Had the opportunity to go out and hunt an 1890 permission this afternoon. The owner is in the process of rehab’ing the house after a long term renter moved out. During the break in its occupancy, the owner allowed me to let loose on the @ 1/2 acre yard sitting on a moderate slope down to the street. The soil was very dry & “crumbly”.
First silver I hit is a pretty significant find. When I pulled it out into the sun, I could just make out the date… found close the back corner of the house on flat ground.
Next up, a Barber dime close to the bottom of the slope.
And finally a Merc, at the very bottom of the slope, about 12-15 ft from the Barber.
Roll call. And yes, that’s a “D” mint mark on the quarter.
I tried… just let soak for 3-4 hours last night, and then rinsed it while working a cotton swab in the crevices. Dried overnight… there’s still some stubborn dirt in the tight spots along the outer design elements, but I think she turned out pretty well…
Final muster:
Unreal amount of detail remaining. Most of the time, I’m lucky to even get a date off of a recovered SLQ.
Congratulations. I believe it has a chance to straight grade, I certainly hope it does. I found a high grade 1893-O dime that did straight grade with PCGS. Good luck! Great find!
Circled back to the 1890 build to finish covering the property, this time working on the front yard and a smaller side yard opposite to the side with the slope I scanned last week. Found a few interesting pieces.
Washie
Rosie
Merc
This 40% Kennedy was likely a more recent drop. When the Manticore picked it up, it was reading @ 3-4 inches deep when it was actually just embedded in the surface roots of the grass. I only realized it after I dug the plug and flipped it out, using the pinpointer to confirm it was much closer to the surface than I expected. I only had to pry it out from the surface roots to reveal it.
Final muster.
Very few wheaties recovered with this group yesterday. I only recall 1 or 2 other times that I’ve come back with less wheaties than silver.
Other finds:
18 Clad quarters
6 dimes
21 memorial coppers
I had a little extra time this afternoon following an appointment, so I decided to circle back to the old build I scanned twice over the last two weeks, focusing on a remaining a separate, small section in the rear of the property and also the curb strips that line the property. The property sits at the intersection of two streets, with the sidewalks crumbling in places and obviously dated. The grassy strips between the sidewalks and streets run about 5 to 6ft wide with several very large oak trees growing within, and run @ 150 ft in length in both directions along the two streets. I started with the back section, and hit all clad and memorial copper. I figured the strips had already been detected, so my expectations were pretty low. I started down the first strip @ 15-20 feet, not hitting anything but lower-VDI trash, but upon approaching the base of the first oak, the Manticore started pinging a hi-tone, but the target was reading shallow… so shallow that my pinpointer was picking it up from the surface. I figured it was another clad quarter, but hey… a quarter is a quarter, right? Well… not THIS quarter…!
Finds like this is why a I love chasing the hunt!
Keeping things going, I hit more copper clad, with a few wheaties to boot. Mixed in, close to the sidewalk in the grassy part and @ 6-7 inches deep…
What does one do when they have a couple of hours to burn when the wife is running late coming home from work on a cool Fall afternoon? He goes hunt a couple of curb strips near a long-retired electric rail line stop. The results leaned more heavily on wheaties, but there was one silver highlight…
What does a guy do when the missus goes to play nine holes with her golf girlfriend? Let’s just say I didn’t lace up any golf shoes… A deal was struck as long as I was home by the time she returned.
A respectable number of wheaties and one silver highlight made it worth the effort…
I wish I could go detecting a few times before the weather gets too bad. But unfortunately lately detectorists are not so welcome in my area anymore because it came out that a local guy "forgot" to report a massive Roman hoard he found a few years ago....
Comments
All these action shots are great!
Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.
Had the opportunity to go out and hunt an 1890 permission this afternoon. The owner is in the process of rehab’ing the house after a long term renter moved out. During the break in its occupancy, the owner allowed me to let loose on the @ 1/2 acre yard sitting on a moderate slope down to the street. The soil was very dry & “crumbly”.


First silver I hit is a pretty significant find. When I pulled it out into the sun, I could just make out the date… found close the back corner of the house on flat ground.
Next up, a Barber dime close to the bottom of the slope.


And finally a Merc, at the very bottom of the slope, about 12-15 ft from the Barber.


Roll call. And yes, that’s a “D” mint mark on the quarter.


If you can avoid putting hairlines on that quarter, so that it will grade, it's a better find than gold.
I tried… just let soak for 3-4 hours last night, and then rinsed it while working a cotton swab in the crevices. Dried overnight… there’s still some stubborn dirt in the tight spots along the outer design elements, but I think she turned out pretty well…
Final muster:


Unreal amount of detail remaining. Most of the time, I’m lucky to even get a date off of a recovered SLQ.


Congratulations, that's a incredibly good find!
Beautiful quarter.
Congrats.
i love getting silver like that
Congratulations. I believe it has a chance to straight grade, I certainly hope it does. I found a high grade 1893-O dime that did straight grade with PCGS. Good luck! Great find!
Circled back to the 1890 build to finish covering the property, this time working on the front yard and a smaller side yard opposite to the side with the slope I scanned last week. Found a few interesting pieces.


Washie
Rosie


Merc


This 40% Kennedy was likely a more recent drop. When the Manticore picked it up, it was reading @ 3-4 inches deep when it was actually just embedded in the surface roots of the grass. I only realized it after I dug the plug and flipped it out, using the pinpointer to confirm it was much closer to the surface than I expected. I only had to pry it out from the surface roots to reveal it.


Roll call:


Final muster.
Very few wheaties recovered with this group yesterday. I only recall 1 or 2 other times that I’ve come back with less wheaties than silver.
Other finds:
18 Clad quarters
6 dimes
21 memorial coppers
I had a little extra time this afternoon following an appointment, so I decided to circle back to the old build I scanned twice over the last two weeks, focusing on a remaining a separate, small section in the rear of the property and also the curb strips that line the property. The property sits at the intersection of two streets, with the sidewalks crumbling in places and obviously dated. The grassy strips between the sidewalks and streets run about 5 to 6ft wide with several very large oak trees growing within, and run @ 150 ft in length in both directions along the two streets. I started with the back section, and hit all clad and memorial copper. I figured the strips had already been detected, so my expectations were pretty low. I started down the first strip @ 15-20 feet, not hitting anything but lower-VDI trash, but upon approaching the base of the first oak, the Manticore started pinging a hi-tone, but the target was reading shallow… so shallow that my pinpointer was picking it up from the surface. I figured it was another clad quarter, but hey… a quarter is a quarter, right? Well… not THIS quarter…!
Finds like this is why a I love chasing the hunt!
Keeping things going, I hit more copper clad, with a few wheaties to boot. Mixed in, close to the sidewalk in the grassy part and @ 6-7 inches deep…



Roll call:


Final muster. The quarter turned out to be surprisingly decent for a ground recovery.


Today’s highlights -



Roll call -


Looks like an S mint dime. Good luck with the date!
I wish, but alas… turns out she’s a Philly strike. Oldest wheatie comes in @ 1927.


Final muster -
What does one do when they have a couple of hours to burn when the wife is running late coming home from work on a cool Fall afternoon? He goes hunt a couple of curb strips near a long-retired electric rail line stop. The results leaned more heavily on wheaties, but there was one silver highlight…
Roll call:


Final muster. Added a 1960-something copper to the bunch as all the wheaties are severely scorched.


What does a guy do when the missus goes to play nine holes with her golf girlfriend? Let’s just say I didn’t lace up any golf shoes… A deal was struck as long as I was home by the time she returned.
A respectable number of wheaties and one silver highlight made it worth the effort…


Roll call:


What a beautiful find!
I wish I could go detecting a few times before the weather gets too bad. But unfortunately lately detectorists are not so welcome in my area anymore because it came out that a local guy "forgot" to report a massive Roman hoard he found a few years ago....
Great stuff!