=konnon6 link=Its a hobby not a job thow some people do make a living off it.
I think of what Mel Fisher said( now that we found the gold the legal
battles begin)
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Unfortunately all too true. I have found this out to my --snifff.
About making a living out of detecting, it is possible but not in the US. Remember you will be lucky if you consistently find a good one every few years, or so. Split that up for the years involved and the expenses of just living and it isn't the best way financially to go. There will be loong periods with all out and nothing in, but the bills will still arrive regularly, how do you intend to handle them? Especially if you have a family.
I personally know about this since I became a pro treasure and lost mine hunter years ago. There were long periods when I couldn't even buy a Pepsi / Coke without thinking of the expense. Yes, I did hit good ones occasionally, but when you split them up among the years involved, I was not even making a min salary.
I also turned to looking for lost Jesuit mies, I found various, they are just now beginning to pay off. The general consensus is "Geeze, how lucky can one be, this guy is going to be rolling in money? Let's go looking for lost Jesuit mines. Sorry, but there aren't that many, and eveyone that I have found reduces the so called lost mine pool just that much. Besides I will not mention the time involved, sigh, years.
For every $1,000,000 possibly to be earned, divide that by 50 years and you arrive at a very small average for the years expended.
Basically I would say that the odds "against" finding one of them - treasure, coin, or mine -good enough to make a good living increases each time one is found by either you or others. A sort of diminshing possibilities.
NO, I would never reccomend going treasure and lost mine hunting full time today. Remember there is a tremendous amount of competition out there. Ideally manage to get a job that allows you a few months free every year to hunt, then go go for it.
Would I do it over again? Yes, but under the conditions that I started with, not today. The laws and conditions are too restrictive now.
The major plus factor is not monetary, but in the adventures that I have had. The thrill of being the first in centuries to see or touch a lost mining town, mine, an archaeological zone, and especially a treasure. In many ways one can relate to the original Spaniard and his discoveries. The search has led me from China, the Pacific basin, to the southen Mexican jungles and to the northern Barranca complex, most of which were unknown then. For one such as myself, the adventures "were" the thing, the financial rewards were left to themselves.
This led to the culmination of a boyhood dream, I was elected into the Elite Explorers Club. However,I was not nominated for any Fortune 500 status, nor will you be as a full time treasure hunter.
As I once mentioned, I have a full bank book of irreplaceable memories which can never be duplicated since the world's conditions have changed so much. Areas that once took me a week to reach by Mule now are accessable by truck in a few hours.
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Tropical Tramp