artie---
Let's see if I have your whole story correct now.
You go to this Recreational Vehicle Park one day, to treasure hunt. Why there? What kind of treasure did you expect to fine out there? Buried bars of gold? A gold mine? An old crusty wheat penny? What?
So then, you are lucky enough to "locate" a rare find: An old silver dollar, which, long out of circulation, by now have become very rare (unless you go to a coin shop), and very valuable (about $33.00 in silver weight, alone); which somebody somehow lost while out in the middle of nowhere. Amazing!
Then you "locate" another coin, exactly the same thing, a rare silver dollar. But, rather than walking over and picking it up, you just say, "Oh, what the heck, even though I came all the way out here to go treasure hunting, I won't bother getting that one. I'll just drive all the way back home without it." Right.
And then you go all the way back out there, a couple days later, and video yourself pulling this other rare old silver dollar out of the ground, which just happened to be marked by two rocks, and it's all nice and shiny, after all those years in the weathered ground. Oh boy!
I've heard people comment about wild stories, saying, "This must be true, because you just can't make up stuff like this." But now I seriously doubt the validity of this quaint old saying!
Have somebody in your family bake you a cake, because you really deserve one for this yarn.
P.S. When will you man-up and take Carl's test?
ref:
Are LRLs More Than Just Dowsing?