Finding good metal dectecting spots?

RobRieman

Silver Member
Nov 12, 2012
3,282
1,915
Cincinnati Ohio
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
3
Detector(s) used
White's V3i / Minelab E-trac
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
1) Old Schools

2) City/Town Parks

3) Circus/Fair Sites

4) Old Churches

5) Old Homestead Sites

6) Swimming Holes and Areas

7) Picnic Groves

8) Athletic Fields

9) Scout Camps

10) Rodeo Arenas

11) Campgrounds

12) Ghost Towns

13) Beaches

14) Old Taverns

15) Roadside Rest Stops

16) Sidewalk Grassy Strips

17) Amusement Parks

18) Rural Mailboxes

19) Reunion Areas

20) Revival sites

21) Fort Sites

22) Winter Sledding Areas

23) Lookout/Overlook Sites

24) Church Supper Groves

25) Fishing Spots

26) Fishing Camps

27) Resorts

28) Old Barns and Outbuildings

29) Battle Sites

30) Band Shells

31) Racetracks

32) Rural Boundary Walls

33) Roadside Fruit and Vegetable Stands

34) Under Seaside Boardwalks

35) Flea Market Areas

36) Ski Slopes

37) Drive Ins

38) Canal Paths

39) Vacant Lots

40) Motels

41) College Campuses

42) Farmer Market Areas

43) Town Squares

44) Urban Yards and Backyards

45) Disaster Sites

46) Areas Around Skating Ponds

47) Hunting Lodges and Camps

48) Mining Camps

49) Railroad Grades, Stations and Junctions

50) Hiking Trails

51) Waterfalls

52) Rural Dance Sites

53) Lover's Lanes

54) Areas Adjacent to Historical Markers

55) Old Gas Stations and General Stores

56) Fence Posts

57) Chicken Houses

58) Bridges and Fords

59) Flower Beds

60) Playgrounds

61) Old Garbage Dumps

62) Cloth Lines

63) Military Camp and Cantonment Sites

64) Wells and Outhouses

65) Abandoned Houses and Structures

66) Areas where Old Trails Cross County or State Boundaries

67) Piles of Scraped Soil at Construction Sites

68) Old Stone Quarries

69) Areas Around Old Abandoned Cemeteries in the Forest

70) Junctions of Abandoned Roads (crossroads)
 

Diggin-N-Dumps

Gold Member
Sep 9, 2009
6,046
3,781
Fort Worth,Texas
Detector(s) used
CTX 3030 / AT PRO / Etrac w/ NEL
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Depends what your looking for. Some places are good for gold and others are good for relics and silver coins
 

Beepndig

Jr. Member
Aug 19, 2015
29
49
CO
Detector(s) used
Ace350, pioneer 202
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Any place near your home . Look at satellite map of area you live in and pick out the fields schools and parks you want to try your luck at for those hunts you don't have a bunch of time. The list up above, and anyplace you feel like you can get away with swinging a detector. Some places, like the ones on the list, will usually have a greater concentration of possible targets. These kinds of places will also have t he greatest concentration of treasure hunters. I have found modern coins every place I have ever detected. I didn't start fining silver until I started hunting baby boomer schools. Luckily, a lot of schools were built when WWII was over and people celebrated by making babies! probably the best hunting grounds, will be had by getting permission to hunt private grounds. Doing a little homework on the history of towns will turn up some good possibilities . The local historical fort may have been relocated at some point in time, old military camps were the beginning of many towns and town may have been built in different location from a towns humble beginnings...... Any older part of town they are owing street or sidewalk removal is like a time capsule and once replaced , won't see the light of day again for a long time. I have even scanned in random fields that weren't , to my knowledge, any form of social hot spot at any time in history and still found pesky pull tabs and a modern quarter. If there is older trash, could be older coins to be had.
My first older find was at my local fairgrounds in the overflow parking area that is nothing more than a flat field they use for parking during the fair. It was the driving range and club house area when I was a kid. They had skimmed the the top with a dozer and began bringing in recycled blacktop . Half the lot had already Ben recovered so I half heartedly swung my detector on full stride on my way to the dirt pile in the middle of the lot. Even swinging the coil wildly and way to fast I managed to hit two signals on the way to the dirt pile. One modern nickel and one tax token from 30-40's. On the dirt was a thick brown piece of a bottle bottom. It was from a Clorox bottle from the 40's. Didn't find anything exciting in the dirt pile but it exciting to get on some older stuff. Perfect timing as I May not have found the token if bull dozers hadn't removed the overburden for me.
 

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