NJKLAGT
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2014
- Messages
- 1,118
- Reaction score
- 1,914
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Southern Ontario
- Detector(s) used
- Garrett Euro Ace 350
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
- #1
Thread Owner
Nothing to go crazy about, but it's my first...
Dug my first champagne yesterday! It was hot and humid and the ticks were out in full force (I think I picked about 30 of them off me).
I wanted to switch things up yesterday so I set out to find some West Virginia swirls at a spot that has produced some marbles. The bottles there aren't really that great, just a bunch of 30s and 40s stuff and even some plastic. When I arrived I was spooked by a wild turkey that was nesting half under a rusted coil of wire fence. I was only a few yards away and hadn't even seen her when I was walking up, and she just shot up and flew through the trees. She had 12 eggs in her nest, and I've never seen a wild turkey's nest so that was cool. Anyway I dug a little ways away from the nest but only for about 5 minutes, because I wasn't finding anything, but mostly because I wanted to let the turkey get back on her eggs.
It was already around suppertime but I decided to hike out of the woods, cross some fields, and go right back into the woods again to try one of my favourite spots. This spot has produced a lot of great bottles and it's probably the place where I fell in love with the hobby. I thought I had dug everything there, but there was a heaping pile of more modern scrap metal and stuff off to the side that I impulsively decided to pick through to get to the surface. Once I got to ground level there was a rusted piece of sheet metal that I pried up, and right away I saw this champagne. I love the metal sheets and buckets because they often protect what's underneath. Welp, that's my story. I also found my 4th or 5th unique Hamilton Glass Co. fruit jar lid.



Dug my first champagne yesterday! It was hot and humid and the ticks were out in full force (I think I picked about 30 of them off me).
I wanted to switch things up yesterday so I set out to find some West Virginia swirls at a spot that has produced some marbles. The bottles there aren't really that great, just a bunch of 30s and 40s stuff and even some plastic. When I arrived I was spooked by a wild turkey that was nesting half under a rusted coil of wire fence. I was only a few yards away and hadn't even seen her when I was walking up, and she just shot up and flew through the trees. She had 12 eggs in her nest, and I've never seen a wild turkey's nest so that was cool. Anyway I dug a little ways away from the nest but only for about 5 minutes, because I wasn't finding anything, but mostly because I wanted to let the turkey get back on her eggs.
It was already around suppertime but I decided to hike out of the woods, cross some fields, and go right back into the woods again to try one of my favourite spots. This spot has produced a lot of great bottles and it's probably the place where I fell in love with the hobby. I thought I had dug everything there, but there was a heaping pile of more modern scrap metal and stuff off to the side that I impulsively decided to pick through to get to the surface. Once I got to ground level there was a rusted piece of sheet metal that I pried up, and right away I saw this champagne. I love the metal sheets and buckets because they often protect what's underneath. Welp, that's my story. I also found my 4th or 5th unique Hamilton Glass Co. fruit jar lid.


