lab rat
Hero Member
- Joined
- May 21, 2003
- Messages
- 947
- Reaction score
- 141
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Sunny Southern CA Coast
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab Sovereign
- Primary Interest:
- Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
Hello, bls!
Don't get discouraged. If you are finding bottle caps, you are finding metal. Each time you locate a target, make a mental note of what it sounds like, and when you recover it, associate the sound with the target. It takes practice-- I averaged 3 2-hour hunts a week for 5 years, and still have off days. That's over 1500 hours of hunting time! My finds work out to an average something like one really excellent find for every 50+ hours of hunting. It is a full- time job that doesn't pay well, if you look at it that way. I hunt for other reasons.
Here's a few simple rules:
1) a detector in the closet doesn't find anything
2) go where everyone goes; you're more likely to find something
3) go where nobody goes; someone was there in the past and may have lost something
4) the more desirable an object the less someone wants to lose it, and the less chance there is of finding it. Don't hunt to get rich! Its a losing proposition.
Think of it as an Easter-egg hunt. Even if there is no intrinsic value in what you find, there is a history behind every object, and if you are sensitive to that you will learn a great deal every time you dig a target. That knowlege will help you do better in the future.
Best of luck to ya!
Don't get discouraged. If you are finding bottle caps, you are finding metal. Each time you locate a target, make a mental note of what it sounds like, and when you recover it, associate the sound with the target. It takes practice-- I averaged 3 2-hour hunts a week for 5 years, and still have off days. That's over 1500 hours of hunting time! My finds work out to an average something like one really excellent find for every 50+ hours of hunting. It is a full- time job that doesn't pay well, if you look at it that way. I hunt for other reasons.
Here's a few simple rules:
1) a detector in the closet doesn't find anything
2) go where everyone goes; you're more likely to find something
3) go where nobody goes; someone was there in the past and may have lost something
4) the more desirable an object the less someone wants to lose it, and the less chance there is of finding it. Don't hunt to get rich! Its a losing proposition.
Think of it as an Easter-egg hunt. Even if there is no intrinsic value in what you find, there is a history behind every object, and if you are sensitive to that you will learn a great deal every time you dig a target. That knowlege will help you do better in the future.
Best of luck to ya!
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