Independent Amateur Radio ResourceKI5QHC | Blue, Texas

Central Texas | Ham radio | Emergency communications

Central Texas ham radio and emergency communications resource guide.

This guide is for new operators, families, volunteers, and preparedness-minded neighbors in Central Texas who want a practical path into amateur radio and emergency communications. Start with the basics: get licensed, learn local repeaters, build a written plan, keep the station powered, and practice before storms or outages make communication harder.

Written and maintained by Daniel Shirley, KI5QHC. Last reviewed June 5, 2026.
Best first step: do not start with a pile of gear. Start with a license path, a local repeater list, a family check-in plan, and one radio you can operate without guessing.

Who This Guide Is For

Central Texas has rural roads, fast-changing weather, long travel distances, and many households that need more than one way to receive information during outages. Ham radio can help, but it works best when it is connected to local procedures, local operators, and repeatable habits.

Central Texas Emergency Communication Priorities

PriorityWhy It MattersGood First Action
Local alertsOfficial information keeps the radio plan grounded in reality.Know county emergency management, weather, and local alert sources.
Voice radioRepeaters and simplex are the practical first layer for most new hams.Program local repeaters and test them from home and vehicle.
PowerA radio is only useful if it can run during an outage.Plan battery, charging, and printed notes together.
Written trafficSome information is better preserved as text than relayed by voice.Learn Winlink after voice basics are comfortable.
PracticeUnpracticed equipment becomes friction when stress is high.Do short drills before storms, events, and travel seasons.

Start With Licensing

The Technician license is the usual first step. It opens the door to local VHF/UHF repeaters, simplex practice, public-service events, and the operating habits most beginners need before moving into more advanced radios or digital tools.

Local Emergency Communications and ARES

Emergency communication is local. If you are near Lee County, start with LeeCARES / Lee County ARES and learn how nearby operators train, support events, and coordinate volunteer communication. If you live outside Lee County, look for the ARES group, amateur radio club, or emergency communication group that actually practices in your area.

Build a Local Repeater and Simplex Plan

Do not wait for an outage to learn which repeaters are reachable. Build a short printed list with frequency, offset, tone, location, and channel name. Test from home, vehicle, work, and the places your household actually travels.

Weather and Official Preparedness Links

Ham radio should support official information, not replace it. Keep weather, county, and state preparedness links in the plan, especially if your household has medical, mobility, transportation, or communication needs.

Winlink, APRS, and Digital Tools

Winlink and APRS are useful, but they should not distract from basic voice practice. Learn local repeaters and simple message discipline first. Then use Winlink for written traffic and APRS for location or short tactical data where local operators support it.

What Is Winlink?Understand ham radio email, gateways, written traffic, and emergency forms.Read How Does Winlink Work?Follow the message path through software, session types, gateways, and replies.Read Winlink Forms for Emergency CommunicationsPractice check-ins, situation reports, and resource requests.Read APRS for Emergency CommunicationUse location and short status as one layer of the plan.Read

Build the Go-Kit Around Practice

A useful radio kit is boring in the best way: the same radio, antenna, battery, notes, adapters, and charger packed the same way every time. The kit should include paper copies of your channel list, family contacts, local resources, and operating checklists.

Linking to this guide

This page is designed as a practical starting point for Central Texas ham radio and emergency communications. Local clubs, community groups, resource pages, and preparedness organizations are welcome to link to it as a beginner-friendly reference.

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Core KI5QHC hubs

Start HereFollow the beginner path through license, radio, repeaters, go-kits, and digital tools.Open Emergency Communications GuideBuild a layered communication plan for family, field, and community use.Open ResourcesBrowse licensing, repeater, programming, weather, go-kit, and radio guide links.Open