I usually try to find myself on 20m. I like it's DX-ability at night and appreciate it's reach during the day. Otherwise 10m is nice because there's lots of new hams ready to answer CQ calls, or calling CQ themselves.
The person who answered my very first QSO made it extra special by sending me a first-contact certificate; went way above and beyond and I am incredibly thankful for it.
Only HF these days, 40 through 10. Was active on satellites, not so much now. 2 m is dead in my vicinity. The weekly net prioritises checkins from Echolink over RF and that’s a dealbreaker for me.
Will go back on satellites when HF conditions deteriorate.
73
Maybe half a dozen people, but usually nobody has much to say. My dad is in a larger city these days and he says about the same.
I think all the yappers are on 80, I sold my long range equipment years ago because I couldn't listen to the stupid. I still have a 10m rig that I'll fire up if the skip is active.
I can generally hit a repeater 17mi (27km) away from at home. When I'm outside, I can be heard well, when I'm inside, I'll break the repeater's squelch but may not be clearly copied. HT to HT is generally much less, but I'd generally expect a mile or two (3km)
I plan to live on 20m, probably for the rest of my life; 10m if I am mobile, meaning in a car or even /MM (but even then might run up the 20m antenna).
I am so in love with the reach and the propagation properties of 20m, and being at Solar peak means I can ride this for the next few years.