- May 28, 2010
- 19,424
- 30,111
- 🥇 Banner finds
- 1
- 🏆 Honorable Mentions:
- 1
- Detector(s) used
- Nokta Makro Legend// Pulsedive// Minelab GPZ 7000// Vanquish 540// Minelab Pro Find 35// Dune Kraken Sandscoop// Grave Digger Tools Tombstone shovel & Sidekick digger// Bunk's Hermit Pick
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
'41 and '42 Mercury Dimes in the Catskill Mountains
A friend of mine invited me to go with him to an old farm in the Catskill Mountains (New York), where he and some guys hunt turkey and deer. I was excited to go, because this area has been humming since the 1670s, and has a lot of Revolutionary and Indian War history. While my buddy checked his game cameras and did maintenance on tree stands and such, I turned on the Lobo SuperTRAQ, and headed into the field next to the barn. It did not start well.
The first thirty minutes was nothing but pull tabs and a couple of nails (yes, I was relic hunting in all metal). After 35-minutes I hit the corroded “zincoln” penny, and was starting to think about going to help paint the deer stands! I was gridding pretty tight, so I was only about 30-feet from the barn when I hit the 1941 Mercury an hour into the hunt. It was a good signal at 9” or so. Needless to say I got a second wind!
I pulled all of the other iron in the photo over the next hour-and-a-half, and was pretty tired of digging when my buddy came over and handed me a bottle of water. We talked for a while and he said he was almost done. We decided to meet back at the car in about 15-minutes, so I started doing a “W” pattern back to the barn. I was within 10-feet of where I found the first Merc, when the second one sounded off. I knew it was good. It had that sweet “zip-zip” sound. Sure enough, a 1942 Mercury dime at 5” or 6”. Sweet! I hope I get to go back!
A friend of mine invited me to go with him to an old farm in the Catskill Mountains (New York), where he and some guys hunt turkey and deer. I was excited to go, because this area has been humming since the 1670s, and has a lot of Revolutionary and Indian War history. While my buddy checked his game cameras and did maintenance on tree stands and such, I turned on the Lobo SuperTRAQ, and headed into the field next to the barn. It did not start well.
The first thirty minutes was nothing but pull tabs and a couple of nails (yes, I was relic hunting in all metal). After 35-minutes I hit the corroded “zincoln” penny, and was starting to think about going to help paint the deer stands! I was gridding pretty tight, so I was only about 30-feet from the barn when I hit the 1941 Mercury an hour into the hunt. It was a good signal at 9” or so. Needless to say I got a second wind!
I pulled all of the other iron in the photo over the next hour-and-a-half, and was pretty tired of digging when my buddy came over and handed me a bottle of water. We talked for a while and he said he was almost done. We decided to meet back at the car in about 15-minutes, so I started doing a “W” pattern back to the barn. I was within 10-feet of where I found the first Merc, when the second one sounded off. I knew it was good. It had that sweet “zip-zip” sound. Sure enough, a 1942 Mercury dime at 5” or 6”. Sweet! I hope I get to go back!
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