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Lanny

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Posts posted by Lanny

  1. This is a fun little post.

    On a different note, looking at all of the picks in the photo (plus the pristine pick head in the first photo) reminds me of the cost in labor and freight to get those picks to the goldfields, and how sometimes, perfectly good picks were left behind. Sometimes by prospectors that had gone bust and just wanted to get out of the goldfields without having to pack out the extra weight (with guns occasionally left behind for the same reason), and probably some that were simply lost. (I lost my favorite pick once, got out in a hurry to show my wife some nuggets I'd found, but left the pick behind at the workings. Years later saw a local no-good with it at his claim--law of salvage I guess.)

    I found a cache of tools once while detecting in Montana. They were buried under the dirt, with the large, oblong hole underneath covered by a piece of sheet iron, all resting beneath a huge tree. All of the tools' (picks and shovels) wooden handles had long since disappeared due to time. A case of someone thinking they'd return later?

    Thanks for fuelling some memories, and all the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 7
  2. Allen, great pictures and cool story. You and I get to do the same kinds of detecting--quite the select experience checking the ground after the big equipment has finished working the bedrock, lots of fun to be had, and quite a few surprises too.

    Glad to see you're still at it, and congratulations on your pick find--the way it's weathered, it looks like very old steel too.

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 1
  3. Such a great article to read; you've done a masterful job. A lot of crossover in the article for our shallow to bedrock gravel deposits up here in the Great White North.

    I have had success in locating some good placer deposits that we then worked with trommels, etc. after locating the pay with the detectors using the dig and detect method you've outlined.

    I've found some nice gold in areas of glacial blowouts from ice dams as well, but those were very shallow deposits, but they held coarse gold.

    All the best, and thanks again for the great job of writing up the article as it applied to your trip to the far north,

    Lanny

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  4. Great article Steve, your rationale really makes a lot of sense, and I think I'll start getting rid of other detectors soon as well--too many that don't get used often enough. 

    I picked up some great tips from your article as well.

    I too appreciate all of the write-ups you've done about new detector models over the years, very enlightening, and your recommended detector models have always been spot on.

    Thanks again for all you do; you sure are great at making a lot of information in the detector field genuinely understandable.

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 1
  5. I've had lots of contact (electronic messaging) and phone calls with Jim over the years--a truly great guy.

    His body was just not letting him get out into gold country and do what he loved to do anymore, but it's sad that he's gone. Always a good guy to answer questions and to provide help and feedback.

    He really will be missed. 

    Thanks for the pictures and the write-up, and all the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 6
  6. In all my time in the wilds, I've seen far more black bear than grizzly. Black bear cause most of the trouble in our mountains, and they're very unpredictable. Sometimes you bang a shovel on the ground, yell, chuck some rocks, etc. and off they go. You know you're in trouble when they keep coming at you! (Been there, done that--a fat zero on the fun scale.) Plus, if a black bear attacks you (unless protecting a cub) it's because you're seen as a source of food, and so you're supposed to fight back with everything you've got to stay off the menu.

    Grizzlies usually attack to show dominance (once again, cub encounters excepted)--swat you down, stomp some, maybe chew on you a little (that'd be a tough undertaking to outlast), then they'll leave, supposedly. They are after all the apex predator in our mountains, so they can write their own rules, I guess.

    Had a double grizzly encounter one day, a couple of three-year-olds, ones just kicked off their momma's milk wagon. We were washing pay with a trommel, and the two grizzlies wanted to see what we were up to. So they got right close, then stood up. (As my dad used to say, "If you think a bear is big on the ground, just wait until it stands up!") Had a dumb idea to hop on the Honda Quad and gun the engine so they'd run away--only they came closer. Shut that Quad off right quick, and the grizzly twins dropped back to the ground and wandered away--they'd seen what they wanted to see, turned their backs on us and sauntered off. (I had a 12-gauge defender shotgun to-hand with buckshot as the first chambered round followed by four one-ounce rifled-slugs for backup, but I'm glad to this day that last resort that was never used--would have been a terrible jackpot of trouble with two grizzlies that close.

    I've seen other grizzlies as well, but usually at some distance--those are the grizzly sightings I enjoy the most.

    All the best,

    Lanny

    • Like 6
  7. Now I know why I could no longer get Scott on the phone. . . . 

    Thanks for the heads-up about his passing. He sure was a great guy to talk to, lots of interesting stories, and he really learned how to use his detectors to find gold (loved the Goldmonster)--had great success with finding nuggets when he found his connection to get himself on good ground.

    He was easy to talk to, but it's going to be hard missing him--a genuine kindred spirit that loved chasing the gold.

    All the best, 

    Lanny

    • Like 4
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