An interesting find finds its way back home

tnt-hunter

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Location
Mountain Maryland
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
9
Detector(s) used
Fisher CZ-21, Minelab Equinix 800, ,Garret AT Pro,
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I got back to campus the other day and had 3 hours to detect. A decent number of coins came out of the ground, but the area was heavier in trash than usual and most of the coins were pennies, 83 out of 118 so the face was only $6.13. In addition I found a bent and broken handle for an old safety razor, an old car key, both halves of a cheapy cutwork heart (found 5 feet apart), a crochet hook and a pendant.

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The pendant is plated so it is not valuable, but it is inscribed with “Falcons 87” on one side and a name on the other. Out of curiosity I search the name and found an obituary for the man. He was a 1987 graduate of Frankfort High in West Virginia, they are the Falcons, and he was a graduate of the college where I found it. He probably lost the pendant while he was a student so it was lost at least 27 years ago or longer. I found names of parents and relatives in the obituary so I checked the local Maryland phone book and found numbers for his grandmother and an uncle. Other number would probably be in the West Virginia book, but I don’t have one. He died in January 2018 so I was hoping the numbers would still be good.

I know the pendant is not valuable in the monetary sense but it may have sentimental value to the family since they lost him at the age of 48, so I made a call and grand mother gave me his mother’s number. Mom was surprised by the call, but when I asked if she wanted the pendant she definitely wanted it. She mentioned that he passed away last year and her responses to our conversation told me she was very happy the pendant was finding its way home. The easiest way to get it to her is by mail so she gave me her address and I put it in an envelope and will mail it tomorrow. Another find returned!

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Thanks for looking and may your coil lead you to good things.
 

Upvote 38
Nice bunch of coins,and I am proud of you on the return of that pendant,the family will cherish it forever. CONGRATS.
 

Very nice all the way around .. You got my vote for Honorable Mention!
 

No doubt, honorable mention. Very nice gesture. Gary
 

Nice find, but excellent gesture on returning it. Honorable mention from me also.
 

You did all detectorists a great service.
 

Very nice day. Congrats.
 

Honorable mention goid deed
 

That is very kind of you to go to the effort to get that back! Nice work!
 

Nice finds, congrats!!!
 

Congratulations on the nice finds and sharing the story! :icon_thumleft:

You are doing a nice thing for the family...Honorable Mention in my book!:notworthy:
 

I am surprised that this thread hasn't been granted Honorable Mention status. :dontknow:
 

Always enjoy a story with a happy ending, but I have a question I hope you can answer. How do you dig over 120 keeper targets in 180 minutes, repair your plugs and find the next keeper target? I gotta know so I can up my game. I was hunting for almost six hours yesterday and had 55 "keepers" in that time. I thought I was moving along pretty good, but you youngsters put this 68 year old man to shame for search, extract and repair. One find cycle every 1.5 minutes is outstanding! You da man!:notworthy:
 

Job well done- Congrats!
 

Congrats on the finds and the return.
 

JoeVal, here are the secrets of fast target recovery. when the good targets are only a swing or 2 of the coil apart and you have soft ground, and it also helps that the trash level in this place is low. I have had a lot of practice and can pin point without using the pinpoint feature on the detector. So I cut the plug with a mini shovel and use the Garrett carrot, trowel the dirt with the target onto a bucket lid recover the target, pouch it and tip the lid into the hole, flip the plug back stand and stomp it down and start swingin.

When I first started detecting the latest scout camp, almost all the targets were within 2 inches of the surface so when I got a signal I just used the pinpointer and a trowel and my recovery time averaged about 40 seconds a target.

One last thing, I am NOT a youngster. I am 68 as well and have been detecting for 16 and a half years.

Thanks for looking and keep swingin.
 

Thanks for the tips. How big is your bucket lid and how do you carry it to keep it out of your way yet handy to get?
 

A good deed done! Very nice of you! Nice finds too! Congrats! :icon_thumleft:
 

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