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Lanny

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  1. Great answer Steve which has illuminated some new thinking for me and given me a new focus while I'm riding out the frozen conditions here. As always, I'll be revisiting my manual again as it perpetually seems like I'm missing something, missing things I need to understand better to refine my detecting. You sure know your stuff!

    Peteren, thanks for the write-up on hematite as it sure is obnoxious stuff and being non-magnetic, as you say, it's a stinker to get out of the way. Magnetics are fairly easy to deal with by using a super-magnet, but hematite has to be removed the hard way, so I understand why it's driving you crazy. 

    Goldbrick, great question, thanks for posting it.

    All the best,

    Lanny

  2. Bob,

     

    I'm getting tired of the cold winters too, but I do love hunting the gold here in the summers, so I may have to do some investigating of the snowbird option as well.

     

    I have to agree that Prescott is a beautiful area, yet it seems like all places have their pros and cons. Having said that, Prescott is in a choice location.

     

    I agree with others that you should join a club for access to claims until you've stomped around enough to find a sweet spot of your own, or maybe you'll just always love the club scene as it does give you a dedicated group of friends right out of the gate. Any place in Arizona with a lower elevation will greatly inhibit your summer gold prospecting such as in places like Stanton, so that's why migrating north in the summer will remain a great choice too.

     

    All the best with your trip to check things out,

     

    Lanny

  3. Sounds interesting. I'll have to do some Australian research to see if I can find the details for what happened to spark the novel, and life sentences to boot! I wonder now if they think it was worth it. Plus, the novel itself may be something to get me through this freeze-up as you've suggested.

    Update: I found it: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-24/stephen-struber-dianne-wilson-convicted-murder-of-bruce-schuler/6647230

    Interesting read!

    All the best,

    Lanny

  4. It's interesting how that dang lead takes the headlines and makes a nuisance of itself when all a nugget shooter wants to do it not detect the lead, but I'm glad you got some gold regardless. More than a few times after I've dug a pocket-full of lead, for whatever reason, I'll dig a nugget or two. Weird coincidence? Or is it just that when I'm working bedrock or the bottom of gulches I'm working where heavies have been concentrated, and that's the only common factor, heavies hanging out with heavies?

     

    Enjoyed reading your entry, so thanks, and all the best,

     

    Lanny 

  5. Great response!

    I like how you described how nuggets bedding down in the same spot will produce a stronger signal.

    Last summer, I hit two spots with the Gold Bug Pro where I got a very broad signal in packed dirt, shallow on bedrock. I had never experienced this before, and I didn't know what to make of it. I almost thought it was some kind of ground mineralization effect or something, but as I'd been finding nuggets consistently in that area, I dug all of the dirt anyway.

    In the process of scraping and gathering, I uncovered a crevice that ran about ten inches deep, cleaned it out as well, and threw everything in the gold pan. The signal in the ground was gone, but now there was a strong signal in the pan!

    I panned down the dirt a bit and quickly saw the flash of gold. I spread the dirt out with the water and it was full of small nuggets, any of which, individually, the detector easily saw. There was also a 4 gram nugget keeping them company that I eyeballed as I cleaned out the crevice. As all of those nuggets had bedded down in that pocket/crevice together, that was what produced the broad signal in the dirt, but when they were concentrated in the smaller area of the pan, the signal was stronger.

    Thanks, as you may have solved a bit of a mystery for me. 

    That was a fun day, and unbelievably, I repeated it a couple of weeks later on another section of bedrock! I doubt it will ever happen again as it's never happened before. I mean, I've hit concentrations of small nuggets before, but they rang individually as I swept the coil over them because they were more spread out in their patch's area. They did not give out the broad signal I received on the nuggets that were much closer together. 

    All the best,

    Lanny

  6. That little X-Terra sure got you some nice results!

     

    I'll let you in on a secret, well really not a secret, but never wonder about or discount its ability to find nuggets!! Minelab packed a ton of gold finding technology into that little beauty. As for gold, I've found lots with it and the elliptical DD coil is very sensitive as well. I was amazed at the tiny gold I found with it and pleased with the bigger gold it found as well, of course. :)

     

    All the best,

     

    Lanny

  7. Loved the review. You've really given some great information, and you've got me thinking about adding another detector to the arsenal. I'm waiting, as others likely are, for more field reports on the machine, but from what I've read so far on Ray's experiences with the Racer, it looks very good indeed.

     

    All the best, and thanks for the huge chunk of time you invested to do the write-up,

     

    Lanny

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