It's been a while since I posted any pics, and the forum looks a little slow...so here we go:
While it seems everyone else is getting bad weather, where I'm at in Colorado, we set record high temps of 77 last week.
For the middle of winter, no less!
I got out to hunt last week with my hunting buddy CZconnoisseur...where we hit a couple of local parks.
These parks are old, trashy, heavily hunted, trashy, and more trashy. (With extra trash on the side.)
It's truly hard to comprehend what a century and a half of human litter in small parks really looks like, but if you want to find old coins, you've got to go where old coins are likely to be.
(Kind of like fishing. You don't go buy an expensive rod and reel, and truly expect to catch a fish in your bathtub.)
As well as the trash, you've got to deal with the fact that the older coins are frequently also the deeper coins.
So you're talking about coins hiding in trash, and also running silent and deep...like the old WWII submarine movies.
Add the rocky soil and mineralization of the Rocky Mountains, and it can test your dedication to the hobby.
I truly wish I had video of the screen and audio. Most of the signals could have been a seminar in advanced CTX hunting techniques.
My totals were: 1912d Barber dime, 1936 Merc, 1918 Merc, 1891 and 1897 Indian Heads, a no-date Buffalo, an eighteen someting seven 'V' nickel, 1930, 1937d, and 1942d wheats.
All in all, a great week...all way round.
CZconnoisseur (with his Deus) got about the same number of coins, including a Rosie that gave us a 'team trifecta' of silver dimes. He was churning out the wheats so fast, I lost count.
It was a good week...Great times!
mike
While it seems everyone else is getting bad weather, where I'm at in Colorado, we set record high temps of 77 last week.
For the middle of winter, no less!
I got out to hunt last week with my hunting buddy CZconnoisseur...where we hit a couple of local parks.
These parks are old, trashy, heavily hunted, trashy, and more trashy. (With extra trash on the side.)
It's truly hard to comprehend what a century and a half of human litter in small parks really looks like, but if you want to find old coins, you've got to go where old coins are likely to be.
(Kind of like fishing. You don't go buy an expensive rod and reel, and truly expect to catch a fish in your bathtub.)
As well as the trash, you've got to deal with the fact that the older coins are frequently also the deeper coins.
So you're talking about coins hiding in trash, and also running silent and deep...like the old WWII submarine movies.
Add the rocky soil and mineralization of the Rocky Mountains, and it can test your dedication to the hobby.
I truly wish I had video of the screen and audio. Most of the signals could have been a seminar in advanced CTX hunting techniques.
My totals were: 1912d Barber dime, 1936 Merc, 1918 Merc, 1891 and 1897 Indian Heads, a no-date Buffalo, an eighteen someting seven 'V' nickel, 1930, 1937d, and 1942d wheats.
All in all, a great week...all way round.
CZconnoisseur (with his Deus) got about the same number of coins, including a Rosie that gave us a 'team trifecta' of silver dimes. He was churning out the wheats so fast, I lost count.

It was a good week...Great times!
mike