A friend invited me to detect their front yard months ago, but I was pessimistic and put it off until last Friday. I was hoping for a few Civil War relics. Stepping into the woods, my first signal was a solid 83. After digging through layers of leaves and dirt, a green disc showed up. By its size, I figured it was a Large Cent. That surprised me, because I was really expecting just a lot of trash. Scanning the hole, there was another signal- a second green disc. After recovering that, there was still a good signal. This time, it was two green discs stuck together! I scrubbed the surrounding area with my coil, but didn't find anything else. The multitude of briers limited the area I could search, so after finding some melted lead and iron I moved to the front yard. My first signal there was an 1852 three cent piece- a first for me! Soon after that a 1943 Mercury dime emerged, also a first (I've mainly hunted Civil War/colonial sites).
A partially melted bullet and part of a pocket knife also showed up in front yard. So there may have been a small encampment there during the war, but I'm guessing there was also a home site. The "huntable" land is not very large, but it will be worth a return trip or two.
The green discs turned out to be Large Cents indeed. Two of them are too toasty to get the exact dates on, but I can see the head profiles. The two that were stuck together are easily identified in the photo- they were much better preserved. The one on the left is 1820, the other one appears to say 1835.
HH,
Jason
A partially melted bullet and part of a pocket knife also showed up in front yard. So there may have been a small encampment there during the war, but I'm guessing there was also a home site. The "huntable" land is not very large, but it will be worth a return trip or two.
The green discs turned out to be Large Cents indeed. Two of them are too toasty to get the exact dates on, but I can see the head profiles. The two that were stuck together are easily identified in the photo- they were much better preserved. The one on the left is 1820, the other one appears to say 1835.
HH,
Jason
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