BioProfessor
Silver Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2007
- Messages
- 2,917
- Reaction score
- 84
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Mankato, MN
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab e-Trac, White E-Series DFX
Hi all,
I got an invite to take a little boat ride from The Netherlands to the UK to check out a country estate just east of Ipswich in the UK. When I got there, I found out that the estate owner didn't really understand metal detecting. The estate is a little over 500 acres and when I looked it over with Google Earth, it looked to be about 75% pasture and 25% woods. Not a bad mix of chunks of lead in one place and old shotgun shells in the other. Just typical UK. What I didn't know was that there were no longer any animals in the pastures - no horses, no sheep, nothing. So all the pastures were grass all right. TALL grass. So I had the run of the whole place. Ouch.
So I walk the estate and find a small part of a hillside that has lots of nettles and areas of grass and weeds that are not that tall. I can weave my way through the area and find a "path" where I can swing my stock coil. No use in even trying the WOT. Not a chance.
So I have an area of about 100 meters by about 150 meters that are huntable. Well I've got 10 days so I figure I will cover it pretty good.
I hunt through the area the first day and find the normal pieces of lead, little snippets of brass, a crotal bell, a buckle or two, and a few what's its. I find one mid 1800's silver 6 pence so I figure it is at least a place that still has stuff to find.
On my second day, I'm working my way up the field and get a nice low tone. Lead. But you're there and you have to dig it. Hey it could be good lead. Something like a nice musket ball. Well I dig it and out pops what I think is the typical "gob" of lead sheet that was evidently used to repair everything in the UK for the past 1000 years. I pick it up and since I have more time than land to hunt, I brush it off. It's not a hunk of lead, it's a medieval (13th - 15th century part of it) lead Holy Water Ampulla. I couldn't believe it. Only this little chunk of land and I find this!! Made my day. Couldn't do the gold dance but it was a least worth a little jig.
Probably because I had the time, I scan my hole before I cover it up. Low signal still there. WT
OK, now it's going to be the musket ball. So out comes another shovel of dirt and a second Ampulla rolls down the pile of dirt. And this one is PERFECT!! A 600 year old artifact that is in this shape. Now I was ready to do some kind of dance. Just had to. Two Medieval Holy Water Ampullae in the same place.
Holy cow!
Made my week for sure.
Thanks for looking.
Daryl
I got an invite to take a little boat ride from The Netherlands to the UK to check out a country estate just east of Ipswich in the UK. When I got there, I found out that the estate owner didn't really understand metal detecting. The estate is a little over 500 acres and when I looked it over with Google Earth, it looked to be about 75% pasture and 25% woods. Not a bad mix of chunks of lead in one place and old shotgun shells in the other. Just typical UK. What I didn't know was that there were no longer any animals in the pastures - no horses, no sheep, nothing. So all the pastures were grass all right. TALL grass. So I had the run of the whole place. Ouch.
So I walk the estate and find a small part of a hillside that has lots of nettles and areas of grass and weeds that are not that tall. I can weave my way through the area and find a "path" where I can swing my stock coil. No use in even trying the WOT. Not a chance.
So I have an area of about 100 meters by about 150 meters that are huntable. Well I've got 10 days so I figure I will cover it pretty good.
I hunt through the area the first day and find the normal pieces of lead, little snippets of brass, a crotal bell, a buckle or two, and a few what's its. I find one mid 1800's silver 6 pence so I figure it is at least a place that still has stuff to find.
On my second day, I'm working my way up the field and get a nice low tone. Lead. But you're there and you have to dig it. Hey it could be good lead. Something like a nice musket ball. Well I dig it and out pops what I think is the typical "gob" of lead sheet that was evidently used to repair everything in the UK for the past 1000 years. I pick it up and since I have more time than land to hunt, I brush it off. It's not a hunk of lead, it's a medieval (13th - 15th century part of it) lead Holy Water Ampulla. I couldn't believe it. Only this little chunk of land and I find this!! Made my day. Couldn't do the gold dance but it was a least worth a little jig.
Probably because I had the time, I scan my hole before I cover it up. Low signal still there. WT

Holy cow!
Made my week for sure.
Thanks for looking.
Daryl
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