We have all experienced it. You goto a place u hit 1000 times and all the sudden, u find a good target and think, how did I miss that?
I have found an:
1886 indian at 2 inches.
1914 barber dime at 3 inches
SLQ at 3 inches next to a root in the middle of a park about is small as 2 tractor trailers side by side
All these coins were in parks that have been pounded to death. How do I know they have? Because there was hardly(cept pennys) any clad left.
Another crazy day. We hunted a war memorial that we snailed crawled about 5 times, the place is 53 feet square. We are talking small places here. Anyway, the soil was sandy and it was late Sept of 2011. I didnt want to go, but my dad wanted to stop just for a lil bit.
My first find was a 1918 merc 5 inches. I was shocked because U can walk for ten feet without a sound in all metal. Then a pull tab, and 4 inches down in another dig, a 1901 indian. I was like, what is going on here. 2 mins later and about 30 feet away from me, my dad also finds his 1st indian, the date? 1901.
I goto the front of the memorial and I get a 12-50(my etrac issue). I dig and its a 4 inch 1964 quarter. At this point my father accuses me of planting the stuff. Im starting to get tired so I head towards the truck and I get a pocket spill at 3 inches of 2 quarters, 1944 and 1941. At this point Im in deep shock I know I hit these areas before. I decided to walk back and I get a 2 inch nickel signal, I thought in my head I bet its a V, it was a 1906 V.
How did this happen? My first thought was that someone planted these here. But the soil and condition of the coins made my rethink that. Could those coins have been there all the while and we missed them?
And then my dad came up with the tumbling coin theory:
A coin is dropped and is flat.
It rains and there is a small depression next to the coin and the coin is now at an angle.
Then as the coin sinks, the softer earth gives way and we have a coin on its side. At this stage, a coin on its side is tough to hit if your not at the right angle.
Now, due to frost, the ground contracts pinching the coin and when it expands, ot causes the coin to be back at an angle and so on.
In areas where there is no frost, it may be just soft earth and moisture.
The war memorial is sandy, so we thought that the coins may have turned so we got a better hit on them.
Just a thought.
Bey
I have found an:
1886 indian at 2 inches.
1914 barber dime at 3 inches
SLQ at 3 inches next to a root in the middle of a park about is small as 2 tractor trailers side by side
All these coins were in parks that have been pounded to death. How do I know they have? Because there was hardly(cept pennys) any clad left.
Another crazy day. We hunted a war memorial that we snailed crawled about 5 times, the place is 53 feet square. We are talking small places here. Anyway, the soil was sandy and it was late Sept of 2011. I didnt want to go, but my dad wanted to stop just for a lil bit.
My first find was a 1918 merc 5 inches. I was shocked because U can walk for ten feet without a sound in all metal. Then a pull tab, and 4 inches down in another dig, a 1901 indian. I was like, what is going on here. 2 mins later and about 30 feet away from me, my dad also finds his 1st indian, the date? 1901.
I goto the front of the memorial and I get a 12-50(my etrac issue). I dig and its a 4 inch 1964 quarter. At this point my father accuses me of planting the stuff. Im starting to get tired so I head towards the truck and I get a pocket spill at 3 inches of 2 quarters, 1944 and 1941. At this point Im in deep shock I know I hit these areas before. I decided to walk back and I get a 2 inch nickel signal, I thought in my head I bet its a V, it was a 1906 V.
How did this happen? My first thought was that someone planted these here. But the soil and condition of the coins made my rethink that. Could those coins have been there all the while and we missed them?
And then my dad came up with the tumbling coin theory:
A coin is dropped and is flat.
It rains and there is a small depression next to the coin and the coin is now at an angle.
Then as the coin sinks, the softer earth gives way and we have a coin on its side. At this stage, a coin on its side is tough to hit if your not at the right angle.
Now, due to frost, the ground contracts pinching the coin and when it expands, ot causes the coin to be back at an angle and so on.
In areas where there is no frost, it may be just soft earth and moisture.
The war memorial is sandy, so we thought that the coins may have turned so we got a better hit on them.
Just a thought.
Bey