I originally setup in the bottom of a steep valley @Ashton, that worked "ok", trying to sort out man made noise and local lightning wasn't as hard as I thought.
Then I moved it east of Burra, where it went "missing".
The decameter (my spell checker likes decimeter) antenna, a big 5 element yagi and a 2 m loop antenna feeding a receiver that I built from a design in Heisermann's "Amateur Radio Astronomy Handbook".
The guy who wrote the book did all his experiments in the middle of town!
I added a long wire antenna with a receiver that was almost the same as the "spooky tesla radio" I saw a while ago on Instructables, I used that to listen for lightning, ignition noise etc.
Jupiter is the most powerful non-thermal source of radio in the solar system, the effect is synchrotron radiation.
I was able to see all the really strong radio sources, Sag A etc.
None of this was digital, antenna -> receiver -> integrator -> voltmeter -> pencil -> paper.
If nothing else it was a great excuse to sit in the middle of nowhere around a fire and enjoy the night sky.
These days with modern components and techniques you can get way better results.
There is a great NASA site where they have a design for a "Jupiter" radio.
A really cool world wide effort that keeps Jupiter under near constant observation.
http://www.radiosky.com/rjcentral.htmlhttp://radiojove.gsfc.nasa.gov/http://www.spaceacademy.net.au/spacelab/projects/jovrad/jovrad.htm
Andrew