Whats number one on your bucket list?

Blak bart

Gold Member
Jun 6, 2016
18,676
98,450
FL keys
🥇 Banner finds
5
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
Mine lab primary fisher secondary
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
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Spanish, old, gold, with emeralds and diamonds !! Anything similar to this !! Preferably church related !! Gotta dream big !!
 

birdman

Gold Member
Jan 28, 2005
7,458
2,393
Choctaw Beach Florida
🥇 Banner finds
1
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
Equinox 800 and ORX, tesoro Cibola with garret,whites and minelab pinpointers
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Spanish gold coin would be the ultimate
 

ARC

Gold Member
Aug 19, 2014
37,384
132,444
Tarpon Springs
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JW 8X-ML X2-VP 585
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All Treasure Hunting
Mexican 8 escudos Royal... AKA... "Galano".

This one sold for $330,000 in Nov.

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RustyRelics

Gold Member
Apr 5, 2019
5,911
32,384
Central PA
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Equinox 600/Ancient Whites MXT
Primary Interest:
Relic Hunting
This question could be answered so many ways, and in my case, I already found a bucket lister even though I never knew it existed (my avatar). But, here goes.

For Arrowheads and associated artifacts: A Clovis or something similar.

For Civil War Relics: Either my first U.S. Plate, first eagle button, first Confederate plate, first artillery shell, or first Kentucky related artifact. A Virginia button would be nice.

For coins: ANY DAMN SILVER COIN WILL DO! FIVE YEARS OF FUDGING CLAD!

For Colonial: This will fall under coins, but a Conn. Copper, A Virginia halfpenny, KGIII, Spanish reale or cob or pistareen, and some revolutionary war regimental buttons.

For bottles: John Ryan cobalt blue squat soda, Local Portsmouth Ohio and Ashland Kentucky amber Coca Cola straight sides (ultra rare I'm told, I already have the Huntington W.Va one, but I bought that so... I cheated).
 

old digger

Gold Member
Jan 15, 2012
7,505
7,304
Montana
Detector(s) used
White's MXT
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I would like to luck upon an early settler's hidden stash. I've read that a lot of early Montana settlers and business men would hide their fortunes. I recall of one that would always want to be paid in gold coin. One of his stashes was found, but it was rumored that there was more to be found.
 

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