dredging creeks

1942 merc

Sr. Member
Sep 14, 2012
413
755
sd
Detector(s) used
xp deus , Equinox 800
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Last edited:
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1942 merc

1942 merc

Sr. Member
Sep 14, 2012
413
755
sd
Detector(s) used
xp deus , Equinox 800
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Ok ....dredging is out. Has anyone used gpaa claims with any luck. I have hobbies , I would eventually like to find gold at some point. Is panning and sluicing the only way to look for gold in the hills legally ? Has any one used the gpaa claims that could give me some pointers as to equipment , which of the four claims has running water , Is this gpaa more of a hobbie or with hard work can gold be made ? I see you can camp for fourteen days at a claim . I am looking at mid may to mid june . I also see you can use a four wheeler. My four wheeler is not EFI will a carberated wheeler work up there or would I have running issues ?

If anyone could give a new guy some help with any of this it would be a time saver.
Thanks
 

Maitland

Full Member
Mar 15, 2010
172
159
Black Hills, South Dakota
Detector(s) used
White's Silver Eagle, Fisher Gold Bug 2
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I know this thread is almost two and a half years old, but when I came across it it reminded me of an article I recently seen in the Rapid City Journal. The Forest Circus seems to have a chip on their shoulder when it comes to anyone dredging for the sake of mining, but yet if they twist it around in their favor which they did here, they don't seem to have any problem with removing 98,000 cubic yards of sediment from lakes in the Black Hills. Getting a permit to run a dredge in South Dakota is a long-drawn-out, political process and there's a good chance of you being told "no". Dredging is very beneficial to the ecosystem of the creek, both for fish habitats (ironically this was mentioned in the article I linked to) and it's also good at removing the garbage and left-over pollutants from the streambed (such as mercury, which is very prevalent in some creeks around the northern Black Hills), but the Forest Circus along with the South Dakota politicians they're sleeping with don't want to admit any of this if the words "gold" or "mining" are in the same paragraph.

Anyway, to answer your question, 1942 merc, yes you can dredge in South Dakota, but you have to jump through so many damn hoops that you're likely to quit before you ever get there, and if you make it that far you might be declined. I've heard nothing but horror stories on the matter. I've never used the GPAA claims in the Black Hills as I am not a GPAA member, but I have heard positive things about the Husker claim, and I know they've found a little bit on the claims down by Rochford and Mystic (which I believe are named the Mary Ann and the Migg). The Husker typically has running water during the spring melt or after a very heavy rainstorm, otherwise from at least July onward you might find pools of water in the creekbed but that's about it. Their other claims are all on year round creeks if I'm not mistaken. The written word is that you can use anything non-motorized (gas or electric) in the Black Hills for prospecting, so yes, you're pretty much limited to sluicing and panning, and you're also allowed to metal detect in the Black Hills "as long as you don't dig holes" (gotta laugh at the Fed's technicalities). I don't think you should have any problems with using a carbureted ATV, just use a lower octane fuel while you're up in the hills.
 

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