Jump to content

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. I like it. Focused hunting has always rewarded me. I would say you are on the right path. HH Mike
  3. I carry mine in my sock. I usually find gold when I forget my bottle, so now I just use my sock. When I first started doing it, I walked 2 miles with 2/3 oz of nuggets working their way under my sole. Good times.
  4. Today
  5. I have an original hardwired Compadre, that I still use to teach my beginner veterans proper technique and pinpointing, so they are not overwhelmed right out of the box. That's me with Vince Gifford, and Rusty Henry, at the factory in Prescott. In the early to mid 2000s, I used their Lobo Super Track for my gold prospecting business south of them in Congress, Arizona.
  6. I don't want to kill any animals and would only do so as a very last resort in self-defense. Like in this short clip. Imagine he would not have had a self-defense tool. Lucky though that everyone lived, but man... BTW, I don't think these were intended to be warning shots. Also, brave that he filmed with only one hand on the gun. I would have used both... So how did we get here? Ah yes, definitely no headphones for me in the mountains šŸ™‚ GC
  7. Yes! A thousand times, yes!! I admit, Iā€™d be willing to pay a fee to add certain features a la carteā€¦I wouldnā€™t think twice about ponying up $15-20 to add pinpoint volume. $99 might be a little too steep for me for the mineralization meterā€¦but my opinion is skewed because Iā€™m fortunate to have mild soil in my usual detecting areas. Maybe $30 for the monochrome version? šŸ˜‰ I know fee structures like that can be a slippery slope thoughā€¦.just look at airlines to see how you can get nickel and dimed for everything!
  8. Chuck, you ever think of the funny, and great videos you wish had been made of yourself, back in the day? I was telling Chris tonight of the time I had the starter go out on the Ford, way back in the Pahsimeroi Valley. Had the Rokon in the back. Came back from hunting and starter wouldn't turn. Truck was nose-on to a big brushpile (stupid). Unloaded Rokon, and used it to get truck pulled back and turned around. That took about 10 tries. Then downhill wasn't steep enuf to get truck rolling, so tied Rokon to truck with dog's long rope. Then pulled truck to get moving, drove Rokon off side of two-track, and dropped, quickly untied rope from truck as it's moving, opened door, and jumped in. Of course all this required about 15 attempts to get right. A speed up video of all that would have made Charlie Chaplain laugh 'til his guts ached. I remember on the way home I felt like I did a decathlon...LOL. Don't want to think about being on the ground, close range, with two coons. Now that would be fun to watch. Those things are mean, and tough. Much tougher to kill than a badger IMHO. Jim
  9. Good eye! My first couple years on the Equinox 800, I almost always hunted with the horseshoe engaged. On the occasions that I didnā€™t, I always had the reference threshold in the background so I still had a gage on how polluted the soil might be getting. The last couple years, I started using what I called my ā€œPoor Manā€™s 6-Tonesā€ on the Equinox that used the threshold exclusively as my iron tone (iron range notched) while my first tone bin went to the bottom of the nickel range (gave me room for threshold as iron, then sub-nickel, nickel, trashy, IHP thru Copper Penny, and Dime & above ranges - total of 6 ā€œtonesā€ for a 5 tone setting). Anyway, the point is, I got very used to hearing threshold breaks as my iron tone. Iā€™ve carried that trait over into the Manticore, which, to me, is essentially built on the same concept - a dedicated ferrous tone, and up to 5 dedicated non-ferrous ranges. Long story longer, Iā€™ve been keeping the horseshoe disengaged w/reference threshold on during the majority of the hunt, and now engaging the horseshoe only for targets Iā€™m stopping to investigate more thoroughly - the pronounced iron tone and red numbers jump out more noticeably on the iffy target, for sure. Iā€™m pretty sure just having the reference threshold break as my iron tone on the Manticore was encouraging me to over-focus on the 2D display, especially since I was trying to learn what that was trying to tell me. Youā€™re right, having the horseshoe consistently engaged while using ATHC might have helped snap me back into reality on how bad those targets really sounded while using that mode. As you and fishersari both suggested, I really need to put the 2D aside for now and focus on the audio quality and tone responses, and work the 2D screen in over time as the (valuable) supplementary tool that it is. Maybe I need to slap some black tape over it temporarily!! šŸ˜
  10. Im in Alaska and no geologist either, but it looks like similar rocks Ive found usually in encased in a conglomerate or concreation. Same shinny mica looking grey blue. I think its related to sulfides. Kodiak
  11. Nice find! An 1800s 8 Real coin. Congratulations! That is one nice chunk of silver. šŸ‘
  12. I found an 1825 example here: https://archive.org/details/TheEagleAndTheShield/page/n221/mode/2up
  13. Likewise, I get notifications when you post. It's been quite the adventure reading this. And an eye opener. I've lived in CA all my life. I haven't heard anything like this. Some of the characters I'll remember for a long time. Like that guy that lives full time in the mountains and visited you for a day or two. All those hooligans that were just out to steel your gold. Whisky Jack the actual oldtimer who was around for the hydro mining and knew the mine. All kinds of interesting stuff. It's a real job and serious business I'm glad you wrote it down for all of us to read and enjoy.
  14. Tom, I think it might be Civil War era. You might have seen the eagle on a Union Civil War Breast Plate. The breast plate has the same eagle look and is facing the same direction of that on the ring. It's looking to its left. Most are looking to their right. Maybe more clarity of the sides of the ring would help identification.
  15. Somewhat off topic but Steve, GhostMiner, and Ron are you guys in Nevada County? Is there a detecting group I can look into/join?
  16. Thank you Gerry! I really appreciate that incredible photo collage - WoW!šŸ˜
  17. Great information throughout, fishersari - and thanks so much for finding and re-posting that response from Minelab. Very interesting to see that the iron falsing tendency seems to get more pronounced in soil with less mineralization - as I mentioned, the soil in my area generally has very low mineralization. It looks like I have to be much more selective about when I choose to run in ATHC, be more savvy about my supporting settings when I do, and be willing to dig noticeably more iron in exchange for some potentially masked targets if I elect to go after the iffier signals. @UT Dave @Jeff McClendon @TampaBayBrad @Dug D @Skull diver, Thanks to all of you for your very helpful replies - excellent advice and observations throughout, and Iā€™ve already begun to implement many of your suggestions as I continue to learn the machine, and Iā€™ve already seen a dramatic difference. Over the weekend, I spent a couple hours at one of the sites that was giving me so many problems in my original post, only this time I stayed in ATLC. Itā€™ll probably come as no surprise to any of you that I had almost no falsing difficulties whatsoever. Iā€™m not sure what my problem was when I had tried that mode on my first few hunts with the machine and I came away thinking it was falsing as often as ATHC - maybe I had my settings jacked up, maybe it was inexperience with the machine, or maybe I was just plain mixed up. But ATLC over the weekend was a night and day difference for me versus ATHC - I even came home with a ā€˜36 Merc from a pounded park. Iā€™m a bit embarrassed that I didnā€™t think of going back and trying ATLC on my own before posting, but hopefully this thread can help other new Manticore owners as much as it turned the light bulb on for meā€¦a lot of excellent wisdom in these follow up posts.
  18. Ronā€™s first map: https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0073/plate-1.pdf https://maps.princeton.edu/catalog/princeton-9593tw73b Ronā€™s second map: https://digital.library.ucla.edu/catalog/ark:/21198/zz002b0jd5
  19. Fishing8046 Those maps are paper ones I have, which area are you interested in as I can zoom in and take a closer picture. Ron
  20. Yes, ticks are bad this year, ask me how I know. šŸ™‚
  21. I don't know why this coin were in my country.. there is no history with mexico that I know of in the location it was found but the place once was a small harbor near a river which they mine leads long time ago.. anyway post this because I feels like the forum loves silver šŸ™‚..
  22. Thank you for sharing those maps. You wouldn't happen to have a link you could share or a pdf that we could zoom in on?
  23. I have read this since day one, check in almost everyday. Its been a great read.
  24. Hello, i am by no means a geologist but i am trying to learn about different minerals and compositions of rocks. There is an area i am working in New Zealand at the top of a hill where i am finding a lot of Brown (Iron?) coloured rocks and inside is a really dark grey/blue with shiny particles. Im an amateur prospector and learning every day! Any suggestions greatly appreciated.
  25. I've already got it. Thats what was on it when I found the small nugget
  1. Load more activity
×
×
  • Create New...