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There is a camp located at the mouth of a canyon not 1 mile from my house, I think the land is owned by the city so I shouldn't have any problem getting permission to search there ....
Are the depression era Civilian Conservation Corps camp sites open to detecting?
Paul
I guess it depends on who owns them. Their are two in my area that are on forest service land that I have detected. Finds have been slim.
Hey Nuggetdog. My Grandpa was in a ccc camp in Green River. This was before WW2. Here is a pic he must have brought back with him. It shows what I guess is the layout of the barracks.View attachment 1128922
Yea, the camp near here has a historical type sign so I'm thinking its probably protected.
I check at Forrest service office and they told me I could detect anywhere I want expect around their offices where I would not want to anyway.
You can detect most places but not once you discover an area is of historical interest. A CCC camp being older than 50 years would be considered an area of historical interest.
Several rules and laws cover this. It does not matter that a particular FS employee is ignorant of the law or chooses hot to enforce it.
There is the Antiquity Act (ARPA) and FS rules to know. Better read them before thinking or telling others it is ok to dig anywhere and anything.
I spoke of my experience. If you think otherwise that's fine but I live in a sparsely populated area where I know most of the forest service employees and if they say go ahead it's game on.
....... and if they say go ahead it's game on....
..... It does not matter that a particular FS employee is ignorant of the law or chooses not to enforce it.....
....., but one should be aware of what they are and the consequences of ignoring them....
I'm with dirt-scratcher on this one. Why oh why someone argues with a "yes", I don't know. If you want to keep looking for a "no" (via some verbage that can be deemed to apply to your "pressing question") I guarantee you will find it. Just use key words like "dig", "holes", "treasure", "take" , "remove" "cultural heritage" and "indian bone", and sure ..... you will ALWAYS find someone to tell you "no". You might as well take up needlepoint. Sheesk.
So when someone tells me "go ahead", I don't argue. If you're in the middle of nowhere, who's there to gripe, in the first place?
If someone in authority told me "yes", then that becomes their problem, not mine.