Bryanm362, wow, no one can say you didn't try

Not sure about your specific locale, but when I think of my own area, and places that match those types of descriptions you give (old church, old park, athletic fields, etc...) the results for any beginner would be dismally the same. Because a lot of them have simply been hunted to frazzles. Not that the hardcore good hunter can't still get more oldies, but .... it's not going to be easy for a beginner to go in and find those whispers, in a sea of zinc, foil, etc.... Or things like church yards that have been re-landscaped and re-filled with new sod, etc... And even though the person at the church or the house or whatever might tell you "it's original", yet perhaps they simply don't know. Like, it could have been re-done 10 or 20 yrs. ago. The list is endless of reasons why a place doesn't produce. It might truly be that the person is just no proficient in their experience. Or it might be that the spot simply isn't good for such things. There's no way for anyone else to know, without going there and trying for themselves, and/or talking to old-time good hunters in that area.
I recall one park in my state, where we used to pull a lot of silver from there back in the 1970s, '80s, and into the '90s. But it's a few hours away, so I would tend to hunt it only when happen-chance travelling through that area. Still, to this day, whenever going through there, it's usually still good for another barber dime, early merc, IH, or whatever. But a few years ago, I was corresponding with a hunter in that area. I asked him if he'd hunted that park. He answered that yes he had. Quite extensively as a matter of fact. However, he'd only found clad (and perhaps 1 or 2 wheaties there) in all the years he'd lived there. He simply couldn't believe it when I told him of the stuff we used to find there, or the fact that I told him I could STILL find oldies there. Eventually, he and I met up. I showed him the ropes, flagged a few that "I'd chase". And before long, he was up and running. In a few hunts, he'd found more oldies there in that park than in his entire several years up-till-then hunting it. He just hadn't know, prior to that, the type signals to chase, strategies to use, etc... And it's NOT something that can be described for someone else in "printed text". Because no amount of reading printed text will or can ever convey to someone else "sounds". You simply have to see and hear. Thus is the reason I suggest to hook up with long-time good hunters. Ie.: the types that can routinely bring in the silver from worked out parks.