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GTP 1350 Finds a Silver Cache!

wedjlok

New member
There is a sweet little area that I've been detecting for some time now that used to be an old farmhouse lot, before the house burned down a few years ago. Most of the finds that I have from here all range in the mid 1940's range and include several silver Rosie's, wheat cents, belt buckles, and the like.

Off to the side of where the house used to stand are a couple of large, old Oak trees, but it has always been so overgrown and infested with snakes and spiders galore that I've hesitated to venture there very often, but have always had a "feeling" about that area, as well as a single large tree right behind the old house.

Feeling rather adventurous, I decided to trudge through the waist high ferns and beat down all of those giant orb weaver spiders that stood in my way and detect around those old trees, and I'm glad that I did!

I was using my Garrett GTP 1350 and got just a blip of a signal that registered in the dollar range, and almost passed it up thinking that it was a deep buried can. I hesitated, though, because cans are not something that I normally dig up here, not too many pulltabs even, as it all seems fairly clean in this small lot. I pinpointed it and get a consistent signal, but it was deep (ended up being around 18" after I dug) and it also ended up being snarled within tree roots beyond belief. So I dug for a while until it started getting too dark to really accomplish anything safely, remembered the spot, and returned the next day (today).

After digging for a little while longer and screaming some choice words at those tree roots, I caught hold of something that seemed like some sort of decomposed bag that contained a less decomposed burlap-like bag inside of it. I almost jumped out of my skin!

After gathering it out as gently as could be done in such a situation, I opened it up to reveal 24 Half Dollars!!!! All of these halves ranged from 1910 to 1964 and included 1 Barber Half (1910), 1 Franklin Half (1957), Walking Liberty halves (1940-1946) (the Walking Liberty's were the most plentiful), and 8 1964 Kennedy Halves.

All that I can say is that persistence always pays off and when I get the "feeling" I always come out ahead, whether it be an old park or a trudge in the woods. I apologize for the shoddy photo, but my camera is cheap (all my money goes into 'tecting). If there was that one there, then chances are there are more, or I'm at least hopeful. I've never been there and not found something of interest, even after seeing another person there as well not too long ago.

So, I hope you enjoyed the story, maybe one day I'll invest in a decent digital camera :)

Aeryck
 
That is a great find and story. You should submit a story of the cache to Garrett. I was just curious .
what where your settings, and did the GTP profile the target size correctly?
Once again great find.

Jason
 
Thanks guys. Yep, I take a shovel, but those roots are something else. I almost always have to dig around them in order to get anywhere, and then reach up under them for the dig.

As for the settings, I almost always run the machine in Relics mode or Zero, unless there is a lot of trash. I have only been using the stock coil with the 1350, unlike the sniper coil that I use more often on the ACE 250. For those virtually trash-free areas like this one I run the sensitivity up quite a bit, just below falsing, and in this case I think I had it at about 10.5 or so. I find that I get the greatest depth with Relics or Zero mode, so I use that in the areas that I can get away with it and it picks up every little signal that way. About the profiling, though, anything over about 7 inches and it seems to be a little off. This was about 18" down and it was showing a pretty steady Medium size reading, which was another reason that I thought that it could have been the top of a can or something similar. Otherwise, the size profiling is almost always spot on, and when its jumpy, I just stomp on the ground a few times and it clears it up nicely for a solid fix on the size. Although, I have noticed that it will ID Quarters a lot of the times for a penny when it is underneath a tree root due to the interference. I usually dig almost all of my signals, though, unless I know without a doubt that it is definitely junk.

Aeryck
 
Congrats on a super find, it happens fer sure. I myself found the left overs from a CACHE this year a couple months back and know their is more, however I can't get to it as it's on public property and at the time of the find the spot was under a water line repair.

The detector I was using at the time was a different brand plus a water unit being used on land. Will post a couple pic's of a few of the coins and the mason jar they had been in. 1700's to 1900's, in Ohio.

Again Congrats on a great find:hot:

HH

GaryL .... :detecting:
 
Nice to find a cashe. I have found 4 over the years. It is still a thrill.. Great job and a great find. Thanks for sharing. HH...Jesse.
 
Great finds man! Makes me want to stick with some deep holes ive dug instead of giving up on them! Alan
 
It does kinda make me mad to dig sometimes thinking that I may have a good one to find that the hole that I've dug is really just leading me to a phantom tree root, but I usually do not give up until I see something for the effort. In this case, as it is sometimes the case with other places, once I dig for so long I end up having to come back to finish the job, so long as it's in a far off place like the woods. This Florida sandy soil is strange that way; I've found quarters 8" deep that were only a couple of years old. The sandy soil is conductive enough to allow deep finds with no problem, but it tends to allow them to settle deeper than expected as well. Add the Live Oak tree roots to that equation, snarling around what you're digging, and it can be a chore sometimes to even dig. Although, I must admit that I'd rather dig here any day than to dig what I experience in the Midwest with all of their rocks. In Florida I can dig a hole almost as deep as I want with no problems using just a simple trowel, whereas up north I hit rocks after about an inch or so. And then getting to the tree roots, I can just use my hand to scoop into the sand under and around the roots to empty the hole out even more in places that I cannot get a digger to.

I never leave a signal untested, though. If it sounds like something will be there, I will dig it up. I do not tend to hoard so many things nowadays, though. I'm in college so a lot of my older finds I have long since sold once I can display them nicely, but I usually keep the coins. Civil War relics have financed many a thing for me in the past, but I still love finding anything and it's more about the thrill than the money, really. I normally put a lot of work into researching my areas and the ones that pay off are more of a thrill than knowing that I can go to the parks any day of the week and get clad to put in the bank (which I still do regularly, BTW). If they are not key dates or older coins, then I clean them, roll them, and deposit them. They are always a pretty supplement every month to my bank account :)

Aeryck
 
Yeah I once dug up three Barber coins at about 14 inches that were buried under a tree root. Had to dig down alongside the root then tunnel in at a ninety degree angle.

Bill
 
Hi Aeryck,
I really enjoyed the story leading up to your great find.
I'd have been doin' a highland fling around it.
Did you do the dance?
:please::please::please:
 
Thanks Ian and Eileen. You bet I did a dance :) I do a dance every time that I find silver, and then even afterwards for a while sometimes. I love finding the old coins, it just seems to be getting a little harder at times. I even ran into another MD'er today at a local park that I never even see anyone MD'ing at, and wouldn't you know it, he was using a 250 (mine was in the car) and I was using my 1350. He stayed for a little while, found something that made him smile pretty big (until my gf saw him smiling) then he high-tailed it outta there. I was going to talk to him, but he headed outta there pretty fast (although I didn't see him do the dance).

Aeryck
 
Nice find!!

Mac
 
Yeah Aeryck,
We've come across guys like that too.
But it cuts both ways, we were doing a big job at the weekend about 80 miles away and along came Roy and his mate Muir, we had a wee blether about tectin' for 15 minutes.
(woulda bin longer but I was busy at the time)
We met Roy several times on the west coast in the summer and it's always pleasant to meet him.
BTW we do our dance when we get
 
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