Ben Cartwright SASS
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2012
- Messages
- 1,636
- Reaction score
- 1,587
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Massachusetts
- Detector(s) used
- Whites, Garrett
- Primary Interest:
- Other
I have been on a hiatus for several years from metal detecting and now that I have started again I remember one of many things that drove me bonkers.
Where I hunt you really cannot dig holes, parks, churches private yards, and in eastern Mass we have tons of small flat coin sized rocks. I probe with either a brass probe or a flat head screw driver that I rounded off the end of. When I am probing I try to be gentle as you don't want to scratch a seated dime or quarter so as soon as I touch something at about the right depth I cut a slit and gently work it up to the surface to find - another flat rock
If I wasn't being that careful I could and have tapped the rock/coin to try to see what it is, but I seem to find alot of rocks, I feel like Charlie Brown at Halloween. I think that is why I like to hunt the beach with a sifter or a local park that dates from the 1800's where I found a large cent but has mostly loam.
How do most people do it?
Where I hunt you really cannot dig holes, parks, churches private yards, and in eastern Mass we have tons of small flat coin sized rocks. I probe with either a brass probe or a flat head screw driver that I rounded off the end of. When I am probing I try to be gentle as you don't want to scratch a seated dime or quarter so as soon as I touch something at about the right depth I cut a slit and gently work it up to the surface to find - another flat rock

If I wasn't being that careful I could and have tapped the rock/coin to try to see what it is, but I seem to find alot of rocks, I feel like Charlie Brown at Halloween. I think that is why I like to hunt the beach with a sifter or a local park that dates from the 1800's where I found a large cent but has mostly loam.
How do most people do it?
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