Hello All,
I'm sending this initial report at the Liberty Inn Motel in Lincoln City, OR, 
so please forgive any bizarre email transformations. Ruth, Danny and I left 
Puyallup on Saturday for a 7-day family vacation, and although I was 
unsuccessful in persuading them to stay at the Grayland Motel, it was possible 
to arrange lodging in Oregon within walking distance of TP-enhanced ocean 
beaches.
My equipment is rather basic, with a newly-designed 7.5" plug-in loopstick 
Tecsun PL-380 ULR (both LW and MW 7.5" plug-in loopsticks) and a 3' portable 
PVC tuned passive loop, which is designed to easily fit in a crammed compact 
car trunk (and be assembled, in the dark,within a couple of minutes).
South Pacific DX has been excellent for the first 3 days, with 18 DU's (South 
Pacific DX) stations heard from Australia, New Zeakand, Fiji (639), Tahiti 
(738). and a French-speaking station on 666 kHz that I've never heard at 
Grayland. Multiple DU's have been fighting it out on several frequencies such 
as 531, 639, 657, 738, 891 and a few others. This morning I had the thrilling 
experience of making an MP3 of two stations on 738 kHz (Tahiti and ABC Grafton, 
Australia) fighting it out with both at 9+ levels, maxing out the PL-380's 
digital S/N indicator with a 25 reading (with RSSI of 55). THe barefoot Sony 
SRF-T615 also easily received both stations, a very rare event for a stock 
Ultralight radio. New DU's on 585, 603, 666 and 684 kHz have also been 
received, but several of these will require assistance from DU-DX experts for 
definite identification. MP3's have been made, of course,  for such future 
detective work 
Because of dissatisfaction with our Seaside, OR motel (which had a very 
crowded, smoky beach with serious RF hash from adjacent motels and walkway 
lights), we decided to move to this Linclon City, OR location, which seems like 
a dream come true for DXers. There is a cliff adjacent to the nearby ocean 
beach, with an ideal picnic table for radio and PVC loop setup. The cliff seems 
to add at least 5 dB to DU signals, making Australia, New Zealand and the 
Pacific Islands boom in on the modest equipment.
We have four more days to go in this DXers' paradise, and like John Bryant used 
to say, even if you've already had a blast with DXing fun, it's never too late 
to be greedy for more! After returning to Puyallup, I should upload the various 
MP3's, and a full DXpedition report. Thanks again to Walt for his recent Masset 
DU logs, which have been extremely useful. Have fun, guys!
73, Gary DeBock (N7EKX), in Lincoln City, OR      



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