We present observations of waves at and just above the plasma frequency (<i>f<sub>pe</sub></i>) from three high frequency electric field experiments on three recent rockets launched to altitudes of 300&ndash;900 km in active aurora. The predominant observed HF waves just above <i>f<sub>pe</sub></i> are narrowband, short-lived emissions with amplitudes ranging from &lt;1 mV/m to 20 mV/m, often associated with structured electron density. The nature of these HF waves, as determined from frequency-time spectrograms, is highly variable: in some cases, the frequency decreases monotonically with time as in the "HF-chirps" previously reported (McAdams and LaBelle, 1999), but in other cases rising frequencies are observed, or features which alternately rise and fall in frequency. They exhibit two timescales of amplitude variation: a short timescale, typically 50&ndash;100 ms, associated with individual discrete features, and a longer timescale associated with the general decrease in the amplitudes of the emissions as the rocket moves away from where the condition <i>f</i>~<i>f<sub>pe</sub></i> holds. The latter timescale ranges from 0.6 to 6.0 s, corresponding to distances of 2&ndash;7 km, assuming the phenomenon to be stationary and using the rocket velocity to convert time to distance