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This song is in loving memory of my oldest brother Ed who lost his courageous battle with leukemia last night. It's a relief he's no longer suffering.



My condolences bill...may he rest in peace.
 

This song is in loving memory of my oldest brother Ed who lost his courageous battle with leukemia last night. It's a relief he's no longer suffering.



I'm not much of a guy hugger Uncle, but you get one.

Deaths of others ,especially those we're close to; seems to change the lens we look through. Maybe each time.
 

Bart&RC,

Thanks it's appreciated. Luckily I got to see him in the retirement home this past July when he was still in decent shape. They gave him 1 month to live and he last 9 months with the last 2 on heavy duty morphine so it's a relief.

He made it to 92 which is about 12 years above the average so more than a full life.
 

Bill,
92 is a good long run. The misses and I, have you in our thoughts and prayers.
 

Rook it was the summer of 83 and I was 13...it was a brutally hot summer and I used to walk about a mile to a swimming hole on the oceanside of the island (we lived on the bay). There I would meet the rest of my friends and fish and swim and explore. So this one day I go down to the swim hole and wait and wait but no one ever shows ? So after waiting around and melting in the sun, I give up and start heading home. I decide to cut through a patch of woods to stay in the shade for the walk home. I had never been in this patch of woods and to my surprise there was an old trailer home rotting away back here in the woods. Well this was both scary and thrilling and I cautiously started to explore these ruins. It was dangerously rickety and I had to be careful not to step through the collapsing floor in places. After about a half hour detour here I was ready to leave. This trailer had a crawl space underneath it and lots of stuff was thrown up under the trailer for storage. Well something caught my eye and I started working my way up under this trailer to reach it. As I looked above my head for spiders there it was....wedged up on a floor joist was the largest chok full o nuts coffee can they made...the real big one !! I reached up to get it and could not budge it, it was full !! I wrestled this massive coffee can off the beam and out from under the trailer where I could open it...it had a wooden board for a lid and was sealed with waxed canvas. Well...it was by far the most silver coins I think I've ever seen at one time still to this day !! There was 30-40 pounds in that can !! I slowly started home like a beast of burden.....stopping every 100 feet or so to rest and shift the load. It took a long time to get it home but I did....I announced that this money was mine and I would be using it to buy my own candy when ever I wanted for the rest of the summer !! My parents freaked out and explained that I could have candy money any time I wanted !! It was truly an amazing cache of silver coins !! The newest was 1952 !! And I just remember my step mom spreading these coins all over the living room...stacking them in different stacks according to value and denomination. I think my father may still have some of this silver in his safe...I hope so !! I was rewarded with candy money for the rest of that summer and it was a sweet cache for everyone....and my first and best cache ever !!

Chok o nuts coffee... that’s my brand!
Love it!
 

I took a nap in the dingy... looks like everyone left the ship... I’ll check back later.
 

Rook it was the summer of 83 and I was 13...it was a brutally hot summer and I used to walk about a mile to a swimming hole on the oceanside of the island (we lived on the bay). There I would meet the rest of my friends and fish and swim and explore. So this one day I go down to the swim hole and wait and wait but no one ever shows ? So after waiting around and melting in the sun, I give up and start heading home. I decide to cut through a patch of woods to stay in the shade for the walk home. I had never been in this patch of woods and to my surprise there was an old trailer home rotting away back here in the woods. Well this was both scary and thrilling and I cautiously started to explore these ruins. It was dangerously rickety and I had to be careful not to step through the collapsing floor in places. After about a half hour detour here I was ready to leave. This trailer had a crawl space underneath it and lots of stuff was thrown up under the trailer for storage. Well something caught my eye and I started working my way up under this trailer to reach it. As I looked above my head for spiders there it was....wedged up on a floor joist was the largest chok full o nuts coffee can they made...the real big one !! I reached up to get it and could not budge it, it was full !! I wrestled this massive coffee can off the beam and out from under the trailer where I could open it...it had a wooden board for a lid and was sealed with waxed canvas. Well...it was by far the most silver coins I think I've ever seen at one time still to this day !! There was 30-40 pounds in that can !! I slowly started home like a beast of burden.....stopping every 100 feet or so to rest and shift the load. It took a long time to get it home but I did....I announced that this money was mine and I would be using it to buy my own candy when ever I wanted for the rest of the summer !! My parents freaked out and explained that I could have candy money any time I wanted !! It was truly an amazing cache of silver coins !! The newest was 1952 !! And I just remember my step mom spreading these coins all over the living room...stacking them in different stacks according to value and denomination. I think my father may still have some of this silver in his safe...I hope so !! I was rewarded with candy money for the rest of that summer and it was a sweet cache for everyone....and my first and best cache ever !!

bart
If you had 30 to 40 pounds you have us beat to date. I'm going with Marty to an ole fishing camp next weekend weather permitting. I doubt a cache would be there but we'll be looking for silver primary. And congratulations on the cache you found.
 

bill, sorry to hear of your loss. I lost my older brother last year to cancer. We'll keep you guys in our prayers.
 

I probably lost the pictures on my old computer, however, a fellow I knew on another website in Atlanta I believe found a large silver hoard in an old park.

He sent me the pictures privately and told me not to share since he had sold the rights to the story to a treasure magazine.

In any event not many of us will ever find a decent sized hoard in our lifetime.

I know a couple of folks on the Canadian forum made out like bandits by tracking down long forgotten sites, 1 was a former beach now unused and the other was a former turn of the century picnic site since overgrown and gone back to woods.
 

Man, I'm really sorry about your brother. Bill. I don't know what I'd do if I'd lost mine.
 

bill
Back some 15 years ago I was in a book store. I ask the attendant if they had metal detecting magazines. He answered no and proceed to ask me about the sport. I gave him some general blah blah blah and he then told me a story that I still today don't know if I believe or not. He told me an older black man came by and told him to come with him and he would be payed handsomely. They went to an old home site on the Tennessee river in Muscle Shoals Al. They both lived in Florence across the river. The older man had a machine and proceeded to detect the old site. He said suddenly the older man got a strong signal. They dug and came out with he said 4 lbs. of melted gold and some silver coins. He said the man told him he would sell the finds and pay him later. The young guy was thinking yeah right. He then told me that some time later the older guy stopped by his house and payed him 50 bucks. If this is true there maybe some left. I'm thinking this was a large old land owner with a large estate home and when the union army came through either the owner burned the home to keep the Yanks from getting stuff or the union army burned it. I googled the place. It's there. The only problem is that it's on government property. It's very tempting to try to go look. I didn't have my Deus at the time but now since it folds nicely it could or could not pay off. This is the first time ive told this story publicly. Only my bride.
 

No ring, (turns out it was on the floor board of his truck, under the seat. What a dingleberry.) but that didn't stop me from digging up over 193 .22 bullet casings (we counted) three cents in change, several pieces of Budweiser can, and this really neat brass lock that may date back to pre 1930.

DSC_0989.jpgDSC_0990.jpg
 

rook,

Not suggesting you break the law or anything, however, if the site is not gated and either closed during the virus outbreak or at least weekends. Well I won't tell if you don't heh isn't government property which ultimately is public property because we foot the bills which is why we detect school yards, parks, sportsfields, etc....

Same logic just a different type of government site....and with those comments judge I rest my case....:laughing7::laughing7::laughing7:
 

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