New to any Detecting Forum with many good finds to discuss

artifact1.jpgTrue. I grew up in the land of the Seneca. Here are some cornfield finds from my youth that I managed to save. Thanks for the links.
 

Swinging that coil for hours deep in the woods creates plenty of time for thinking. Here's some stale detector humor I have been working on.

Getting rained out today so no treasure hunting nor finds to share. But I have been working on some hypothetical metal detectorist dating lines to try on women who also enjoy the sport. These are difficult times so sorry in advance if any land rough.

Q: Nice rig. Would you like swing coils together some time?
A: No thanks. We operate on different frequencies.
A2: Wouldn't work. You are so old that you are rusty and are generating false signals.
A3: Your sensitivity knob is set too low. You will never be able to acquire targets.

Q2: How's your luck? I've been making some nice finds.
A: Your luck just ran out.

Q3: I will show you my places if you show me yours.
A: Use Google Earth. Your places have obviously been picked over and are over-hunted.

Q: Would you like to go out to dinner some time?
A: Would never date someone using a sub $2k rig.
Reply: Obviously a gold digger. Funny, my machine was set on junk metal.
 

You've found a great place for information and fellow treasure hunters of all kinds -- welcome aboard mate! :occasion14:
 

Welcome from Texas :wave:
 

Welcome to the forum! :icon_thumleft:

Beautiful old copper, congrats! :occasion14:
 

i want to know if you doing remote scanning for areas ?
let me know
 

Welcome from San Jose, CA!
 

Welcome to Treasure Net!

The gold button that weighs a troy oz or 31.103 grams is most likely solid gold and not a coin but worth it's weight in gold.
Gold like other precious metals are bought and sold according to troy weight.

Take it to any jeweler to be verified. I'm betting it's solid Gold!

GG~
 

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