Immy
Silver Member
Pardon me if I get melodramatic here, but the end of an era has just occured for a major part of my coin roll hunting.
I walked into my favorite penny casino today, returned a cupful of zincs, had my usual $2.50 breakfast (pretty good too!) and went to the cage to get another $10 in pennies to take home...and got the news - they no longer sell them and have phased out the machines that pay off in actual pennies. NOOOOOOO!!!!!
I must have looked stunned walking around after that. There was no indication that it was imminent, at least not the last time I visited. I knew this day would come but I thought the change over would be gradual rather than instantaneous.
This is a lethal blow to my penny hunting. I've been coming here since Nov. 1985 when I first noticed their marquee screaming "Come Try Our Penny Slots" and have pulled hundreds of wheats, and a handful of Indians, from their machines. To think that I'll never do that again, at this casino or any other, hits me at my very core.
I love roll hunting but I'm not a fan of re-rolling. Casinos have spoiled me by allowing me to simply return buckets of coins. That day is over, at least for pennies. Yes, some banks have counting machines but Las Vegas has been slow to employ this technology at most banks. And with the casino there was never a chance of getting a whole box of brand new coins, the searcher's nightmare.
So I gave my favorite local casino one last look around before I walked out for the final time. Yes, they still have nickel and quarter machines but so do many other smaller places that are closer to my home. I still have many fond memories of jackpots I've hit there, time spent with my father side-by-side playing poker, plucking wheats as I noticed them in the dim lighting and lugging home rolls of copper, eager in anticipation over what they contained.
I'm glad I concentrated on pennies over the last several months. It became the last hurrah at my favorite local source for pennies. Maybe I knew the end was near...
P.S. I'm keeping the casino anonymous for my own silly reasons. Maybe some of my fellow roll hunters will stumble across it by accident if the visit my fair city.
I walked into my favorite penny casino today, returned a cupful of zincs, had my usual $2.50 breakfast (pretty good too!) and went to the cage to get another $10 in pennies to take home...and got the news - they no longer sell them and have phased out the machines that pay off in actual pennies. NOOOOOOO!!!!!
I must have looked stunned walking around after that. There was no indication that it was imminent, at least not the last time I visited. I knew this day would come but I thought the change over would be gradual rather than instantaneous.
This is a lethal blow to my penny hunting. I've been coming here since Nov. 1985 when I first noticed their marquee screaming "Come Try Our Penny Slots" and have pulled hundreds of wheats, and a handful of Indians, from their machines. To think that I'll never do that again, at this casino or any other, hits me at my very core.
I love roll hunting but I'm not a fan of re-rolling. Casinos have spoiled me by allowing me to simply return buckets of coins. That day is over, at least for pennies. Yes, some banks have counting machines but Las Vegas has been slow to employ this technology at most banks. And with the casino there was never a chance of getting a whole box of brand new coins, the searcher's nightmare.
So I gave my favorite local casino one last look around before I walked out for the final time. Yes, they still have nickel and quarter machines but so do many other smaller places that are closer to my home. I still have many fond memories of jackpots I've hit there, time spent with my father side-by-side playing poker, plucking wheats as I noticed them in the dim lighting and lugging home rolls of copper, eager in anticipation over what they contained.
I'm glad I concentrated on pennies over the last several months. It became the last hurrah at my favorite local source for pennies. Maybe I knew the end was near...
P.S. I'm keeping the casino anonymous for my own silly reasons. Maybe some of my fellow roll hunters will stumble across it by accident if the visit my fair city.
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