Welcome to the group Scott.
There may be a few VHF Society members in your area. If you get on 2M SSB you may incite local activity. On a regular basis there have been very few, maybe no stations on from the Boise area heard in Puget Sound that I am aware of. W7MEM in the panhandle
near Spokane is easily heard in Puget Sound but he runs a very large station. There are a few stations in eastern WA that may be able to work you. Some work Puget Sound via mountain bounce. I have been a rover from Steptoe Butte south of Spokane and could
work into Puget Sound to some stations.
Boise will be very tough especially without major antenna and power. Maybe someone else on the list recalls some past success from that area for comparison.
Going digital will increase your chances of being heard long distances. You can start with trying to operate FT-8 on 144.174 during the weekly 8pm Thursday night FT8 activity night. You can also take a listen each Sunday 8am and Tuesday 8pm 2M SSB net.
If you sign on to the spreadsheet they use you can get an idea of who is on and where, and let net control know you are on so people can turn their antennas your direction. There are a number of stations on in the Portland area that may have a better shot
to you than Seattle does. After the Thursday event a report is issued from data pushed to PSK reporter showing stations heard by whom. You can also look in real time at PSK Reporter. If FT-8 mode does not work some other more sensitive modes might be worth
a try.
In practice, CW is used mostly when SSB QSO exchange attempts have failed. It is also used often when no one hears your calls or responses. Low power or remote located rover stations often call on CW during contests. You can reply back to SSB stations with
CW. Make sure you are offset slightly, not zero-beated on the SSB user so they will hear you. Some radios automatically offset 600Hz, some do not. On 6M you will get some CW only activity particularly when the band is open (such as in the early summers).
6M has major FT-8 activity for all contests, especially when the band is open to pick up more grids for scoring.
In the right circumstances SSB/CW/FT-8 on 2M can make 250-300-mile contacts. It is done often on Thursday nights as seen in the reports and during the SSB nets (mostly north-south). In other geographies even further. The mountains present a challenge here.
The only way to know for sure is to try it and be sure to do so when someone is listening. It may take big power and long antenna, location always helps.
In summary you have a very tough path west but maybe you have the perfect QTH?
🙂. I would start with what gear you have on the Thursday FT-8 nights and see what you can hear. Take a look at the club roster and reach out to members in your general area to see what they have tried, or get then on the air for local activity.
Greetings from DN13 Nampa ID. I'm brand new to this group and fairly new to VHF contesting
I've done some SOFM Only and have that down pretty good from 6m thru 1.2 and am looking to do some SSB on 2m and 6M analog only in Jan and have a 4 element 6m Yagi coming shortly
Two questions for this group
1 - given the distance from the Boise to Portland/Seattle is 2m SSB worth the expense and would I be likely to make any contest contacts beyond the 150 mile distance I can currently make?
2- I am not a digital user yet, but am curious if any you are making 2m or 6m CW contest contacts and what your range might be?
Thx and 73 Scott W7IMC