Parks on the Air (POTA) is, on the surface, an awards program: operate from a qualifying park, log contacts, earn credit. But every activation is also a small, low-stakes rehearsal of exactly the skills an EmComm deployment depends on — and treating it that way has made me a better field operator than any amount of reading about it would have.
What a POTA activation actually exercises
- Setup speed under real constraints — uneven ground, no shade, limited time before you need to leave, figuring out antenna supports from whatever’s actually at the site
- Power budget discipline — running off battery for a multi-hour session gives you a real sense of how your gear’s actual current draw compares to the spec sheet
- RF troubleshooting on the fly — a bad ground connection, a marginal antenna match, or interference from a nearby pavilion’s electronics doesn’t wait for a convenient time to show up
- Working the band you’ve got, not the band you planned for — propagation doesn’t care about your activation schedule, so adapting frequency and mode on the spot is a constant small skill, not a one-time decision
Bringing digital modes into it
An FT8 or JS8Call activation from the field is functionally identical to the digital-mode setup you’d run during an actual EmComm deployment — same audio interface, same software, same antenna deployment — just with contacts instead of formal traffic on the other end. It’s a genuinely good way to find the gaps in a go-kit before they show up somewhere that matters more.