Hi Craig, 

<<< I am planning a trip to the Pacific northwest coast next month and I 
thought I had found a suitable rental property near Manzanita overlooking the 
ocean where, with a big nod to the intrepid Rockworks DXing contingent, I could 
set up a temporary superloop with a couple of long fishing poles. I will be 
flying in so I want to keep my antenna options reasonably portable. My thinking 
was that I could pack the fishing/antenna poles in my travel golf bag. The 
property afforded a nice flat lawn which looked ideal for a temporary smaller 
superloop. I spoke to the property management representative and asked very 
specific and detailed questions regarding a temporary wire antenna, prior to 
reserving the property. The property management representative considered my 
request and agreed to my request. I then reserved the property. Several days 
later, I received an email from the property management rep stating that she 
had spoken with the owner who adamantly denied permission to set u
 p a temporary antenna due to sensitive neighbors. I subsequently cancelled my 
reservation due to the hefty rental fee coupled with what was a small beach 
house with only basic amenities. 

Aside from the Grayland hotel, is anyone aware of any other rental property 
reasonably close to the ocean in OR which is radio friendly? I was hoping to 
stay on the OR coast this time. >>> 

Most of the Oregon coast DXpedition visits have been by hit-and-run Washington 
state DXers who pull up to Highway 101 viewpoint turnoffs (Rockwork and Cape 
Perpetua) and set up small broadband loops or FSL's to take advantage of the 
enhanced ocean cliff propagation around local sunrise. 

Bill Whitacre rented a house in Yachats (two miles north of Cape Perpetua) 
during the July 2013 Yachats DXpedition to house multiple DXers and antennas, 
but I don't know if that property would be available for you. A good website 
for such Oregon coast rental properties is at 
http://www.oregonshoresvacationrentals.com/?gclid=COHn-_nDgdICFZeXfgodJA8NXg , 
but you'll need to make sure that your chosen property allows external 
antennas. Even if you can only drive up to a Highway 101 turnoff (like 
Rockwork) with a small broadband loop around sunrise you will probably be 
pretty astonished at the results, though. Good luck! 

Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA) 


Thanks for considering my question. 

----- Original Message -----

From: "C B via IRCA" <irca@hard-core-dx.com> 
To: irca@hard-core-dx.com 
Cc: "C" <bevd...@yahoo.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, February 8, 2017 1:07:35 PM 
Subject: [IRCA] My Coastal Temporary Superloop Plans Were Foiled 

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