Lafayette Radio or one of its competitors and bring home a complete
setup - 23 channel transceiver, groundplane antenna, coax, mounting
hardware, etc. All brand new, ready to go. And if you had a car, a few
more dollars bought a mobile mount and 102" whip antenna. License?
Just fill out a form - but in fact many did not bother to do even that
much. No tuneup, no fancy adjustments - just pick a channel, push the
button and talk.
I don't know how many kids in my school had cbs or access to them, but
they outnumbered us hams back then. Some of them became hams, most
lost interest when the cb boom ended.
Things haven't changed all that much, except now it's the 'net that's
a prime competitor.
73 de Jim, N2EY
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