Misc data and adventures of a Tayopa treasure hunter

Gidday TT

One of my favorite early Dutch Baroque work was The Laughing Cavalier (1624) is a portrait by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals in the Wallace Collection in London, which has been described as "one of the most brilliant of all Baroque portraits

Cavalier_soldier_Hals-1624x.jpg

Crow
 

Gidday TT

One of my favorite early Dutch Baroque work was The Laughing Cavalier (1624) is a portrait by the Dutch Golden Age painter Frans Hals in the Wallace Collection in London, which has been described as "one of the most brilliant of all Baroque portraits

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Crow

Thanks Crow!...That sure is a great work that captured something extra...something more than the usual likeness you find in portraits... Many years ago I had the chance to visit the Frans Hals Museum in the city of Haarlem in the Netherlands and I recall great works of portraits there as well.

p.s. speaking of arts, not long ago I read one apparently famous book in the arts world entitled "The $12 Million Stuffed Shark: The Curious Economics of Contemporary Art". It was written in 2008 by an economist who made insider investigations for many years. It is quite a book and highly recommended by many to understand the oddities and intrigue in the contemporary arts world .He had a sequel in 2014 but skipped that and I am now reading his third book which he wrote in 2017 entitled "The Orange Balloon Dog: Bubbles, Turmoil and Avarice in the Contemporary Art Market" ..the way he presents it is quite humorous and full of insights ...

TT
 

Gidday TT sadly there is a lot of hypocrisy in the art world. Companies and corporations use art as a legal tax haven to park money from taxation and in time make capital gains on such work under the pretext of a non profit foundation exempt taxation liabilities.

For example he world's most expensive painting to sell at auction is Leonardo da Vinci's Salvator Mundi, which sold for $450.3 million on November 15, 2017 at Christie's. Pablo Picaso, les Femmes d alger version o 1955Sold for: $179.4 million at Christie’s (May 11, 2015) Amedeo Modigliani’s Nu couché (“reclining nude”) achieved the second-highest auction price for a painting at the time: $170.4 million.

Andy Warhol’s Triple Elvis in short a photograph taken from Elvis b grade movie "Flaming star" manipulated into three identical images of him and sold for Sold for: $81.9 million at Christie’s (November 12, 2014) Three photgrah with figure of Elvis cut and posted together, Would taken a good 15 minutes work worth 81 million go figure?

The money these works love them or hate then cannot justify the prices being paid for them thus some thing else is happening. That is tax evasion under the pretext of foundations promoting cultural patrimony. The bit coin of the elite. Untouchable.

Crow
 

Off topic posts deleted. Joe who started the thread about his adventures has passed. Please keep posts about him and his adventures, not random off topic subjects.
 

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Howdy Folks :coffee2:

Those mountains shown throughout this thread sure looked…shall I say deadly?
I’m used to treacherous canyons, but the scale of the terrain was magnitudes larger.

No forgetting your canteen. That’s for sure. I have to wonder what light was used while traveling at night?
 

RIP Don Jose. I hoped he would see the opening of the mines in his time... Now hoping his legacy is well protected.
 

I'm getting ready to get away for 11 days down South...I am not sure IF I will be able to head to Durango though...I have ordered a new classifier and 20 mesh sieve just in case I am able to head into the hills...IF not, I will always have them on hand IF I am ever able to make it to Reno...IF I do get to make a trip into the hills I just hope that I am not struck by lightning during a thunderstorm...lol...I have been checking the local weather forecasts and it appears that I just may be heading into the rainy season...

Oh well...Only time will tell...I guess we will just have to wait and see...Tayopa is still on the back burner, as is searching for diamonds near Reno...I hope that I am able to make it to reno one October...The last time I found my Little Tia Juana it was in May...Who knows???Only God knows IF I will ever find another diamond...

Ed T:)
 

Good luck Ed, hope you find something, and make it back for show and tell.

Homar

Thank you Homar…I don’t think i’ll make it to Mazatlan nor Durango but I will try to make the best of the trip…There are a couple things I hope to accomplish this trip…Due to the recent goings on with carjackings and such I will not be driving a car down South this trip…I have made a reservation to fly from Tj to Culiacan…Who knows if I will catch an Uber or a taxi from the airport to the centro camionera to catch a bus to parts unknown…lol

There is a little run down house that I have my eye on in Mazatlan…I hope to try to check it out…It is in a suburb on the outskirts of the city and it may be had for a song…It needs to be refurbished to become move in ready but I hope to try to refurbish it before I turn 65…I can always dream…If I can work out a deal with the seller I can always lease it for 50 years or so…Who knows…

I hope to retire in Mazatlan one day…Then I just might be able to make it to Durango to try to retrace my steps to my version of Tayopa…We will just have to wait and see…

Ed T :)
 

Hello from down South?Here is a picture from my current trip that some of you may find interesting. 39767835-DCBD-4BB0-A7D0-8FF47FF377EA.jpeg IF I am on the correct path to Tayopa, I wonder IF these could be the 2 runt hills?

In any case, I had a wonderful time. I too wonder IF I have been to the Mesa campanero. Only time will tell.

Ed T:)
 

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I have had a terrible week. I had a very valuable piece of ore taken from me at the airport on the way home. There went the down payment on the house of my dreams. Lol

Oh well. I will not cry over spilled milk. I wish whomever ends up with said ore much luck in trying too find where it came from. Life will go on, as will I.

Ed T :)
 

I have wondered how he was doing, he lived a good, long life. enjoyed his postings, and he was one of the few who really understood why no digging a few hundred feet away from me where I believe is hundreds of millions of dollars of Aztec treasure.
 

Here is something else that may be of interest.
May be a job for Maris to identify approximate location?

The following is an alleged treasure map pertaining to hidden treasure in Bulgaria. alleged gold treasure of Valchan Voivoda (1775-1863), a legendary Bulgarian voivode and “haidutin”.Voivode (“war leader” or “warlord") was a medieval title for a military commander from the time of the Second Bulgarian Empire (1185-1396 AD) which during the period of the Ottoman Yoke (1396-1878/1912) was assumed by the leaders of Bulgarian haiduti, Robin Hood-style rebel bands robbing rich people and employing guerilla warfare against the Ottoman forces.

This one was taken from Bulgarian treasure hunters by authorities.

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Amy
There is absolutely no basis for comparison between Robin Hood and the Bulgarian Haiduti, let alone with the Valchan Voivoda. Haidutite fought for the liberation of Bulgaria from 500 years of Turkish slavery! All these treasures were collected to finance this liberation and will probably never be found.
Greetings!
 

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