{
    "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1",
    "title": "Cody Cabana Productions",
    "description": "",
    "home_page_url": "https://codycabanaproductions.com",
    "feed_url": "https://codycabanaproductions.com/feed.json",
    "user_comment": "",
    "icon": "https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/website/CCP-Logo-for-Header-TRANSPARENT.gif",
    "author": {
        "name": "Bill Cody"
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": "https://codycabanaproductions.com/blog/my-qsl-card-saga-2/",
            "url": "https://codycabanaproductions.com/blog/my-qsl-card-saga-2/",
            "title": "My QSL Card Saga  ",
            "summary": "Now that's a pretty cool card, right? If you're a \"ham\" (a.k.a. amateur radio operator), you know exactly what this is. For those unfamiliar, it's a traditional way to prove you've had radio contact with another ham. Before the Internet, these cards were the only&hellip;",
            "content_html": "<figure class=\"post__image post__image--center\"><img loading=\"lazy\"  src=\"https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1.png\" alt=\"K3CDY QSL Card\" width=\"1536\" height=\"1024\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px\" srcset=\"https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-xs.png 640w ,https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-sm.png 768w ,https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-md.png 1024w ,https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-lg.png 1366w ,https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-xl.png 1600w ,https://codycabanaproductions.com/media/posts/14/responsive/K3CDY-QSL-Card-V1-2xl.png 1920w\"></figure>\n<p>Now that's a pretty cool card, right?  If you're a \"ham\" (a.k.a. amateur radio operator), you know exactly what this is.  For those unfamiliar, it's a traditional way to prove you've had radio contact with another ham.  Before the Internet, these cards were the only way to establish proof, and hams would exchange these via snail-mail.  They were useful for ham contests (of which there are still many) to help rack up points for recognition and rewards.  This is officially called a \"QSL card.\"</p>",
            "author": {
                "name": "Bill Cody"
            },
            "tags": [
                   "ham radio"
            ],
            "date_published": "2026-05-18T22:00:39-06:00",
            "date_modified": "2026-05-18T22:03:29-06:00"
        }
    ]
}
