There are bad eggs everywhere. I hear more jamming on the amateur bands than cb these days. Enjoy the hobby and ignore the trouble makers. You will see some fairly intelligent people get sucked into these games and become part of the problem. Just ignore it.
The best advice I can give to someone thats just starting out is that hams are often as misguided as cbers. Ham myths are usually more complex and hundreds of other hams on the internet will back up someone giving bad advice. It makes it hard for the newcomers to get off to a good start. Do your own research and experiment with different things.
End fed antennas seem to be all the rage these days but they are poor antennas. Someone will eventually recommend one. Your neighbors will hear you better on their electronics than the person youre trying to talk to.
The cheapest and easiest bands to get on are 2 meters and 440. There's usually someone to talk to there or a local repeater. If the people there aren't welcoming or don't interest you don't give up. Once you have a general ticket it opens up another world.
Antennas for hf bands can take up quite a bit of room. If you have room to string up a doublet you can cover most or all of the hf bands with a single doublet antenna and a good tuner.
Maybe this will help you.
http://hamuniverse.com/hfbands.html
The best advice I can give to someone thats just starting out is that hams are often as misguided as cbers. Ham myths are usually more complex and hundreds of other hams on the internet will back up someone giving bad advice. It makes it hard for the newcomers to get off to a good start. Do your own research and experiment with different things.
End fed antennas seem to be all the rage these days but they are poor antennas. Someone will eventually recommend one. Your neighbors will hear you better on their electronics than the person youre trying to talk to.
The cheapest and easiest bands to get on are 2 meters and 440. There's usually someone to talk to there or a local repeater. If the people there aren't welcoming or don't interest you don't give up. Once you have a general ticket it opens up another world.
Antennas for hf bands can take up quite a bit of room. If you have room to string up a doublet you can cover most or all of the hf bands with a single doublet antenna and a good tuner.
Maybe this will help you.
http://hamuniverse.com/hfbands.html