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47 days and Pismo Beach gives up Platinum

biglry

Member
I woke up early today to a much needed rainy morning in Calif. As I forced myself out of bed my only thoughts were of the joy and good feelings that I knew were going to happen later in the day, but I'm getting ahead of myself. Let me start from the beginning it was over a month an a half ago 9/12/2015 when I received the following e-mail with a slightly blurry Web picture of a ring from a young man named Brad.

"Hello,
So today I was at Pismo Beach with my family and as I was playing with my son in the water my wedding ring came off. I just found this website and thought I would give it a shot. We entered the beach off Main Street and were about 75-100 yards to the right. I was in thigh high water and it was around 1pm when it happened. I added a picture of what my ring looks like. It's platinum and has quite a bit of weight to it. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Brad Hieb.
"

I immediately sent Brad an e-mail asking if he had any more details i.e. how deep of water, any remembrance of landmarks in relationship to where he was? I had also downloaded a Google satellite map of north Pismo beach with an area I had marked out which I sent and asked if he could give me any closer idea as to where he was when he lost the ring? We had a few more e-mail conversations such as how tall he was as "thigh high" to one person could be much different on another since I am 6'5" tall. Brad told me his wife took a tape measure and best they could tell the surf was about 28" deep at the time he lost the ring. I looked up the tide tables for that day to get an idea where he might have been in the surf line and I soon realized he was probably a ways out in the surf and this might be a tough recovery, but hunt was on.

I had gotten the search area narrowed down to about the size of two football fields long located from the mid surf to the mean-high-water line of the mighty Pacific. I immediately started hunting at the first low tide the next day. During most of the month of Sept. and first part of Oct. there had been no real low minus tides and even though I went from wet sand to waist deep in the pounding surf, up and down the beach all month long I had no luck in finding the lost ring. I had even gone out several times at 3 & 4 AM for the only good low tides during those months trying to get the best shot at finding the lost treasure, but with no success.

Then on Tuesday 10/27/2015 around 6:30 PM after 47 days and about 40 to 50 hours spent searching for this one ring during the ebb of a minus low tide at the far north end of the planned search area. the Excal ll with 10" stock coil I was using got a hit in about 2 feet of water. My heart skipped a beat as I thrust my carbon graphite handled Stealth 720i sand scoop into the cold water about a foot down and lifted the heavy mass of wet sand rinsing it away as I pulled it from the water only to have the scoop come up empty. I waved the detector's coil over the depression I had left under the water and the signal was still there.

I took another scoop, deeper this time standing on the scoop all 350 lbs. of me going a nearly two feet down. As I lifted the load and the sand was washing out the holes in the scoop I caught a glint of silver, I had a ring...a big beautiful silver colored ring and once I grasped it in my hand and felt its weight I knew it was Brad's Platinum ring that I had been searching for. I could not wait to get back to my vehicle where my cell phone was to give Brad a call.

I dialed the number I had, Jenifer, Brad's wife answered. I told her I had found the ring...I could hear her voice break with emotion. I assured her it was now safe and secure until she and Brad could come from Fresno to pick it up, to which she replied, "Next Monday they would be here" I also told her I would send Brad an e-mail with a picture of the ring which I did.

That brings us to today and like I was saying it was raining and cool, but at noon today in Pismo Beach it got all warm a fuzzy as Brad and his 22 gram Platinum ring were reunited and here are the pic to show the smiles on Brad and Jenifer's faces along with their three sons Nathaniel, Liam and Hudson as the lost ring, a symbol of their commitment to one another was returned to its rightful place on Brad's finger.

Knowing that all jewelry has a story and the very personal feelings that go with it I am proud to say I along with "The Ring Finders" which is how Brad found out about me and my services played a part in this very happy reunion.

As we parted ways I heard young Nathaniel, who had told me earlier he had a metal detector remark "I know what I want to do when I grow up" I gave him a thumbs up and with a smile on my face walked away wondering what future lost treasures that young man would find and whose faces would he put smiles on
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Sheesk, I'd have given up after day #1 ! Congratz!
 
That is a great story with an outstanding outcome:thumbup: You are to be commended for your determination....another positive story to shine good light on metal detectorist can only help or hobby:clapping::clapping:
 
What a cracking post,well done to you for putting a smile on someones face,excellent work and an excellent outcome....you are awesome.
 
You sir are a real trooper... takes alot of blind faith to keep searching the same spot over and over and over and well congrats too you that's a wonderful thing you did..
 
biglry,
Excellent recovery and terrific write up! You made one young family very happy!

I have been looking at the 720. Do you have the hybrid configuration or standard or all small holes?

I'm still using that big heavy scoop I got from you a couple years back. I like the small holes ... I don't dig much of anything twice ... all the small stuff stays in that scoop. It is heavy and, in shell packed sand, it takes some work to get a deep dig.
Cheers,
tvr
 
tvr said:
biglry,
Excellent recovery and terrific write up! You made one young family very happy!

I have been looking at the 720. Do you have the hybrid configuration or standard or all small holes?

I'm still using that big heavy scoop I got from you a couple years back. I like the small holes ... I don't dig much of anything twice ... all the small stuff stays in that scoop. It is heavy and, in shell packed sand, it takes some work to get a deep dig.
Cheers,
tvr
I have the hybrid with just the small holes in the back. Sunspot built mine using SS tubing for the support struts instead of solid SS bars to cut a few more grams off the weight, with the carbon fiber handle it weights in at a super light 3.8 lbs.
I have been pounding it into the sand for almost a year now with no signs of wear or any deformities to the basket I also do not have any type of push plate on the back and it is still very solid, it is the best scoop I have ever owned and I have gone through quite a few. I hunt 2 to 4 hrs. a day 7 days a week rain or shine.:detecting:
 
Great job, Great find. Congratulations to you both!

(another good service is LostMyStuff.net)
 
Incredible determination on your part and an awesome recovery and return account:thumbup::thumbup:
 
Outstanding. You have to be the most determined individual I have ever hear about. To keep going back to that area day after day with no luck would have discouraged the majority of us and we would have given up.

You, Sir, Are one of a Kind. Not only did you bring joy to that couple you yourself experienced the Joy one gets from finding and returning a Ring.
 
biglry said:
I have the hybrid with just the small holes in the back. Sunspot built mine using SS tubing for the support struts instead of solid SS bars to cut a few more grams off the weight, with the carbon fiber handle it weights in at a super light 3.8 lbs.
I have been pounding it into the sand for almost a year now with no signs of wear or any deformities to the basket I also do not have any type of push plate on the back and it is still very solid, it is the best scoop I have ever owned and I have gone through quite a few. I hunt 2 to 4 hrs. a day 7 days a week rain or shine.

biglry,
Than you very much for the information. I think I know what is going on my Christmas list ... and with an early delivery so I can try it out on a trip planned right around then.
Cheers,
tvr
 
BIG LARRY DOES IT AGAIN, FOLKS! Just a few weeks ago I was reading about him returning a 3 total carat weight diamond ring to it's rightful owner after 19 days of looking! Larry is a champ, count on him! Larry, I also hunt Pismo from time to time. I'm the young guy with the TDI. Keep up the good work, I'm sure they were all smiles the whole drive back to Fresno and then some!
 
Used to live in Nipomo and hunted Pismo Beach all of the time., especially after the fourth of July fireworks show. That was about 15 years ago and then we moved to San Diego. There was a park up that way where I found about 100 old silver coins over a period of time. Funny no one ever hunted it before.
 
Grilled Scallops said:
BIG LARRY DOES IT AGAIN, FOLKS! Just a few weeks ago I was reading about him returning a 3 total carat weight diamond ring to it's rightful owner after 19 days of looking! Larry is a champ, count on him! Larry, I also hunt Pismo from time to time. I'm the young guy with the TDI. Keep up the good work, I'm sure they were all smiles the whole drive back to Fresno and then some!
Yea that was a good one. The lady had jumped from some rocks to the beach trying not to get wet when she dropped her cell phone. She jumped into the water, about 2 feet deep looking for the phone that is when her 3 ct. total weight diamond ring came off. She found the phone, but no luck on the ring.

I was contacted and went to the area which is all cliffs, rocks and very little beach(Shell Beach). I started searching right where she found her phone, but the tide was coming in with a big surge and I was neck deep and getting slammed against the rocks, I had to quit for the day. Not until 19 days later was the ocean calm enough and the tide low enough that I could go back into the water and search safely .

I found the ring under a ledge in about 3 foot of water, it was easy to get the coil in there and search, but I had to dig a bit to recover the ring once I located it.
The story made ABC news in Fresno which is where she was from and then got picked up by ABC nightly news in LA next it went viral on Yahoo news. I did a few interviews and recived a lot of great e-mail, even a phone call from a guy in Mexico who wanted me to go dive on some island and look for a ring he had lost a few years ago. :yikes: I politely refused
Here is a pic of the ring I recovered.
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