- Friendship Radiosport Games
The Friendship Radiosport Games (FRG) is an international
multi-sport event that includes competitions in the various sports collectively referred to asradiosport . The Friendship Radiosport Games began in 1989 as a result of asister city agreement betweenKhabarovsk, Russia andPortland, Oregon ,USA . Since then, participation has been extended to other sister cities in thePacific Rim . The Friendship Radiosport Games are generally held in the month of August.History
The first Friendship Radiosport Games were held in 1989 in
Khabarovsk, Russia , which was then still a part of theSoviet Union . The games were organized as a result of the signing of asister city agreement between theSiberia n city of Khabarovsk and the city ofPortland, Oregon , on the west coast of theUnited States . The origination of the idea for a friendlyradiosport competition between the two cities can be credited to Yevgeny Stavitsky UAØCA, an activeamateur radio operator in Khabarovsk. Participants from Portland traveled toSiberia to participate in the games, an event that would not have been possible only a few years before, as the two nations squared off against one another in theCold War . In 1991, the second Friendship Radiosport Games were held in Portland, hosted by the Friendship Amateur Radio Society, and participants from Khabarovsk traveled to Oregon to attend the event. This would start a tradition of holding the event in August of every odd-numbered year.Extending the event to additional sister cities, the host for the 1993 Friendship Radiosport Games was
Victoria, British Columbia ,Canada . In addition to competitors fromCanada ,Russia , and theUnited States , competitors from thesister city of Niigata,Japan also came to the event in 1993. The 1995 Friendship Radiosport Games were held inKhabarovsk, Russia for the second time, and representatives from all four cities were in attendance.Tokyo ,Japan became the fourth host city for the Friendship Radiosport Games when the event has held there in 1997. The 1999 games returned toPortland, Oregon ,USA , where the ARDF event was also designated the IARU Region II Championships, the first such IARU sanctioned championships in theAmericas . The event returned toVictoria, British Columbia ,Canada in 2001, where for the first time competitors fromMelbourne, Victoria ,Australia were also in attendance. Breaking with the established pattern, the Friendship Radiosport Games were not held in 2003, but were instead held in 2004, again inKhabarovsk, Russia . The invitation to participation was further extended to radio clubs in thePacific Rim sister cities ofHarbin ,China , andBuchon , Korea.Competition
The Friendship Radiosport Games have traditionally included events from all of the three activities collectively known as
radiosport . This includes HF contesting,Amateur Radio Direction Finding , andHigh Speed Telegraphy . Some competitors participate in only one of these activities, while others have been competitive in multiple events.ee also
*
Amateur radio
*Radiosport
*Contesting
*Amateur Radio Direction Finding
*High Speed Telegraphy References
*Moell, Joe KØOV (1999). [http://members.aol.com/joek0ov/frg99pics.html "KØOV's Photo Album of the 1999 IARU ARDF Championships"] . Retrieved Nov. 27, 2005.
*Moell, Joe KØOV (2005). [http://members.aol.com/homingin/intlfox.html "Radio-Orienteering Comes to the Americas"] . Retrieved Nov. 27, 2005.
*Stavitsky, Evgeny UAØCA (2004). [http://w7lt.org/sparcgap/sparcgap_2004-05_files/page2.html "Last Call For Friendship Radiosport Games"] . Retrieved Nov 27, 2005.
*Young, Joe VE7BFK (2001). [http://www.islandnet.com/~jyoung/FRG01/photoidx.htm "Photos of FRG 2001"] . Retrieved Dec. 4, 2005.
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