Nokta Scores Spectacular Gold Specimen

Steve Herschbach

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Apr 1, 2005
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I held off on posting about this one for a bit while I got around to some unfinished business. Since my move from Alaska I have been slow to get another safe deposit box set up. I have always had one for my gold and other important valuables. The problem with posting about this stuff on the internet is it can attract the wrong kind of attention. This is something I would encourage everyone to think about. Now that all my gold and other goodies are residing at Wells Fargo I feel a little more free to post about this.

Chris Ralph and I were prospecting in Northern California not too long ago. I was running the Nokta FORS Gold and concentrating on some areas littered with square nails, cable bits, rusted cans, and other ferrous junk. There were places the Nokta running in dual tone DI2 mode sounded like a machine gun from ferrous low tones. I would go along with the detector going "putt - putt - putt - putt - putt - beep - putt" and on hearing that beep, stop to dig a bullet or some other non-ferrous item.

The weather was a bit wet but not unpleasant; kind of brings the forest smells out and makes for softer walking. I was afraid we were going to get rained out but it keep just on the edge of really starting up. There was not much sign of detecting, no doubt due to all the trash. Chris was off hitting some bedrock with his detector while I wandered around in the trees and duff overlying the old tailing materials.

There was a bit of a mound around the base of a tree and I swept around it getting ferrous tones, when all of the sudden I get a strong non-ferrous beep. I looked down at the target id displayed on the end of the FORS Gold handle and it was showing 82. I thought "That's odd, a coin." I was still not tuned in one what the numbers meant exactly on the Nokta but on a typical 1-100 scale an 82 would be something like a penny or a dime. I have yet to find a really decent old coin since moving south, so I thought I was maybe going to dig some nice silver.

I gave a couple digs and was surprised to see nothing pop up. Hmmm... must be bigger, deeper. So I open the hole up and dig deeper, and this dirty gray lump pops out of the ground.

My exact thought "you have got to be kidding me!" It was a filthy lump but I knew instantly it was gold. I could not believe my good fortune. I got out my water bottle and washed it off a bit and saw gold and large chunks of white quartz - I had found something really special. After cleaning it ended up as 1.83 ounces of stunning gold and quartz that would do a museum proud. Just a really spectacular specimen, the best I have ever found. I won't claim that only the Nokta would have found it because any good detector would have. Yet I do think this is a case where a good discriminating VLF detector proved to be of benefit in approaching an area that might cause most pulse induction operators to wander off in another direction.

I thought this post would be a fine way to wrap up my nugget detecting finds for 2014 in anticipation of the New Year. I want to offer special thanks to Chris Ralph for being my guide and mentor while I learn my way around the Lower 48. I literally could not have done this without him. Thanks Chris! I also wish each and every one of you a fantastic nugget laden 2015. Happy Hunting!
 

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Steve Herschbach

Steve Herschbach

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Apr 1, 2005
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I don't mind paying taxes. It is what it gets spent on that riles me.

People whether we like it or not always want to hear about which detector found what. People who own the model like to see their choice validated, and others who are considering a model want some assurance it will work well. The reality in VLF at least is I have seen not one bit of increase in depth since my old Compass Gold Scanner Pro. The newer detectors are lighter and easier to operate and that is about it. My Gold Bug 2 will hit smaller gold than my Scanner would. Other than that though there is nothing I ever find with a VLF these days that I don't think I could also find with that old Compass Gold Scanner made back in 1991.

Pulse induction, that is another story. Still advances being made there in the actual technology.
 

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meMiner

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Jul 22, 2014
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Port Perry, Ontario
Detector(s) used
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Congrats on the wonderful gold specimen. Your words about it being the location and person behind the detector, rather than the detector itself are inspiring. I had the same feeling about VLF detectors, that the technology changes have not made great advances in the recent past. The darn things (old and new) find gold as long as there is gold to find. I base that on my experience with jewelry, which is rather extensive, rather than nuggets, which I am still on the low part of the learning curve. It is nice to hear that it applies to nuggets too. Final thought, I like your attitude towards the taxman. Making a profit and paying your share ultimately lets one sleep at night, not worrying about the brown envelope announcing and audit arriving in the mail or the knock on the door.
 

Armchair prospector

Sr. Member
Jul 31, 2011
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I sold my MXT thinking (it) wouldn't find gold, so I bought the Fors gold instead. I won't sell that unless I desperately need the money. I must think money grows on trees. I do know the difference and have, just like others that don't think in the right capacity. Always thinking it is the equipment, not the nut holding it.
 

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Steve Herschbach

Steve Herschbach

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Apr 1, 2005
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I am as guilty if not more so than anybody. I enjoy the technology itself and so using and learning about different machines is every bit as much a part of the enjoyment for me as actually going metal detecting. Some people are purely into the detectors themselves and never go metal detecting and there is nothing wrong with that. That said sadly I can report you can't squeeze a business card in the gap between an MXT and FORS Gold when it comes to prospecting ability.

The VLF machines are all so good these days I honestly just feel it is mostly a matter of finding the one you just really enjoy using, and then just focus on using it a lot. I am working hard on taking my own advice on that this year.
 

FinderFinn

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Dec 26, 2014
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Nice job Steve! :occasion14: If you remember I pm'd you before christmas holidays asking questions about PI-machines. I have not yet got around to purchase an MD as it is around -20c here in Finland. Nokta doesn't really yet have a reputation here in Finland, but by what I have been reading and watching it could certainly be an option for me also.
 

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