I'm dealing with antenna issues myself right now. Long story, but hit by a devastating eye disease and low vision now. Not sure if we'll stay here, so no big antenna support projects.
I'm experimenting with LOW antennas mounted on the house for now.
My take:
Coax fed 10 meter dipole, works and my Dentorn Super Tuner can match it to 20 through 10 meter. High noise floor, not the best transmit, though it DOES get out.
450 ladder line fed 40 meterish doublet (ish because the legs are a bit long and it wasn't trimmed to tune). The Dentron can match it to 80 through 10 meters. 80 actually works better than one would think. Lower noise floor than the dipole and better receive. Markedly better transmit it seems, even on 10 meter.
210' rectangular loop 450 ladder line fed. The Dentron can again match it to 80-10 meters. Lowest noise floor of the three, highest receive of the three, gets out about as well as the doublet, maybe slightly better.
Wire is cheap, if you really want to know if something works just try it!
Crossing the power line....of course, best not to for noise, performance and safety...however...sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do. I WOULD NOT cross over the high voltage lines on the poles!!! The high voltage lines look jacketed, but they're not, it's just a corrosion covering, it's not insulative! But, if it's just the drop coming from the pole to your house those lines ARE insulated. The two power lines are insulated and they're ran with a grounded stringer line that supports the wires to the house. If the jacket on them was compromised it'd probably be giving you trouble. So, if you cross that and touch it you're probably OK. If I were going to do that I'd use insulated wire for the antenna to boot. If in doubt, call the electric company. I did and I was told I need to keep an antenna three feet away and at a right angle to my house drop. They will for a fee shut the power down at the pole while I cross it, but the Tech said the drops are jacketed and if I used jacketed antenna wire to cross it'd be fine.
It sounds like four relatively high supports for a loop may not be feasbile for you, so I would go with the ladder line fed doublet (same length as a dipole, just ladder line fed).
I have a Dentron Super Tuner, look on QTH classifieds, fleaBay or CraigList (use adhuntr to search all of CraigsList easily - most people WILL ship small things), they can be had for $100 or less (I just picked up a Dentron Jr for $30 delivered, works GREAT on my antennas too, just won't handle as much wattage, it handles the rig fine though!). Using a tuner the doublet should work anywhere you want to go to. Trimming it and then working the harmonics will probably work, I just haven't went there yet.
To quickly and easily tune the Dentron I use an MFJ-207 antenna analyzer. It's crude and only tells you the resonant frequency coarsely as it's a knob pointer / printed scale for the frequency, but it's cheap new and cheaper used. It can be made to be very precise cheaply though, it has a frequency counter output and you can get a frequency counter and jumper coax off fleaBay for $20 shipped from China. Put the output of the tuner on a coax switch, switch to the MFJ, set your frequency and tune the Dentron for the lowest SWR, then switch to the rig and you're good to go.
Hope that helps...don't be put off by the naysayers, high and clear is no doubt best, but low and cluttered DOES work, it's better than nothing! Wire is cheap, so just give it a shot!
Steve KA0NEB