Colonial KirkPA
Silver Member
Hello, folks, it is KirkPA from Pennsylvania. The weatha here in Central PA is brutal...brutal, folks. The low temps have been getting down to the teens at night, so the ground will be freezing up. But, that ain't a gurna stop BDD from relic hunting. Indubitably, bros, we will probably be chiseling at the hard ground again.
Last week, I had an hour to waste before Stacia and I were going to go shopping, but I didn't waste it, so I hit a super old park. I decided to focus on those high VDIs only, such of those that could give up Ag coins, possible Cu coins, and the occasional Fe. Yup, I discriminated those Au signals and concentrated on the Ag signals, so I could show my skills off. I wanted to be just like my good bud, Captn_SE (The True Wilver King).
I got a somewhat jumpy, somewhat crackling, and somewhat decent signal on my Pro XL, so I decided to dig. After plucking out about 6 inches of soil (I didn't check my plug 1st, since I knew the relic was deep), I found a nice wilver ring. This wasn't the ordinary wilver ring, it was a wilver spoon ring. It is marked, "WMA Rogers." Indeed, ring dudes, it is an antique (1850-1899). Oh well, even though I am not a ring dude, I kept it. I am taking credit for 1850.
*Note: the picture is there for size comparsion. Oh, zoy is the one with the big smile. This picture was taken in 1991...future treasure hunters of Central PA...future Bone Dry Detecting members...future Tnet members...future coppa dudes...future instigators.
BDD...Kirk
P.S. The picture did not give off a VDI number. As stated before, it is there for size comparsion.
Last week, I had an hour to waste before Stacia and I were going to go shopping, but I didn't waste it, so I hit a super old park. I decided to focus on those high VDIs only, such of those that could give up Ag coins, possible Cu coins, and the occasional Fe. Yup, I discriminated those Au signals and concentrated on the Ag signals, so I could show my skills off. I wanted to be just like my good bud, Captn_SE (The True Wilver King).
I got a somewhat jumpy, somewhat crackling, and somewhat decent signal on my Pro XL, so I decided to dig. After plucking out about 6 inches of soil (I didn't check my plug 1st, since I knew the relic was deep), I found a nice wilver ring. This wasn't the ordinary wilver ring, it was a wilver spoon ring. It is marked, "WMA Rogers." Indeed, ring dudes, it is an antique (1850-1899). Oh well, even though I am not a ring dude, I kept it. I am taking credit for 1850.
*Note: the picture is there for size comparsion. Oh, zoy is the one with the big smile. This picture was taken in 1991...future treasure hunters of Central PA...future Bone Dry Detecting members...future Tnet members...future coppa dudes...future instigators.
BDD...Kirk
P.S. The picture did not give off a VDI number. As stated before, it is there for size comparsion.
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