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
I dig all of my bottles but I buy all of my jars. I know that some might not consider this to be treasure hunting in its purest sense, and in ways I'd have to agree with them.
But, I have only ever found two or three jars that weren't broken in all my time digging, and they weren't anything very old or desirable to me. I guess this is because big things get broken easily and tiny things weave down into the cracks and spaces where they stay protected in the ground over time.
At the flea market there's this guy who sells bottles and jars for a dollar, and these could be anything, doesn't matter to him, he'll even have an empty four-year-old beer bottle without a cap or label sitting there. So naturally a lot of the stuff stays there for a long time, but for a dollar you can imagine the good stuff goes fast. Once a month or so someone will come and drop off a few boxes of jars to sell him and you just have to hope that you happen to be there around the time that they arrive. I'll never forget the time I passed a lady leaving with a dozen ground lip jars, I had just missed out, who knows what was in that box of hers! Well anyway I guess I was there at the right time this time, scored three solid jars for a dollar each. First a green Crown quart, greener than some I've seen, and it's got a backwards 1 error, pretty cool. Then a nice Wallaceburg Gem quart with some thin green streaks and some big ol' bubbles on its backside. And last but not least a HFJCo Mason's Improved pint, ground lip, bubbly, awesome.
I would have been happy to spend three dollars on any one of these jars, so to get all three for a dollar each was such a rush. Now that the ground's hard I'll probably be spending more time at the flea shops!
So what are your most unbelievable flea market finds?

But, I have only ever found two or three jars that weren't broken in all my time digging, and they weren't anything very old or desirable to me. I guess this is because big things get broken easily and tiny things weave down into the cracks and spaces where they stay protected in the ground over time.
At the flea market there's this guy who sells bottles and jars for a dollar, and these could be anything, doesn't matter to him, he'll even have an empty four-year-old beer bottle without a cap or label sitting there. So naturally a lot of the stuff stays there for a long time, but for a dollar you can imagine the good stuff goes fast. Once a month or so someone will come and drop off a few boxes of jars to sell him and you just have to hope that you happen to be there around the time that they arrive. I'll never forget the time I passed a lady leaving with a dozen ground lip jars, I had just missed out, who knows what was in that box of hers! Well anyway I guess I was there at the right time this time, scored three solid jars for a dollar each. First a green Crown quart, greener than some I've seen, and it's got a backwards 1 error, pretty cool. Then a nice Wallaceburg Gem quart with some thin green streaks and some big ol' bubbles on its backside. And last but not least a HFJCo Mason's Improved pint, ground lip, bubbly, awesome.
I would have been happy to spend three dollars on any one of these jars, so to get all three for a dollar each was such a rush. Now that the ground's hard I'll probably be spending more time at the flea shops!
So what are your most unbelievable flea market finds?
