FRS 15 · The Niagara Escarpment Net
The Niagara Escarpment Net Test Convenes on a Sultry Monday Evening
Chicken, rice, sweet potatoes for the dog. A guy 90 miles out. The Stone Age of Bang & Rock.
Around 18:45 the low-power FRS 15 channel woke up with the Monday-evening chatter that precedes the Niagara Escarpment Net Test — a small, informal ham/GMRS check-in that the escarpment lets you hear farther than physics normally allows. Someone opened with “Mondays are just so chaotic” and drifted into recipe advice for a dog: “chicken and the rice and the sweet potato and all that — find the real thing and make it for the dog for a week or four or five days”.
By 19:00 the net-control station called it formally: “We want to welcome you to the Niagara Escarpment Net Test”. Six check-ins were logged in the next few minutes, one of them from South Buffalo and another guessed at 90 miles out — “we've heard him before but conditions were excellent this morning” — before someone philosophised, on air, that “we're in the Stone Age of Bang & Rock together”.
Snyder · 221 Red Oak
Teenagers Salt a Snyder Lawn With Hot Dogs, Vanish
At 23:14, Amherst PD checked out a call at 221 Red Oak: a homeowner's daughter looked out the front window and saw “a large group of teens on the front lawn — when she looked again they were gone but they had left behind a bunch of hot dogs all over the lawn”. She looked again a minute later; the teens were gone; the hot dogs remained. No leads, no video, no motive.
Amherst · Bunny in a Fence
Bunny Stuck in a Fence Draws Seven Knots of Air Time
At 20:36, an Amherst PD unit accepted the assignment with an audibly resigned “7 knots for, you know, a bunny stuck in the fence” — one of the shift's most Buffalo-summer transmissions, and delivered with the flat cadence of someone who has done this before.
Buffalo Limo · A Report of a Break-In
"Send Another Car": A Buffalo Limo Dispatcher Watches a PlayStation Case Go
At 18:26 a Buffalo Limo dispatcher stepped abruptly out of taxi-book banter and asked for backup: “Send another car over — we're watching a male just broke the PlayStation case and grabbing some PlayStation stuff”. No location; no follow-up over the next hour on the same channel. Whatever store, whatever male: the case was open, the driver was watching, and the game consoles were leaving with him.
BNIA · The Ramp Answers
"It's-a Me, Mario": How the American Ramp Identifies Itself in July
At 16:08 on the BNIA ground-crew site frequency, someone keyed up and asked who is this?. The answer, in perfect character: “It's-a me, Mario”. The channel then returned to normal ramp business (LaGuardia inbound, 15 out) as if nothing had happened.