The highlight of my 2-night DXpedition over the weekend in Grayland, Washington 
was certainly the logging of Radio Farda, 1575 kHz in the UAE. This was during 
grayline conditions last night (Nov. 2 UTC date), less than an hour past local 
sunset and just before Al-Dhabbaya, UAE sunrise. It's a distance of 7,538 mi. / 
12,131 km., per the Google Earth "Distance Tool" from the R. Farda antenna 
array to Grayland Beach State Park!

To my knowledge, R. Farda has not been heard before on the West Coast of North 
America with a receiver of any type, communications receiver OR a cheap 
portable.

I had R. Farda the previous night on my Perseus SDRs before 0200, but didn't 
realize what I was hearing. I first thought it was an early fade-in of an 
Asian, but of course 0130-0155 UTC is *far* too early! I never expected to hear 
a TA on a *barefoot* ultralight portable from Grayland, much less on my Perseus 
receivers and Wellbrook Phased Array antenna. When I realized that it might 
have been R. Farda after all, I was more prepared the next evening. 

Sure enough, a het was first heard and seen on 1575 with the Perseus spectrum 
display at 0130, and audio faded up with dance / techno music at 0140. Five 
minutes later between music selections, I heard an Arabic language announcer 
with mentions of "Arabiyya". The best reception (poor-fair level at best) was 
around 0150 with a pounding, bass-heavy dance / techno tune and Arabic vocals. 

Would it be possible to hear anything at all on a barefoot SRF-39FP? I had 
pre-tuned the Sony between a Spanish station on 1570 and 1 kw. KBAL, Lebanon, 
Oregon on 1280. The radio was ready to go, already rotated for best null of 
1280, and waiting for me on the railing of the outside porch. When Farda seemed 
like it wouldn't get any stronger, I dashed outside the yurt (cabin) in 
Grayland and slapped on the headphones...woo-hoo!! There was the dance / techno 
music, in parallel to what I was hearing on Perseus! The signal (only 
moderately weaker than on Perseus) lasted only 15-20 seconds on the small Sony 
before it was gone into oblivion on both radios.

Here's a short MP3 of how this TA station sounded on the Perseus SDR:
http://www.guyatkins.com/files/sdr/grayland_nov08/1575_farda_uae_02nov08.mp3

As luck would have it, my Wellbrook Phased Array (prototype) antenna was 
oriented approximately correct for grayline reception of Radio Farda--to the 
Northwest at 300 degrees. Hmm...perhaps this wasn't technically a 
"trans-Atlantic" reception, as the grayline took the signal north-northeast 
over Russia, Siberia, across Alaska, and down along the British Columbia 
coastline.

The only other possible TA noted during this DXpedition was 1008 kHz, heard 
both nights with dance and electronica music before 0200 UTC, but not found on 
the Sony ultralight. 1008 may be a reactivated GrootNieuwsradio, Holland, or 
possibly a Spanish SER station.

This Grayland DXpedition was highly productive overall; I'll be sharing full 
details early this week.

Guy Atkins
Puyallup, WA USA
www.perseus-sdr.blogspot.com

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