Tom_in_CA
Gold Member
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2007
- Messages
- 13,803
- Reaction score
- 10,339
- Golden Thread
- 2
- Location
- Salinas, CA
- 🥇 Banner finds
- 2
- Detector(s) used
- Explorer II, Compass 77b, Tesoro shadow X2
- #1
Thread Owner
I live and hunt here in Calfornia. Back in the mid 1990s, I was hunting a site on the out-skirts of Hunter Liggett Military base, where an old stage stop had been. A truck pulled up along the country road & stopped. Eventually a guy stepped out, and walked over to talk to us. Turned out he was in the army, currently stationed at the military base up the road from where we were. He had seen us down in this field, so he stopped to talk to us.
He told us of how he had been stationed in Berlin, at the US bases near "check-point Charlie", about 1989 to 1991-ish. That was right about the time the iron curtain was coming down. So for the first time, the american military GI's could cross over into the "old-country" with no restrictions. So this guy, as most of the GI's did, would go sight-seeing to see what had been off-limits for so long.
Since this fellow's hobby was metal detecting, it didn't take long for him to wise up, and take his detector across the border to start exploring. Modern electronic gadgets, like metal detectors for instance, were simply un-heard of. ALL the parks were virgin he says. So he began to "make sport" of driving an hour or two into the interior of Russia (to get away from WWII destruction/junk zones), to little hamlets, little towns, etc... in search of these virgin parks. Every single one he came to was simply RIDDLED with coins, as fast as a person cared to dig. And since the Russian culture had not been as exposed to the throw-away culture (cans, tabs, foil, etc...) he said the junk ratio wasn't really that bad.
Naturally, he wasn't getting anything too terribly old (since he was just hunting town common's type turf, round-about-lawn, etc...). But he did get coins back to the late 1700s to mid 1800s at times. What amazed him, was all the silver from the 1920s to '40s stuff, which still wasn't too deep, and was in plentiful supply. He even got a gold coin once (mid 1800s-ish). Eventually his assignment to the US base there in Berlin ended, and he was stationed back in the USA.
I asked him if he ever had any legal hassles, or issues involving detector use. He said that ..... on the contrary, most people he ran into were quite intrigued, and wanted to know all about it. Ie.: "what's that?" "how does it work?" "where can I get one?" etc... And the Russian people were eager to meet Americans, as they were just as happy the iron curtain was down too. He met nothing but nice people, eager to invite you in to the nearest bar for a drink and talk
The only hassle he had, was one time some town alderman told him that if he found any coins of antiquity, he'd have to turn them in to the local town hall office, or whatever it was. He said that he told the guy "sure". But then he tells me that his math got real bad right after that
I guess an occasional busy-body encounter like that can happen anywhere. Even here in the USA 8)
He told us of how he had been stationed in Berlin, at the US bases near "check-point Charlie", about 1989 to 1991-ish. That was right about the time the iron curtain was coming down. So for the first time, the american military GI's could cross over into the "old-country" with no restrictions. So this guy, as most of the GI's did, would go sight-seeing to see what had been off-limits for so long.
Since this fellow's hobby was metal detecting, it didn't take long for him to wise up, and take his detector across the border to start exploring. Modern electronic gadgets, like metal detectors for instance, were simply un-heard of. ALL the parks were virgin he says. So he began to "make sport" of driving an hour or two into the interior of Russia (to get away from WWII destruction/junk zones), to little hamlets, little towns, etc... in search of these virgin parks. Every single one he came to was simply RIDDLED with coins, as fast as a person cared to dig. And since the Russian culture had not been as exposed to the throw-away culture (cans, tabs, foil, etc...) he said the junk ratio wasn't really that bad.
Naturally, he wasn't getting anything too terribly old (since he was just hunting town common's type turf, round-about-lawn, etc...). But he did get coins back to the late 1700s to mid 1800s at times. What amazed him, was all the silver from the 1920s to '40s stuff, which still wasn't too deep, and was in plentiful supply. He even got a gold coin once (mid 1800s-ish). Eventually his assignment to the US base there in Berlin ended, and he was stationed back in the USA.
I asked him if he ever had any legal hassles, or issues involving detector use. He said that ..... on the contrary, most people he ran into were quite intrigued, and wanted to know all about it. Ie.: "what's that?" "how does it work?" "where can I get one?" etc... And the Russian people were eager to meet Americans, as they were just as happy the iron curtain was down too. He met nothing but nice people, eager to invite you in to the nearest bar for a drink and talk

