washingtonian
Gold Member
Hi folks,
I'm usually a city hunter. I'm most comfortable on the sidewalk strips and in yards. Some are busts but the density of finds is great, it's convenient living in the city, and I'm usually short of time so 1-2 hour hunts are common.
However, in the summers I usually spend some time in Island County a couple hours from Seattle. I got a permission there this past summer for a large farm. I normally wouldn't ask but I was studying old photos and from what I could tell there used to be a baseball diamond where their hay field is now.
Unfortunately, I didn't find anything that confirmed my suspicion. While hunting that large field I found a 1940s Canadian penny but that was the only real find of interest after probably 3-4 hours. I spent a couple hours hunting the side yard of the house before leaving and did find a 1960s-era silver spill.
So here's my question. This farm is about 30 acres and has been in use for 100 years. That doesn't sound old to some but it's fairly old for this area.
Given what I mentioned above, would you continue to invest time here in future hunts or would you look for greener pastures? If you were going to keep hunting it, how would you approach it? It seems like it would take a long time to cover it all and I'm a notoriously impatient guy
Any thoughts are welcome!
-Washingtonian
I'm usually a city hunter. I'm most comfortable on the sidewalk strips and in yards. Some are busts but the density of finds is great, it's convenient living in the city, and I'm usually short of time so 1-2 hour hunts are common.
However, in the summers I usually spend some time in Island County a couple hours from Seattle. I got a permission there this past summer for a large farm. I normally wouldn't ask but I was studying old photos and from what I could tell there used to be a baseball diamond where their hay field is now.
Unfortunately, I didn't find anything that confirmed my suspicion. While hunting that large field I found a 1940s Canadian penny but that was the only real find of interest after probably 3-4 hours. I spent a couple hours hunting the side yard of the house before leaving and did find a 1960s-era silver spill.
So here's my question. This farm is about 30 acres and has been in use for 100 years. That doesn't sound old to some but it's fairly old for this area.
Given what I mentioned above, would you continue to invest time here in future hunts or would you look for greener pastures? If you were going to keep hunting it, how would you approach it? It seems like it would take a long time to cover it all and I'm a notoriously impatient guy
Any thoughts are welcome!
-Washingtonian