A slightly edited version of this article was originally published
in the November, 1993 issue of
Monitoring Times
magazine.
Looking for a DX target area with lots of small stations and
interesting cultures? But, one that doesn't take fancy equipment
and years of experience to monitor? Just look "south of the
border" to Central America. Because Central America is so close
geographically to North America, even low powered stations can put
in excellent signals. Unless the VOA or RCI plops down on their
frequency, any SW station in Central America is likely to make it
up here. In fact, some Central American DX stations are more
reliable catches than a lot of international broadcasters!
Historically, Central America consists of the five countries of
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Under
Spanish colonial rule, these countries and the Mexican state of
Chiapas formed the Audiencia de Guatemala. Central America declared
independence on September 15, 1821 and was promptly annexed by
Mexico, then under dictator General Agustin de Iturbide. When
Iturbide was overthrown in 1823, Central America was allowed to go
its own way, but, unfortunately for DX country counters, the
northern province of Chiapas decided to remain with Mexico. For
fifteen years Central America attempted to be a unified country,
but mostly was bogged down in civil war due to regional jealousies
and disagreements. The union was destroyed and the Central American
congress dissolved in 1838. Although the five countries went their
seperate ways, they maintain a strong regional cultural identity.
Guatemala has an official government radio station, TGW, La Voz de
Guatemala. TGW got a good start in 1931 under the rule of General
Jorge Ubico, a radio hobbyist. Unfortunately, recent governments
have not been so kind with funding. The shortwave outlets on 6180
and 9760 kHz have been sporadic at best for many years and even the
aged AM transmitter in Guatemala City is reportedly broken down.
Until money is found to reequip TGW, we are unlikely to hear it on
SW again.
Most Latin American countries have at least a few commercial
stations that supplement AM and FM with shortwave. Not Guatemala -
the government outlawed commercial shortwave broadcasting years
ago. But, there are plenty of other shortwave targets as Guatemala
has ten religious SW broadcasters, the highest concentration in the
world. Two are in Guatemala City; the easy one is TGNA, Radio
Cultural, which was founded by American Baptists and is well heard
in North America on 3300 kHz with Spanish and some English
religious programming (see Homebrew Radio In Guatemala, MT
6/88).
The Adventist Church's Union Radio is a bit tougher catch on 5980
kHz. The Adventists are very active in Central America, in
converting souls and in sponsoring some of the region's best
hospitals and schools. They had long wanted a radio presence in
Central America when in the late 1970s, Guatemalan Adventists
volunteered to take on the task. A small station was started with
10 Kw on medium wave and shortwave. Donations from the main
Adventist Church made the studio was the best equipped in Central
America at the time. According to plans, the station was to grow
into a major international broadcaster and Adventist World Radio's
voice in Latin America.
Unfortunately, someone someplace had not done all their homework.
If they had, they would have found out that Guatemalan law
prohibits anyone except the government from operating radio
transmitters of greater than 10 Kw and also prohibits anyone except
Guatemalan citizens from serving as radio announcers for programs
produced in the country. AWR would not be permitted to bring in the
higher power SW transmitters and the foreign announcers necessary
for broadcasts in other languages. Union Radio remains a small
backwater operation in the AWR network, a shadow of what it had
hoped to be.
Actually, the stations do a lot more than preach. Much of their
broadcast time is devoted to community, education and health
programs. Marimba music is the most popular type of music. Ranchera
and tropical music are also heard, but are not as popular among the
Mayans. The latter two types of music are more common on Guatemalan
AM stations which broadcast for the Ladinos. Some programming is in
Spanish, but most is in Indian languages. Although the Mayan
languages are phonetically very different from Spanish, it is easy
to be fooled into thinking they're Spanish. A lot of Spanish words
have been borrowed, especially for modern ideas and religious
terminology. Usually about the time you start to figure out that
you're listening to an Indian language, they throw in a few Spanish
saint's names to confuse you!
Guatemala's provincial SW stations are best heard in the morning
just after they sign-on, mostly around 1100-1200 UTC. As Guatemala
is only a short ionospheric hop away from North America, reception
can be quite clear and strong sometimes, especially in mid-winter.
Also, Guatemalan stations tend to be interference free, as higher
powered stations in South America have already faded out with their
local sunrise and the Guatemalans are more than a match for any
Asians on nearby frequencies.
Let's take a look at Guatemala's provincial SW stations, starting
with the Roman Catholic ones. Radio Chortis, on 3380 kHz in the
eastern town of Jocotan, is sponsored by Belgian and German
Catholics who also fund a small trade school. Broadcasts are mainly
in Spanish, with a few hours of Chorti each week. Except for the
very elderly, all Chortis are bilingual in Spanish and their
language is gradually disappearing. Not far away, in the town of
Coban, Radio Tezulutlan ministers to the 250,000 Kekchi Indians of
the Alta Verapaz region. On 4835 and 3370, broadcasts are in
Spanish and Kekchi.
West of Guatemala City in the Lake Atitlan region is La Voz de
Atitlan in Santiago Atitlan with broadcasts in Tzuthil and Spanish
on 2390 kHz. In North America this is the easiest catch in the
difficult 120 meter band, excluding WWV. Also near the lake is La
Voz de Nahuala on 3360. Although the manager is a nun from Spokane,
Washington, La Voz de Nahuala is primarily operated by Quiche
Catholics. At about 800,000, the Quiches are the largest indigenous
group in Guatemala. Some programs are also broadcast in Cakchiquel,
as well as Spanish. The last is Radio Mam on 4825, which serves
the Mam tribe, Guatemala's second largest indigenous group. Radio
Mam is not very easy to hear, however; it doesn't sign on until
1300 UTC, too late for reception in much of North America except in
mid-winter, and signs off at 2330 UTC, around local sunset. If you
can't get it at sign-on, the best bet is to keep an eye on the
frequency for occasional late fiesta broadcasts.
For years, the only Evangelist Protestant station in rural
Guatemala was Radio Maya de Barillas in the remote northwest. Radio
Maya broadcast in a number of smaller Maya languages ignored by the
Catholic stations, such as Kanjobel and Chuj. It was successful,
and operation and ownership of the station was eventually passed
from American missionaries to area tribal evangelical churches.
Radio Maya is an sure bet on 3325 kHz, and a very difficult catch
on 2360 kHz in 120 meters.
In 1987 and 1988, the Evangelical churches went in direct
confrontation with Guatemala's Catholic radio stations for the
souls of two of the largest groups. The tiny Mam Evangelical
church, long served only by occasional broadcasts on Radio Maya de
Barillas, established its own station, Radio Buenas Nuevas (Good
News) on 4800 in the small town of San Sebastian Huehuetenango.
American missionaries and the technical staff at TGNA were
instrumental in getting the station on the air, but Mam Evangelists
initiated it and continue to staff and run the station. Not long
afterwards, in early 1988, Radio Kekchi, 4845 kHz, came on the air
from the small town of Fray Bartolome de las Casas near Coban. Like
Radio Buenas Nuevas, Radio Kekchi was initiated by Kekchi
Evangelicals and assisted by TGNA and American missionaries.
Although it is primarily run by Kekchis, it maintains an
affiliation with a missionary education group headquartered in
Mexico. Ironically, the town of Fray Bartolome de las Casas, Radio
Kekchi's location, is named after the Catholic priest who
originally converted the Kekchi to Roman Catholicism.
El Salvador is just beginning to recovery from its long civil war.
Before the war it was relatively prosperous, and other Central
Americans regard Salvadorans as the most hard-working people in the
region. Given time to recover, it should again have a strong
economy. Although rich in resources, El Salvador is a tiny densely-
populated country. As such, there really isn't much need for
domestic shortwave broadcasting. There are lots of AM and FM
stations and the main ones serve the entire country very easily
through efficient networks of 1 Kw medium wave repeaters. There
hasn't been any commercial shortwave broadcasting from El Salvador
for decades. Government-owned Radio Nacional has sporadically been
relayed on the 49 or 31 meterbands, but always for a foreign
audience or in an attempt to reach Salvadorans abroad. It hasn't
been active recently and North American DXers probably have a
better chance at hearing their AM frequency of 655 kHz than one of
the highly irregular SW transmissions. Still, a renewal of Radio
Nacional on SW might be one way to help improve El Salvador's
battered image abroad.
Of course to DXers, El Salvador is remembered as the location of
two of the 1980s most interesting clandestine stations, Radio
Venceremos and Radio Farabundo Marti. Although there were some
questions about if the stations might really be broadcasting from
Nicaragua, they were visited by enough international journalists to
confirm beyond a doubt that the broadcasts came from guerilla
controlled territory. Today a fragile peace has come to El Salvador
and the two former clandestines are now legal FM stations in San
Salvador. There have been rumors that one or the other might return
to shortwave as there doesn't seem to be much prospect of them
getting frequencies in the crowded Salvadoran AM band. Shortwave
might be their only hope of again reaching all of El Salvador, not
to mention the overseas friends they made with their clandestine
broadcasts. Until either Radio Nacional or one of the former
clandestines comes back on SW, DXers are going to have to wait to
enter El Salvador in their logbooks again. There are no active
stations in El Salvador today.
Unlike Guatemala, commercial shortwave is allowed, but there isn't
much need for it. While parts of Honduras are beyond the reach of
AM/FM stations, the people who live in those regions are poor
peasants generally outside the market economy. La Voz del Junco on
6075 is the only somewhat active Honduran commerical SW station,
but the SW transmitter is mainly a hobby of owner Antonio Hasbun.
It's not logged very often, usually being buried under Deutsche
Welle. Several other commercial stations have SW licenses, but only
use SW a couple of days every few years - just long enough that the
government doesn't take away their licenses. No one knows when they
might pop up, but if Radio Landia 4965, Radio Progreso 4920, or
Radio Lux, 4890 are on the air, make a log now as they will
probably be gone tomorrow! Finally, there is Jeff White's proposed
commercial station, Radio Copan Internacional, which may be on the
air by the time you read this.
There is one more station in Honduras, Sani Radio on 4755 kHz.
Neither commercial nor religous, Sani Radio is run by a private
development agency and serves some small tribes of Indians in the
eastern Honduran jungle.
For several years now, shortwave broadcasting from Nicaragua has
been sporadic. A new commercial outlet, Radio RICA, appeared on
4920 and shut down almost as quickly. Radio Miskut, a former
clandestine broadcaster, has been heard occasionally on 49 meters,
as well as its former out-of-band clandestine frequencies.
Shortwave broadcasting is the only viable means of reaching
Nicaragua's sparsely populated Caribbean coast, and regular
shortwave broadcasts will certainly return to Nicaragua. But until
the economy recovers from the war and trade embargo, it's going to
be tough going for Nicaraguan broadcasters.
All these wonderful things combined with liberal shortwave
licensing laws have made Costa Rica a center for small scale
international broadcasting. The oldest is TIFC, Faro del Caribe,
which relays its local AM service on SW for a regional audience. In
the late 1980s, after the screwup in Guatemala, Adventist World
Radio turned to Costa Rica for its Latin American station. Then, of
course, there is UN sponsored Radio For Peace International with
its wide variety of alternative political and environmental
programs. Check the Monitoring Times Shortwave Guide for the most
recent English schedules from these stations. More recently, Radio
Exterior de Espa�a opened a relay station here, and part of the
agreement allows Radio Nacional de Costa Rica to start its own
international service via the Spanish transmitters. As this is
being written, the service has not yet started.
But, if you really want to hear Costa Rica, you have to go after
one of the local broadcasters on shortwave. San Jose's main news
station, Radio Reloj, has been Costa Rica's main shortwave voice
for several decades on the unusual frequencies of 4832 and 6006
kHz. Opertated by the three Barahona brothers, this is one of the
most professional small stations in Latin America. Other small
Costa Rican stations have been more irregular on shortwave, but
Radio Casino, 5954, and the national university's Radio UCR, 6105,
have been heard recently. Another station, Radio Rumbo, would like
to return to SW if Deutsche Welle's high-powered transmitters would
vacate Rumbo's longtime SW frequency of 6075, which DW took over
about ten years ago.
No Panamanian station has used shortwave since the late 1960s,
which is surprising considering that there are large rural areas in
both eastern and western Panama. Perhaps if more development and
population starts to flow into these areas we may see some
shortwave from Panama. A few years ago there were reports that
Fidel Castro had shipped a 50kW shortwave transmitter to Manuel
Noriega. Unfortunately for DXers, George Bush invaded Panama before
Noriega had a chance to get it on the air, if indeed the story was
true.
Well, that's our Central American radio tour. What's left? Nothing
but going to the shack and starting to tune them in! Buena
sintonia (good listening), amigos!
This article is copyright 1993 by Don Moore. It may not be
printed in any publication without written permission. Permission
is granted for all interested readers to share and pass on the ASCII
text file of this article or to print it out for personal use. In
such case, your comments on the article would be appreciated.
This website is maintained by Don Moore,
General Latin American Menu
Main Menu
What's New
Best of this Site
Radio History
Mayans and More: DXing Central America
By Don Moore
GUATEMALA
Culturally, Guatemala is the most interesting country of Central
America. While half the population is meztizo (called ladino
locally), or people of mixed Indian and Spanish ancestry, the other
half is full-blooded Mayan Indian, belonging to over two dozens
tribes, each with its own language and customs. Ladinos live in
eastern Guatemala and the main cities and towns, and the Mayans
live in rural areas and villages in the highlands of central and
western Guatemala. PROVINCIAL RADIO
Central America as a whole is rugged and mountainous, but nowhere
is it more so than in central and western Guatemala, home of
Guatemala's Mayans. Regular AM and FM stations simply won't
penetrate the remote valleys and mountainsides where they live. It
wouldn't matter if the signals did, however. Because of strong
anti-Indian prejudice by the Ladinos who control Guatemala, neither
TGW nor hardly any commercial stations broadcast in Mayan
languages. Instead, missionary stations serve the Mayans, and they
use shortwave. In provincial Guatemala, there are eight SWers, five
Roman Catholic and three Evangelical Protestant, battling for
souls. THREE MEZTIZO COUNTRIES
In the middle of Central America are El Salvador, Honduras, and
Nicaragua, none of which has a significant Indian population. Their
populations are mainly mixed meztizo ancestry. Culturally, they are
Spanish-American; any vestiges of the original Indian cultures have
long disappeared. HONDURAS
Like Guatemala, Honduras is easy to hear thanks to religous
broadcasters. The most important one is HRVC, La Voz Evangelica, on
4820. It is heard quite well many evenings until 0500 sign-off and
in the mornings after 1030 sign-on. Except for an occasion late
night taped sermon in English, all programming is in Spanish.
Another Evangelical Protestant station is Radio Luz y Vida, 3250
kHz, operating from the remote coffee town of San Luis in western
Honduras. The missionaries have a very extensive operation here
with a health clinic and their own air strip. Most programming is
in Spanish, but reception reports can be sent in English to station
manager Don Moore (no relation to the author, although I used to
get his mail sometimes as a Peace Corps volunteer in nearby Santa
Barbara!). A third evangelical station is La Voz de Mosquitia,
4910, from the remote jungles of eastern Honduras. This station has
had an on again/off again history, including a messy divorce of the
American missionary founders. Recently it passed to new management
and has become more predictable. NICARAGUA
Not long ago, tiny Nicaragua was an easy catch. In the early 1970s
the Somoza dictatorship operated Radio Nacional with 100 kW on
11820 kHz until the 1973 earthquake took it off the air. In the
late 1970s the Sandinista revolution put Nicaragua back on the DX
map with clandestine Radio Sandino. After coming to power, they
pulled the old Somoza transmitter out of storage and used it for an
external service in 49 meters, La Voz de Nicaragua. But the Contra
war and the U.S. trade embargo gradually brought down Nicaragua's
economy and Sandinista government. One of the first casualties of
the declining economy was the external service. COSTA RICA
Costa Rica is, well, Costa Rica. It's just different from anywhere
else in Central America. When the Spanish came there were few
Indians here and no gold or silver. Instead of rich landowners with
slaves and peasants, Costa Rica was settled by Spanish farmers.
Unlike the usual Latin American model of a small rich class
controlling a large mass of poor peasants, Costa Rica developed
into a working class democracy. Except for two lapses totally only
a few weeks, Costa Rica has had a democratic government for over
100 years. In 1948, the government took the unusual step of
disbanding the army, which allowed it to spend more money on
development. Today the United Nations ranks Costa Rica as the most
developed underdeveloped country and expects it to join the ranks
of developed nations by 2000. Literacy is universal and almost all
homes have electricity, telephones, and running water. That is not
to say there aren't still pockets of poverty, but they're more like
poverty in the U.S. rather than poverty elsewhere in Latin America.
In fact, in some basic health categories, Costa Rica ranks equal to
or above the U.S.! THE OTHER COUNTRIES
Historically and culturally, Panama and Belize are not really part
of Central America even if most outsiders assume they are. But, we
will give them a brief mention here. Over a decade ago, Radio
Belize was often heard in North America, but while the engineering
staff built up a network of FM relays around the country they left
the shortwave transmitter unmaintained until it no longer
functioned. The station no longer uses shortwave and whether or not
they will again is anybody's guess (See Radio Belize: Caribbean
Beat in Central America, MT 1/89).
Association of North American Radio Clubs
DXer of the Year for 1995.