Prober
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2007
- Messages
- 1,933
- Reaction score
- 5
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- West Michigan
- Detector(s) used
- White's M6, Bullseye II, Ace250
- #1
Thread Owner
Hey Gang,
I've been metal detecting in and around Grand Rapids since April of this year. Today I was in Johnson Park (out by Millenium Park) and a Park Ranger told me that there is no metal detecting allowed in any county park. I asked, "Even in wood chips?" "Nowhere except the beach at Millenium after the summer swim season is over."
I looked up the rules after I got home, the rules are somewhat vague...I think they did that intentionally.
Section 7. Preservation of Natural Features (I don't believe wood chips on playgrounds are natural features)
a. It shall be unlawful for any person to damage, cut, carve, mark, transplant, destroy, or remove any plant, injure or remove any bark or wood, pick flowers or harvest seed of of any tree or plant, dig in or otherwise disturb or remove soil, sand, grass, rock, minerals, fossils, stones, metals, artifacts, ground cover, or other surface or subsurface materials, excavate any natural feature by tool, equipment or explosive, or in any way injure the natural features of any area in a County park. This section does not apply to the picking or removal of edible mushrooms, berries, fruits, or nuts.
A violation of any of the following sections of this Ordinance shall constitute a misdemeanor, and shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment for not more than 90 days, or both.
7a and others.
This Ordinance does not say metal detecting in the playground wood chips is included. The Park ranger told me it was against the rules. I don't believe wood chips are a Natural Feature. I would suggest that if anyone is sited by the sheriff's department that they fight the ticket. I'm not a lawyer so don't take anything I say as being gospel. I will stay away from the county parks...they give a listing of the parks under their jurisdiction on their web site. I copied them down and suggest that you do as well...not all parks in Kent county are county parks; at least if the list they give is complete. Check the sign when you enter a park and make sure it doesn't say its a county park.
I've been metal detecting in and around Grand Rapids since April of this year. Today I was in Johnson Park (out by Millenium Park) and a Park Ranger told me that there is no metal detecting allowed in any county park. I asked, "Even in wood chips?" "Nowhere except the beach at Millenium after the summer swim season is over."
I looked up the rules after I got home, the rules are somewhat vague...I think they did that intentionally.
Section 7. Preservation of Natural Features (I don't believe wood chips on playgrounds are natural features)
a. It shall be unlawful for any person to damage, cut, carve, mark, transplant, destroy, or remove any plant, injure or remove any bark or wood, pick flowers or harvest seed of of any tree or plant, dig in or otherwise disturb or remove soil, sand, grass, rock, minerals, fossils, stones, metals, artifacts, ground cover, or other surface or subsurface materials, excavate any natural feature by tool, equipment or explosive, or in any way injure the natural features of any area in a County park. This section does not apply to the picking or removal of edible mushrooms, berries, fruits, or nuts.
A violation of any of the following sections of this Ordinance shall constitute a misdemeanor, and shall be punishable by a fine of not more than $500 or imprisonment for not more than 90 days, or both.
7a and others.
This Ordinance does not say metal detecting in the playground wood chips is included. The Park ranger told me it was against the rules. I don't believe wood chips are a Natural Feature. I would suggest that if anyone is sited by the sheriff's department that they fight the ticket. I'm not a lawyer so don't take anything I say as being gospel. I will stay away from the county parks...they give a listing of the parks under their jurisdiction on their web site. I copied them down and suggest that you do as well...not all parks in Kent county are county parks; at least if the list they give is complete. Check the sign when you enter a park and make sure it doesn't say its a county park.