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first ARES activation — wasn't quite what I expected

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so i finally got activated for a real ARES deployment last weekend, been doing the training nets and ICS courses for about 8 months now so i figured i had a decent idea of what to expect. spoiler: i did not.

it was for a pretty big outdoor festival downtown, they had us set up a communications net to support EMS and the event coordinator because their commercial radios kept dropping in the crowd. nothing crazy, no actual emergency, but it still felt way more chaotic than any of the practice sessions. like on a training net everyone is calm and takes turns and does proper prowords and whatever, but when you're actually sitting next to a stressed out event coordinator who wants updates every 4 minutes it's a different vibe entirely.

the net control guy was fantastic though, really kept things organized. i mostly just passed traffic between two medical stations and logged it which honestly sounds boring but i was pretty focused the whole time. my HT was fine on simplex for most of it but we had one dead spot near the main stage that was annoying.

anyway just wanted to share because i feel like a lot of the ARES prep material makes it sound very clean and procedural and it is, kind of, but also there's just this background hum of actual real world messiness that the tabletop exercises dont fully capture. if you're thinking about joining your local ARES group i'd say just do it, the training is worth it even if you never get deployed.

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yeah that gap between training and actual deployment is real. i've been doing ARES stuff for about 12 years and i still notice it every time, there's just something about real stakes even low stakes like a festival that changes how your brain works. the good news is it gets more comfortable after a few activations and eventually the procedural stuff becomes kind of automatic so you have more mental bandwidth for the actual situational stuff.

the dead spot issue near high RF environments like a stage with a bunch of lighting rigs and sound equipment is pretty common, sometimes a quick change to a different simplex frequency helps if you're getting intermod, other times you just have to physically move. glad your net control was solid, that makes a huge difference especially for newer folks.

this is really encouraging to read actually, ive been putting off signing up for ARES because i kept thinking i needed to know more before i'd be useful. maybe i'll just go ahead and contact the EC for my county. do they usually let newer hams just observe before getting fully activated or is it kind of dive right in?

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