Mills Creek Cooperative - 7/17/99
It is a fact that a lot
of the very best mining ground is already claimed. The diligent prospector
can find new ground, or careful study of claims records can sometimes reveal
a claim that has lapsed and can be restaked. These methods are time-consuming,
and the ground acquired is still not usually the best. Excellent mining
ground tends to be claimed, and these claims rarely lapse.
This leaves working out permission to access claims, whether
on percentage or lease deals, or the outright purchase of mining claims.
When it comes to purchase, the problem becomes money. When that good deal
arises, money can be all that is lacking.
In 1997 a group of mining claims on Mills Creek on the Kenai
Peninsula came up for sale. This creek is one of the better producers historically
on the Kenai Peninsula, and so attracted my attention. Unfortunately, I
did not have the funds to buy the claims outright, and so did not pursue
them.

Blue Bonnets at Mills Creek
Luckily, some friends, also excited about the claims, decided
that a group of us should pool our money to buy the claims. The idea was
discussed, possible pitfalls worked out, and the purchase proceeded. So
it was that I am now a member of the Mills Creek Cooperative. We made a
group purchase of the claims, and agreed upon a set of rules governing the
member's use of the claims. A written agreement of this sort is very important,
so that minor (or major) misunderstandings can hopefully be avoided.
Last summer some basic exploratory mining took place, and
it was found that the ground contained good, reasonably coarse gold. Match
head size nuggets are common, with nuggets up to several pennyweights found.
I'll backtrack and add last years Mills Creek experiences to this Journal
some time in the future.
One of the agreements about our claims is that each dredger
must mark a 300 foot stretch of creek as his current site of operations.
These sites are first-come, first-serve, and are good as long as they are
worked at least once each thirty days. I had let my old site lapse last
fall, and decided it was time to pick a new dredging area for the year.
My friend Darrell, who has recently arrived in Alaska, has never mined for
gold before, so I invited him along for a little mining and camping.

Camp at Mills Creek
An old mining road leads several miles off the highway to
our claims. This small road is normally designated as non-motorized access
only, but our permits for the claims allow us to use vehicles on the road.
This is very important, as the distance and elevation change would make
bringing in equipment very difficult otherwise. It also provides a small
measure of security, as non-miners are not allowed to access the claims
with motorized equipment, somewhat reducing the problem of theft. The above
photo is of my normal camp on the lower portion of our claims, where one
branch of the road ends as it is pinched between the creek and a cliff.
I marked off a 300 foot
stretch of creek upstream, in a section where the water is forced through
a small, vertical rockwall gorge. The water is fast and furious at this
point, and it will not allow me to dredge until water levels drop in the
next couple of months. This is fine, as it will allow me time to pack my
equipment in, and do a little trail work. I'm hoping the bedrock gorge may
have some nice pockets of gold. We sniped gold both above and below the
section late last fall. The water in the gorge itself was deeper than we
could check out with hand tools alone, so only a dredge will tell how good
it is.
Several of my partners
were actively trying new ground in the lower, more open portion of the creek.
All the work to date is being done with 4" and 5" dredges, with
plans for a 6" dredge in the near future. I am currently planning on
using a 4" subsurface dredge in the gorge.

Marshall & Lyle's worksite and
Al & Kenny in the water
A few hours of panning
bedrock exposures along the creek produced minimal results. Darrell and
I then switched to metal detecting an area that had decent results last
summer. Exposed bedrock along one side of the creek had produced numerous
nuggets, but was fairly well picked over. A couple hours detecting located
a dozen nuggets that were missed, however. This resulted in Darrell going
home with a couple of pennyweight of nice nuggets, not bad for a first time
mining trip.

Gold putting a smile on Darrell's face!
Everyone got gold, but no fantastic finds were made. Everyone
was getting setup for the first time this summer, and getting the bugs worked
out of the operations. I don't intend to do any real dredging myself until
September, when water levels start to come down, but may get tempted to
come up sooner. We'll just have to see what develops.
~ Steve Herschbach
Copyright 2000 Herschbach Enterprises
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