Strange things in the woods today....

Retired Fire

Hero Member
Dec 29, 2016
501
798
Charlotte, NC
Detector(s) used
Garrett AT Pro, Garrett Ace 400, 5"x8" coils for both. Whites PinPointer.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Today my Wife and I went back to our permission. We found farm equipment old and not so old. Take a look at the photos. I am not sure what the spike is. It has some sort of clamp or collar on it. If you know let me know. Also have you ever seen a Groundhog climb a tree? Me either until today! And we have yet to find any coins except a modern dime. I am not sure there is coinage here.

View attachment 1439969View attachment 1439970View attachment 1439971View attachment 1439972View attachment 1439973View attachment 1439974View attachment 1439975View attachment 1439976 Treed Groundhog1.jpg
 

Last edited:
Upvote 2
Can't open your attachments and I have seen several groundhogs climb trees.
 

You're finding evidence of OLD human traffic.
That alone would keep me interested.
Congratulations on your hunt.
 

Looks to be a burial ground for machines......could be a body or two out there.....Interesting......Congrats!
 

lets see--- a spike from an old harrow, a moldboard from a Tiger plow an old disc blade a broken point from a plow lay (international) and an old stove damper. scrap is about $100 a ton so Dig Dig.
just funning. ground hogs like trees, usually small ones because they have to get their arms agound them to climb. if they get too high I have seen them bend to the ground again. funny stuff
keep digging guys
 

Can't open your attachments and I have seen several groundhogs climb trees.

Yea, I had problems last night. Some photos wont load and I was getting shut out and had to sign in over and over. Sorry
 

lets see--- a spike from an old harrow, a moldboard from a Tiger plow an old disc blade a broken point from a plow lay (international) and an old stove damper. scrap is about $100 a ton so Dig Dig.
just funning. ground hogs like trees, usually small ones because they have to get their arms agound them to climb. if they get too high I have seen them bend to the ground again. funny stuff
keep digging guys
Thanks so much. It all makes sense. Most of these were found far apart from one another along the edges of old fields and along irrigation ditches.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top