Alaska-forged • New Zealand-bound

greyline86

Communications without compromise.

A personal archive and communications portfolio documenting amateur radio, Signal Corps service, resilient infrastructure, Ready Signal, and the next chapter from Alaska to Aotearoa New Zealand.

The greyline motif

Two remarkable landscapes. One communications thread.

Alaska

Distance, weather, terrain, and isolated communities shaped the philosophy: communications should reach people where they are, not only where it is convenient.

Aotearoa New Zealand

The next chapter points toward the South Island, technical communications, infrastructure resilience, and a professional life grounded in service.

Aoraki Mount Cook and alpine lake in New Zealand
South Island horizon

New Zealand is no longer hypothetical.

The future chapter now has a place, a server, a domain, and a visual language of its own: alpine water, Southern Alps weather, rural distance, and communications work built for real terrain.

Explore the New Zealand chapter →
Personal statement

Communications is ultimately about people.

Radios, software, networks, and infrastructure are tools. Their true purpose is bringing people together across distance, terrain, weather, and circumstance.

greyline86 brings together the chapters that previously lived separately: WB1BR, AL1AR, Army Signal Corps service, AARG, AARS, Aurora Radio Mail, Ready Signal, Alaska, and the coming move to New Zealand.

Read the full narrative →
Ready Signal letterhead with mountain line art and New Zealand map
Mission areas

Built around service, access, and resilience.

Access

Remote amateur radio service

From village examination travel in Alaska to future education and licensing support, the aim has always been lowering barriers.

Systems

Reliable communications tools

Aurora Radio Mail and related projects exist because field communications should be practical, accessible, and Linux-friendly.

Infrastructure

Ready Signal

Professional communications and infrastructure resilience reframed for New Zealand while remaining grounded in North American experience.

Selected timeline

A life shaped by communications.

Full journey →

Signal Corps foundation

Disabled U.S. Army Signal Corps Veteran with communications and technical systems experience.

Fairbanks licensing and CW

Amateur radio became a way to continue serving, experimenting, learning, and connecting across distance.

AARG and rural Alaska access

Founded Aurora Amateur Radio Group to help underserved Alaska communities participate in amateur radio.

New Zealand chapter

Ready Signal and greyline86 point toward Aotearoa New Zealand as the next permanent chapter.

Northern / Southern journal

Latest Field Notes

View all notes →
Field Note 001

Why Greyline Matters

The line between night and day is more than a radio condition. It is the symbol of a life crossing hemispheres.

Field Note 002

Alaska to Aotearoa

Two alpine worlds, two oceans, and one long-running commitment to communications service.

Field Note 003

Ready Signal Reframed

A professional identity built for New Zealand, informed by Alaska, military communications, and field experience.