Frozen ground???

Zodiacdiverdave

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XP Deus, AT Pro, Sea Hunter II, JW Fisher Proton Magnatometer, Shovel, Hammer and chisel
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All Treasure Hunting
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Detect in the woods. The ground stays soft a lot longer than in parks.
 

On a REALLY good site years ago I had 2 or 3 coffee cans with lots of holes poked in the bottom half of the cans and coat hangers made handles.
I would put charcoal in all of them and start them up. When I had a decent target I would put a can on it and look for another good target and put a can on that-then dig the defrosted targets and just keep rotating them to good targets-it makes for some selective digging but it was a heck of a killer site…….
It did get pretty muddy after awhile.
Mike
 

Get a cordless drill and get your hands on the type saw bit,i forget what theyre called,for cutting holes in doors for door knobs :wink:
 

3 inch brick chisel and a 3lb. sledge hammer......NGE
 

Thanks everyone, some great ideas for gutting through the ice layer.
We just had some snow yesterday but they are calling for more warm weather on Friday. I hope to get out and try out some of these ideas.
Thanks,
ZDD
 

Red James cash said:
Get a cordless drill and get your hands on the type saw bit,i forget what theyre called,for cutting holes in doors for door knobs :wink:
Thats a good idea ...never thought of that!
 

Red James cash said:
Get a cordless drill and get your hands on the type saw bit,i forget what theyre called,for cutting holes in doors for door knobs :wink:
Possible: "Core Driller Bit" or "Circular Hole cutter" I call them.
I like the Cordless (German made, Not Mexican Made) Bosh. with a back up battery.
Note: if you had a portable generator from Harbor Freight, a low cost "Heat Gun" works!
It can also warm up your hands & gloves. (Lately, I heat dry my leather boots after the day) (My extra idea).
Good luck.
 

I find a geologist pick is the quickest way to go. I just chop with the pointy end around my target and voila.
 

I just got a "raven" from preditor tools...used it the other day in a frozen cornfield and it worked great.....dug a seated dime.....still alot of work though.


M Scott @ FTP said:
On a REALLY good site years ago I had 2 or 3 coffee cans with lots of holes poked in the bottom half of the cans and coat hangers made handles.
I would put charcoal in all of them and start them up. When I had a decent target I would put a can on it and look for another good target and put a can on that-then dig the defrosted targets and just keep rotating them to good targets-it makes for some selective digging but it was a heck of a killer site…….
It did get pretty muddy after awhile.
Mike

Thats a pretty good idea....and you can use it to thaw out your fingers ! :thumbsup:
 

Some time i go out when the ground is frozen.
I take red golf tees pound them in the ground over target and go back in the early spring and dig them then.
Gary
 

when I was younger and could not wait to get out - was known to use a sledge hammer and larger chissel
not fun when warm even less when temps are below freezing and you slip and get your hand
 

I get my first metal detector today and I am in colorado, figure once I get a target I will then have my wife sit on that spot like a mother hen and I will come back in a few hours and dig...
 

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