My first pull tab and foil

Orient-250

Greenie
Jul 12, 2013
13
5
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Stones,

The whole ground is made up from little and small rocks, making it hard to dig and nearly broke my ($1) garden tool.

I did however dig three holes,

The first one kept saying 8 inches to go, even after diggin for 20 minutes in the rock ground, I gave up.

Stones,

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1373876346.973706.jpg


Second hole

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1373876296.578143.jpg

And a winner - foil

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1373876313.557097.jpg

Third hole,

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1373876364.273447.jpg

Winner !!!!

ImageUploadedByTapatalk1373876384.306937.jpg
 

Last edited:
Upvote 1
yep ditto vpnavy :laughing7: thats just about all I find.
 

Good practice-I'll get better! You may want to invest in that SunRay in-line pinpointer for your 250.
 

lol now that's bragging
 

Of this I can assure you.......it won't be the last pulltab or foil you will discover at the bottom of a fresh hole!!
 

Keep digging that foil and pull tabs and gold will come !
Glen
 

welcome to tnet, its not like the tv shows! keep at it, it'll pay off
 

Welcome to T Net, probably ought to save that pull tab. Contrary to the TV shows, there's enough people finding pop tabs that some day they will become rare and valuable ----------- someday? --------------- maybe? Oh well, that's the first of many. I dig 'em because they ring up in that elusive range of gold, and then I pack them off to deny the next guy the chance of finding one.
 

Orient -250
At current aluminum prices .73 a pound 1267 pull tabs to a pound, ( Info from Ronald Mcdonald House). 17 more and you have a penny...... Congrats on your find.

The picture below is 1,000,000 pull tabs, it weighs 650 pounds Picture was on the following website.

All You Need To Know About Pop Can Pull Tabs

Cubbies1.jpg
 

We all gotta start somewhere. Still, congrats and HH!
 

:hello: :icon_thumright: :hello2: Welcome to t-net! With your excellent pics & description, it's gonna be fun reading for the rest of us when you dig your first great find! Hopefully soon you'll choose an additional site to dig which has softer dirt or sand, and save the rocky spot with hard dirt for the rainy season when at least the dirt will be easier to dig, lol. I have a list of "places to return to during the rainy season!" as some of the dirt around here is like concrete when dry. If you're low-budget as I am, buy a steel garden digger as they will not break or pull loose from their handles -- about $5 compared to the wobbly $1 one you've got. If high-budget, lots of folks here recommend the lesche (sp?) digger. HAVE FUN!
 

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