This is what door knocking is all about! Single best night Ive had.

TrpnBils

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This is what door knocking is all about! Single best night I've had.

So over the past few months I've finally grown a set, put on my big boy pants, and gotten comfortable with door-knocking and I have to say it's been generally a positive experience so far. I've met a lot of cool people, and tonight was no exception. I've been working this 1799 house off and on for 9 months or so with very little to show for it, and I decided to hit a nearby house that used to be part of the original homestead tonight. I ended up talking to the lady for probably 45 minutes and learned a little about the house. She's a retired teacher from the same school my wife and I teach now, so we spent some time BSing about other teachers...who's there, who's dead, and how crazy things were back in the day (I was unaware that they were still using corporal punishment in our district as late as the late 80's!). Lots in common, and I have an open invitation to go back any time I want, which is good, because I would bet money on this being virgin ground and right from the start tonight (I actually hunted it for maybe 90 minutes) it was easily the best night of metal detecting I've had, and I've barely covered any ground.

The house is 90 years old, there is hardly ANY trash, and all targets so far have been shallow (within 4"). I'm heading back Sunday and will be going straight for one particular tree, because when I was leaving, she was telling me about how she has pictures of when the house was built and the original owners used to hang their hammock from these particular trees (the hooks are still hanging from the trees). There's also a lot of CW history in the area and I've dug bullets at the original 1799 house before (which is less than 1/4 mile away). The history of the house shows that the occupants at the time sat out on the porch and watched the troops march past (and I've got evidence of a camp in their yard in the form of melted 3-ringers).

Anyway, here it goes (and apparently not in the order the pictures showed up in):

1) Pieces of a pocket watch, no face or case yet, but I'm hoping...,
2) Two thimbles,
3) Five wheats ranging 1936 to 1954,
4) 10c token for Colgate's Dental Ribbon Cream,
5) "Golden Showers" plant tag (only because I'm juvenile and this made me laugh),
6) Good luck token,
7) Fired musketball,
8) 1928P Mercury Dime,
9) 1916P Buffalo Nickel (my first Buff!),
10) 1898P Indian Head Penny,
11) 1943 2 Francs coin

Can anybody give me any more info on the 2 Franc coin? I guess I assumed German, but I'm not sure. EDIT: Nevermind, it appears to be French.
 

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Upvote 20
Great finds! what part of WV are u from.
Eastern panhandle - I'm guessing the opposite end of the state from where you're located, based on your username

nice hunt ... how did you clean the nickle ?
Well....It was RED when I dug it. It's not really worth anything, so I though I'd try out a few "cleaning" methods (that aren't really that at all) I had read about. If you look up how to clean red nickels, a lot of people recommend soaking it in Worcestershire sauce overnight. I tried that and it did work pretty well, but it left it with a deep gray coloration (think slate) that I wasn't real wild about. In the meantime, other people recommend using fine steel wool to shine up coins. Again, it wasn't/isn't worth a damn thing anyway, and all it's doing is going in a coin book of things I've dug so I'm not ever going to get any money out of it. What you see there is after 30 seconds of fine steel wool. Looks OK to me, and I know better than to do ANY of that on a coin that's actually valuable.

Actually, if you click on the thumbnail and look at the full-size picture, it looks like it's pitted. That was something I noticed after I soaked it, well before the steel wool. So if you go the route of soaking it (I believe it's the same concept of soaking in vinegar/salt solution, and I KNOW that will destroy clad if you leave it too long).
 

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Are metal plant tags old, or do they still make them?
 

Are metal plant tags old, or do they still make them?
I'm not sure. I know they CAN be old, but I don't know if they're still made. I've found a few of them over the years, and none have appeared to be real new.
 

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