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Let's Give The Detector A Little More Credit


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Thank you for your prospecting procedure.  It serves as a 'model' for prospectors with and without metal detectors.

We all know that more gold has been 'found' without detectors than with.  The early prospectors in the states would take off with their mules and pans and seek out features that held gold.  This is not luck. (Except for that storm that made them go to a different set of mountains.)  They weren't looking for gold on a sand dune!  They didn't have Google Earth to 'pre-prospect.'

Some of us have been lucky.  We have found gold in placer deposits that moved to its found location without a direct link to a specific lode.  No known gold feature clues would be available for the find.  (My 20.5/8 ozt specie is both luck and work.)

We also have been unlucky by going to places just as you describe and there is no gold to be detected.  

Now, armed with the great confidence you have we should move on to the next set of gold clues and be confident (not lucky) to repeat your success.

Congratulations again.  I hope to be more confident and less lucky.

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Mn90403

I had never tought about the confidence factor before.

Now that I think about it confidence is a very important part of prospecting!

As you have to have the confidence to keep going through the lean times.

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Confidence, knowledge, research, an adult attention span, persistence, an understanding of your machine, using your eyes, concentration, positive attitude, sense of humor, intuition

and yes, luck.

 

So many factors to utilize. 

 

An interesting thread folks…lots to think about.

 

Gold Hound, that experience is in a class by itself.

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Then there is metal detecting in tailing piles. I made a trip to Ganes Creek, Alaska with three other people and we spent three days. The tailing piles have been mined several times and mixed up multiple ways. Gold, gravel, and trash is randomly mixed and scattered.

We would all walk up to a huge pile of tailings material. We would randomly choose sections to detect. I would walk right into my section and bang a one ounce nugget. We would then all furiously hunt some more but little or no gold would be found. We would move to another pile. Same scenario would repeat.

By the middle of the second day I was actually apologizing. It was just too weird. I wanted my friends to find gold also, but I seemed to have a near corner on that activity for the weekend. But at the end of three days I had over a pound of gold, the other three had a couple ounces among them.

Now, I like to think I know what I am doing, that I have skill and knowledge, and that I work hard at what I do. But there is no doubt in my mind that weekend I was just plain lucky.

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Thinking on this luck thing, Steve, like your 1 ozer, I can think of a day in mid summer, hot as hell, myself, mate and son went for a drive in A/c Troppie to check out road condition re. recent wet conditions, we threw in our detectors in case as per norm. Got out on track a fair bit after couple of hours and decided to return home. For the hell of it we started detecting on a likely flat, I had gone 20 metres off track, massive signal. 4 inches or so down a quartz speci. size of cricket ball, on crushing had a whisker under 8 oz. Not another piece got off that flat, although will be running GPZ over it this winter.

But you know how many times over 30 years done a similar thing for nothing, of course mate and son gave me plenty, it called you etc etc.

Luck or is it due to happen if you do it enough, sort of cutting the odds? We could have stayed and been comfy in A/c Troppie, stubby in hand. Lucky, fortunate don`t know but it definitely was a Magic moment.

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On 3/10/2015 at 10:34 AM, Steve Herschbach said:

Then there is metal detecting in tailing piles. I made a trip to Ganes Creek, Alaska with three other people and we spent three days. The tailing piles have been mined several times and mixed up multiple ways. Gold, gravel, and trash is randomly mixed and scattered.

We would all walk up to a huge pile of tailings material. We would randomly choose sections to detect. I would walk right into my section and bang a one ounce nugget. We would then all furiously hunt some more but little or no gold would be found. We would move to another pile. Same scenario would repeat.

By the middle of the second day I was actually apologizing. It was just too weird. I wanted my friends to find gold also, but I seemed to have a near corner on that activity for the weekend. But at the end of three days I had over a pound of gold, the other three had a couple ounces among them.

Now, I like to think I know what I am doing, that I have skill and knowledge, and that I work hard at what I do. But there is no doubt in my mind that weekend I was just plain lucky.

Luck can be earned as well.  Per your previous posts you went many years before you found your first nugget with a metal detector...no? 

 

strick

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On 3/10/2015 at 9:18 PM, strick said:

Luck can be earned as well. Per your previous posts you went many years before you found your first nugget with a metal detector...no?

strick

16 years. The story at this link was written in 2002. https://www.detectorprospector.com/magazine/steves-mining-journal/first-gold-nugget-with-a-metal-detector/

 

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