Find's Treasure Forums

Welcome to Find's Treasure Forums, Guests!

You are viewing this forums as a guest which limits you to read only status.

Only registered members may post stories, questions, classifieds, reply to other posts, contact other members using built in messaging and use many other features found on these forums.

Why not register and join us today? It's free! (We don't share your email addresses with anyone.) We keep email addresses of our users to protect them and others from bad people posting things they shouldn't.

Click here to register!



Need Support Help?

Cannot log in?, click here to have new password emailed to you

Relic Season has begun - Racer or Bust, please be Seated for the Barber :thumbup:

Cal_Cobra

Active member
Did a road trip with a detecting buddy to check out some new sites we researched, and detect some old sites we've done well at in the past.

The fist stop was an old c.1800 Spanish outpost site that I finally figured out where it was. Given it's current location we didn't have much hope that modern influence (it's in Los Angeles) would have it erased from history. We started detecting and my first target was a musket ball, then a nice flat button. Not much iron, which was odd given that this site was in use for about 60 years, but then after a while, I got a nice coin signal, solid lock on 84. Dug down a couple of inches and unearthed a silver coin, but I wasn't sure what it was, and figured it was a foreign coin. I called my buddy over and he took one look at it and said I had dug a bust dime! It's rough, cannot get a date off of it, but now that I compare it to PCGS pics of bust dimes, there's no doubt about it that's what it is. I passed a signal next to a bush, just was broken and not sounding like anything, and my friend went over it and called me over to compare signals with his Explorer. I said I could hear it, but it was really broken up and I had passed on it. he dug it and it turned out to be a 1779 one reale....grrr. It seemed that at this site most of the somewhat deeper signals were sounding bad, something funky with the ground there I guess. Dug a few more relics and my friend nabbed an 1847 seated half dime that had two sides of it cut off.

That rectangular piece next to the hand tooled copper nail is a hand cast, hand finished hinge. Next to the rim fire shells are two pewter spoon (?) handles, one has a decorative heart on it.

dc632790-ab5d-4f33-9daf-159615167f2d.jpg


Next site was one that we've been to several times, another Spanish outpost and Indian trading site. Very remote but I've done pretty well there in the past, but conductive signals were getting few and far between (although there's no shortage of iron!). I didn't get any coins, but my buddy got a nice silver quarter reale, a tiny, tiny coin about the diameter of a No. 2 pencil eraser. I did get a cool relic, and it was deep, I was sure it was going to be a piece of iron, but it sounded so sweet, I kept digging and to my surprise it was a hand cast, hand tooled lock plate! That flattened out musket ball at the top looks to be a gaming chip.


Got six rim fire Henery shells and one large gun shell I've never seen before. Any idea what kind of shell it is?

relics2.jpg

shell1.jpg

shell2.jpg

shell3.jpg


Our next site was one we've hammered, but it keeps giving up the goods, although it's getting very stingy. I managed to get a nice Civil War era eagle cuff button and the sweetest signal I dug. It sounded super sweet, just a nice pure, round sounding signal that I was sure was going to be a silver dime. I wish I'd taken a video of the dig, as indeed it did turn out to be a silver dime, an 1862S seated dime to be exact! I was surprised when I checked it on PCGS that it could be a $500-$1000 dime!

I'm not sure what the big round thing is with the hole in the center? Also can anyone tell me what the three ringer bullet is?

relics3.jpg


coins.jpg


I also picked up a 1900 Barber quarter, believe it or not from a beach hunt from an old California city that's having some erosion events and has removed enough sand to get to the oldies. I was amazed at how good of a beach machine the Racer was. I used the 10" coil and I could hear, 95% of the signals my friend with his Explorer2 could, but he did have a 12" coil on so there were a few signals that I just got a barely audible iron tick on that he had an iffy coin signal on. I suspect with the 11" DD or the BIG 15.5" DD it'll be a formable beach detector, IMHO it was every bit as good as my CZ70 at the beach.

I did encounter an odd issue one hunt with the trigger switch on my Racer. When moved forward to ground balance it worked fine, but when pulled back to pinpoint, nothing. I thought the switch had gone bad, tried rebooting the machine to no avail, but oddly it worked fine on the next hunt, but I'll probably look into sending it in to get it checked out....but right now is prime relic hunting season out here.

Happy hunting,
Brian
 
Awesome post! Just they kind I like because we get more than the finds, we get usable info we can take to the field.
Congrats on a great hunt! Also nice to see left coasters can get a real or two like us on the opposite coast.
HH !
 
Great day in the field Cal! Congratz on that coin and others!!
 
really nice finds..........geez its frozen up this way :( Now the long wait for Spring to get here.
 
It's always "Relic Hunting Season" ... in my heart and minde ... but our wintry weather has shut us down this past two weeks so we're looking ahead to spring of 2016.

All the best of success on your next journey afield.

Monte
 
>>>>and one large gun shell I've never seen before. Any idea what kind of shell it is?<<<<

I have found those in the Eastern CA desert, Benet primed Government cartridge probably 50 caliber used approx 1870-1880. The crimp above the rim holds the internal primer in place.
 
DesertRokon said:
>>>>and one large gun shell I've never seen before. Any idea what kind of shell it is?<<<<

I have found those in the Eastern CA desert, Benet primed Government cartridge probably 50 caliber used approx 1870-1880. The crimp above the rim holds the internal primer in place.

Thanks for the ID on the cartridge, my hunting partner and I have not seen one like it.

Interesting you should mention that, as the shell was found in the SE desert. Would you mind sharing what part of the eastern CA desert you found yours at (PM me if you don't want to post on the forum)?

Thanks and happy hunting,
Brian
 
Brian, I tried to PM you but apparently I haven't posted enough to have that privilege and your email is hidden. Send me an email if you wish. desertrokon"at"gmail.com.
Vic
 
Top