Full Metal Digger
10-26-2014, 07:50 PM
Hey diggers,
I met up with Denny this morning over in STL at an old school that is slated for demolition (to build condos). Not a huge yard but decent sized. The part that is under the asphalt parking lot is where the real treasures are probably waiting! Hopefully Denny can catch it when they rip it up. We hunted for 5 hours. It has been detected before but I was finding lots of clad quarters, a clad half, and a Sacajawea dollar so it wasn't hunted too hard. The soil was easy digging and there were enough targets to keep you happy.
I ended up digging 15 nickels. Most were modern but I got a no-date buffalo and a nice 1911 V nickel. The V nickel rang up as a 10-12 about 7 inches deep. It was not a strong signal but was repeatable. I could tell right away it was an older nickel and was glad to see the V on the back as I rubbed the dirt off. I hit a little hot spot and got a wheat cent at 10 inches that sounded like silver. Then about a foot away I got a mercury dime at 10 inches that sounded like a wheat cent! Three feet way from that I got a penny signal about 7 inches and popped up a nice silver ring. I think the stone is soapstone. It has a waxy feel to it.
I also found a small child's harmonica that still had the rotted wood parts but they pretty much crumbled when I picked it up. A ball button made an odd signal at 6 inches deep. The play money is about the size of a half dime and nearly stopped my heart when it rolled out of the hole from 9 inches deep!
Thanks again Denny for meeting up with me. I had a blast!
Thanks for looking and HH, Dave.
I met up with Denny this morning over in STL at an old school that is slated for demolition (to build condos). Not a huge yard but decent sized. The part that is under the asphalt parking lot is where the real treasures are probably waiting! Hopefully Denny can catch it when they rip it up. We hunted for 5 hours. It has been detected before but I was finding lots of clad quarters, a clad half, and a Sacajawea dollar so it wasn't hunted too hard. The soil was easy digging and there were enough targets to keep you happy.
I ended up digging 15 nickels. Most were modern but I got a no-date buffalo and a nice 1911 V nickel. The V nickel rang up as a 10-12 about 7 inches deep. It was not a strong signal but was repeatable. I could tell right away it was an older nickel and was glad to see the V on the back as I rubbed the dirt off. I hit a little hot spot and got a wheat cent at 10 inches that sounded like silver. Then about a foot away I got a mercury dime at 10 inches that sounded like a wheat cent! Three feet way from that I got a penny signal about 7 inches and popped up a nice silver ring. I think the stone is soapstone. It has a waxy feel to it.
I also found a small child's harmonica that still had the rotted wood parts but they pretty much crumbled when I picked it up. A ball button made an odd signal at 6 inches deep. The play money is about the size of a half dime and nearly stopped my heart when it rolled out of the hole from 9 inches deep!
Thanks again Denny for meeting up with me. I had a blast!
Thanks for looking and HH, Dave.