VaNana
Full Member
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2014
- Messages
- 126
- Reaction score
- 144
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Northern Va
- Detector(s) used
- AT Pro, Garrett 350 Garrett pinpointers
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
- #1
Thread Owner
Great finds! You're so lucky to have such a great hunting spot, thank you for showing us your discoveries.
The big green piece of glass looks like it's from the base of a pontiled demijohn, maybe 1850s-60s?
So much anticipation! If these privies get found, it will be absolutely bonkers.
Try digging deeper in that shallow depression you described in your earlier thread. Go until the coal/ash debris stops. If you keep finding material that isn't the natural soil, then that's progress in anyone's books. So, it might be some tough and dirty digging, but there could be all sorts of little treasures thrown in with that mix of debris.
It could very well be a trash and ash pit (which is still good), but depending on what the dimensions are it could also be a privy. My first privy had about a foot and a half of burnt wood and ash debris on top, so don't get discouraged! Get dirty and dig it, and have your metal detector handy.
Great finds. I love bottles, but haven't found many ever. We have a trash pit located on the farm we dig on. The trash fills in an old roadbed about 80' long by 8' wide. Machine won't ground balance anywhere near it. I assume it's full of copperhead snakes right now. That's a January dig. Lots of big metal sticking out of the ground. Not sure I'll ever dig it, could get hurt easily down there.
There's probably a privy right under or right next to the tree, the roots love that old outhouse "soil" and trees grow great over top of or very near old privies.
Can't tell about the glass, bot the lock is pretty cool. The lock looks pretty toasted, so nothing to lose, try soaking it in apple cider vinegar say for a week, the vinegar works really well in eating away the heavy rust, then alittle wire brushing and soaking again if need be, it might turn out looking OK. Also if it looks like something you might want to keep, then also soak it in a water /baking soda mix, the baking soda will or should draw out the acid from the vinegar.
The only thing I would add to sprailroad's helpful tip about lock preservation is to bake the lock when done. Baking relics on a hotplate in the garage seems to halt any hidden cancer on items I have done.
Here is a lock I recently did.
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