Uganda 5X3K story

An expedition that should not have happened

After the last successful big tn8k expedition, part of the team decided
on a more petite autumn activity. The group consists of OK6DJ, OK1BOA
and OK1FCJ. After analyzing the activities from different countries, the
choice fell on Uganda. QTH, we know from previous expeditions and a
license will probably not be a problem. The following is communication
with the hotel about our interest and the telecommunications office.

License obtained after three months. First, for 100w power, and then
later, they approved 1kw out. We also secured the approval for OK2ZA,
who might go with us. After purchasing three tickets, we learned a month
before departure that Rudolf OK2ZA would accompany us. We have great
enthusiasm for having Rudolf with us. It’s a short mini-expedition, but
we can do it in 4. This way, we have 80m and 160m with a beverage
listening system. Not only Rudolph’s operator but also technical and
antenna knowledge will help in all aspects.

We also secured an e-visa. Simple online ordering with a $50 fee and per
Evisa is home for a few days.

A few weeks before departure, we all meet at QTH OK1FCJ. We decide on
tasks and will prepare so that nothing surprises us. From the meeting,
there is a to-do list for each of us.

We continuously communicate with the hotel and the contact person via
email and WhatsApp. On Friday, September 8, the hotel manager, Mrs.
Mercy, wrote that she would not always be on WhatsApp. Therefore, we
will communicate more via email. We paid 200 euros by bank transfer for
a taxi bill, airport to hotel and back. Soon, we received another email
request for 100% pre-payment for accommodation and food. We don’t want
to pay the whole thing, but Mercy asks to pay everything via email.
So we sent 3750 euros. The day after we sent the money, our Mercy called
via WhatsApp from another number, as her previous one was allegedly
blocked. We informed her we paid everything according to the
instructions from the email. She told us that she didn’t ask us for any
money. We immediately reported the fraud to the police and the bank. We
were shocked. Getting money back is very uncertain. It will be a miracle
if the funds are returned to us. The police requested the entire
communication, including all email headers.

QTH – Nyange Resort is pretending it’s not their fault but ours, deciding
what to do next. Four thousand euros are gone, plane tickets paid for,
and we have nothing in our hands, only the costs. We hope that something
will come back from the fraudulent bank.

It’s the day before the flight. We need one more extra luggage. There is
nowhere to put another 10 kg. We must buy another one for approx. Three
hundred sixty euros. David purchases luggage through his cell phone. It
does not pass authorization. He confirms it again. After 2 minutes, two
confirmations will come on two purchased extra bags. 720 euros are gone.
We called Turkish Airlines to Turkey, claimed the second payment, and
drove to the airport in traffic to catch an employee of Turkish
Airlines. At the airport, we learned that Turkish Airlines may not
return funds. Finally, they advised us to file a complaint with the call
center.

We have the last, already short night at home. We have a few hours before
our flight. OK6DJ goes from QTH Petr OK1FCJ. OK1BOA and OK2ZA from home.
Check-in starts at 07:00. We are among the first to check in passports
and evisa. Petr OK1FCJ’s passport number did not match the e-visa. Petr
was desperate. He took a second passport from home. If the correct
passport is not brought within an hour, Peter doesn’t fly. A quick phone
call home, waking up Petr’s girlfriend and asking for a fast pick-up
passport. New passport we checked in a few minutes before the counter
closed.

Hurray, we can all fly away.

There is a big storm in Istanbul, and our flight has delay 1 hour on
departure. The flight to Istanbul took 2h30min. On arrival, we were
having trouble. It was stormy weather in Istanbul. We waited until the
departure. After an hour delay on departure, we waited another two hours
in the plane before taking off. The aircraft is a Boeing 737 max. We
have no comfort for the next 10 hours of flight via Kigali (Rwanda).

Upon arrival in Entebbe, we quickly received our passport visas, and
after an impatient wait, we had our way to Uganda open. We soon find out
our mistake. After an X-ray of the luggage, the customs officers put us
aside. We show our licenses, a complete list of luggage, what we take
and export back, and explain our hobby. That’s not enough for them. We
have to clear all goods through customs. We will get it released the
next day at the earliest. We try to explain again. After an hour, the
manager will come. We clarify everything again. Finally, it is called a
senior manager. After the last round of explanation, we get a stamp, and
we can also leave customs with our things—another 2-hour delay. After 28
hours, we are finally at our QTH, Nyange Resort.

We get a discount on accommodation and a conference room, but we pay
another 2600 euros and 200 euros for a taxi. We have booked a conference
room just for us. They informed us that there is a pending conference
and that we will be here all Friday and Saturday, but instead, we can
use the large entrance hall at the reception. What will happen next, we
ask ourselves?

After a sleepless night and the stress of not releasing luggage at the
airport, a little sleep is necessary in the afternoon. We are building
the first verticals, and we are active on 40m and 30m in the evening.

Saturday 30.9
We are building 2 spiderbeams and other antennas. The receptionist
informed us that an unexpected party in the reception hall would be
several hours. People arrive in the morning, prepare the room, and plug
in sound equipment. Around 11 in the morning, something so noisy starts
that we are unable to do work on the radio. Loud music and moderator.
There are about 80 guests. We can’t operate on radio. It’s not possible
to receive weak CW signals and speakers roaring behind. SSB is
useless to try. During TX, the radio is 100% excited. We can’t even hear
each other appropriately.

We continue to build antennas. The mentioned spiderbeams and verticals
80m/160m and dipole on 12m are ready.

Sunday 1.10
We want to cover all HF amateur bands. For listening to lower bands, we
make beverages. We finally have two. One on the US-EU and the other on
the JA direction. Both are short and not efficient. They are close to
the transmitting antennas. We have space limitations. We are building
the last spiderbeam to operate on SSB. There is a proper African
rainstorm and a power failure in the afternoon. We are trying to make a
workable schedule so that everyone at least sleeps a few hours daily.
OK1FCJ goes to bed around 22 and wakes up at 03. The rest of the team
goes to sleep between 01 and 03 in the morning.

Monday 2.10
At dawn, we try 80m. We finally have a transmission on lower bands.
However, we are still unsatisfied with the listening capabilities.
We need to move the beverage to another location. The upper bands are
beautifully open. No music or noise behind us to disturb us anymore

Tuesday 3.10
160m vertical has SWR 2.3; we want to fix it. We have a common coaxial on
160 and 80. Conditions have worsened significantly. You can hardly hear
anything in the afternoon. Peter OK1BOA is having a cold. Petr OK1FCJ
was in a similar situation after arrival. The afternoon rolled around
our QTH army helicopter, which we ignored it.

Wednesday 4.10
We still struggle with listening over the beverage. It is unusable at
160m. We are trying to agree with the security of the building to turn
off the lighting of the entire area for a few hours so that we can hear
better on the lower bands.

A visitor came around noon. The army representatives came to see what we
were, what we were doing here, and whether we had everything authorized.
He leaves after half an hour.

We have agreed to turn off the lights on the road where the beverage
leads. Topband, 80, and 40 are finally great. After opening the 10/12 m
to the USA, OK6DJ works on 160/80 m at night. Milan OK7GU has the best
signal on CW, followed by OK1CF and OK2DA. DL8LAS has the weakest
signal. We have not heard from another station.

Thursday 5.10
The internet goes down in the morning, and the livescore on clublog stops
working. We explained to reception that we need internet 24/7 as we
requested before arrival. Finally, after several emergency calls, they
made us a hotspot. We were without internet for 5 hours. Africans have
plenty of time for everything. No rush for anything.
Again, beautiful openings with a 10/12 m during the day and around 21 utc
to USA, the night 160m was down, and we hear only stations call with
excellent equipment.

Friday 6.10
Departure is coming, so we try to sit as much as possible with the radio,
which, of course, we do previous days. On 15m, Rudolf Ok2ZA works RTTY.
10/12m has cw mod preference and ft8. Again, after closing the upper
bands, we QSY to 160m, where we will make another 60 CW QSO.
OK6DJ is already tired and doing a QSY on FT8. Here, he encounters a
pirate station and is disaffected. He gives a spot to dxcluster that he
ends work on 160m and returns on 80m.

Saturday 7.10
Since the morning, we have been gradually packing the individual
antennas. Traffic is already minimal. Around noon, Mercy arrives. She
probably came to get the present we have prepared, but she won’t get it.
She tells us that she got a new iPhone 15 matched in color with a new
branded handbag in green. To secure herself for the next time because
„someone“ hacks her mobile. We have no more words to comment on.
In the afternoon, we pack everything and gradually turn off our operation
on the bands. Finally, around 10 pm, the water also stopped flowing. It
is not possible to take a bath on the way, and it is not possible to
flush the toilet. Rudolf and Petr wash themselves with the bottled water
we still have left.

Sunday 8.10
Customs clearance at the airport is entirely problem-free. Followed by a
7-hour flight to Istanbul, and in the early evening, after more than 2
hours, we are in Prague.

Operation on 10m/12m
As on previous African expeditions, the second opening of the bands is
exciting to North America. This time, due to the high SFI, it also
affected a large part of the EU. The 10m and 12m bands close around 8 pm
local time. Not even FT8 signals pass through. But around 22-23 hours,
we start to see stations again and signals gradually rise. It is
precisely the time to switch to CW or SSB. This second opening usually
takes less than an hour. But some days it was open until 2am morning.
After NA stations, there is still a short time for JA stations before
the band closes completely.

Conclusion
This event has become very expensive for us. We don’t write much about
money, but this time, it’s this one action that is expensive. Flight
tickets 3500 EUR, extra luggage 750 EUR, fraud on us before departure
EUR 4000 EUR. Own accommodation and transport 2800 EUR. A total of 11050
EUR comes out of more less 2750 EUR per person.

After a detailed fraud analysis by an IT specialist and communication
with the police, we are sure that Mercy and her team are behind the
scam. We paid for everything twice. We will never go to Uganda and
Nyange Resort again, and we don’t even recommend any further
expeditions.

And the fact that we have booked four separate cottages and had just 3 is
another Nyange Resort awful service. No conference room is available at
the time of arrival. Petr OK1BOA’s wireless headphones were stolen.
On the radio amateur side, we experienced a beautiful opening of the
upper bands. It is also interesting to watch the leaderboard on clublog,
which Milan OK7GU won this time leaderboard. We did not use FT4 and FM
modes.

We made 60188 QSOs, of which 13855 CW, 10377 SSB, 751 RTTY, and 35205
FT8.

We thank all the sponsors who helped us. Please use OQRS on clublog to
get QSL. David OK6DJ will quickly arrange them and of course, save the
QSL manager time.