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NJ Art

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Cape May County, NJ
  • Interests:
    Great Outdoors
  • Gear In Use:
    Manticore

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  1. Great advice. Thank you for taking the time and sharing your knowledge. I will be passing this on.
  2. Thank you again. You were spot on with your assessment, good eye sir. He will do well when he sells them, it will be the first time he ever sold any of his finds. I think his wife already decided where the money will go.🙂 I will not be expecting much on the site we just hunted as it is being planted as a shrub and tree farm. We will be back in the winter when the ground tightens up, hopefully with allot of moister. This is the way of many of my sites that were plowed every Spring. The good news is he just purchased another 90 acres and 40 acres. The 90 acres sits behind a late 17th century home and is butted up against a deep creek fed pond. He just sent me a pick of a beautiful Indian ax head, he asked me why the arrow head was so big... I'm currently giving batting lessons to two of his children, having a blast reliving my coaching days, as my two girls have flown the coop a decade ago and are serving our country. The cut corn stalks will be plowed under any day, should be interesting. Art
  3. Hello all. I saved my pics of my last hunt on the farm until my buddies coins came back from PCGS. A 1782 Hibernia, silver top from a thimble and smalls. He is driving for the next few days very excited. He asked me and I couldn't tell him what his coins are worth so here they are.
  4. My earliest coin to date. 1608-1609 Philip III Kings Monogram 1/2 Real Cob.
  5. I now know what left the melted looking gray substance had to have been from the center mass, color matches. Dripped right out of the small vent hole.
  6. What puzzles me is it looks to be totally different materials in a number of places on the outside. I agree after looking at a whole lot of pictures the inside is very uniform. There is a silver flake that looks like it ozzed out of its resting place in the iron, had to be glowing what ever it is.
  7. 14.8 gram end slice, medium rare please with no onions. Not the best of cuts, had trouble feeding it through my water fed diamond bandsaw, using a custom jig to hold it down it kept binding towards the end of the cut. Looks like a group of stars when angled in the right light.
  8. Thank you for your response. You never know it very well could be. I'm new to this, as I always thought that it was a piece of coral until I saw the Apollo rocks brought back from the moon. The holes looked very familiar in shapes and appearance that is why I posted it. What ever it is, it was super heated and is loaded with flakes and tubes of possible iron nickel, I hope.
  9. More pics. Blackish green type crust with striations maybe, it is very sparse. Cut a very small window 3/4 x 1/2. The silver dot to the right has 8 sides. There are many minute specks only seen under magnification. Any body out there with any comment would be very welcome.
  10. I have used the Lesche Relic Hunter since 2001, 39.5 inches long with a 5.5 x11 inch curved straight edge shovel with a T handle, its a small root guillotine, its not pointy. Mine is now 10 inches long. When the ground is super hard I use the Predator Raven.
  11. Glad your going to sleep tonight, that crap use to keep me up. I have a collection of lead weights being from the shore area, around twenty or so. Some crude but all hand flattened or shaped. If its lead and has a hole at one end pretty much describes them. Somebody with a bright idea decided to make a mold.
  12. Looks exactly like a rose head. Maybe a big lead whomper. 😉 Check the edges for two opposite holes or existing wire, I have dug seals that big. Nice hunt Mr.
  13. Here are a few more pics. It weighs 1270g. Any feedback is welcome, thanks.
  14. Not sure what this is. It has iron throughout with some kind of white shining metal scattered with the iron. It was found in New Jersey. It passed the magnet test of course but the bigger holes on just one side reminded me of coral or limestone, a NOT by what I am reading. There are very small gray areas that look like glazing on pottery. Thanks for looking. Art
  15. That is a nice hunt sir. Better to dig holes than thinking about digging holes, glad your out hunting. Love finding those Mercury dimes, beautifully designed. Looking forward to your next hunt.
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