Here is two of my favorites (sorry for the longwinded post. Froze in, and bored).
The love token comes with a weird story, and the button was fun to "hatch"......
1) Myself and a friend, both MDers, had to drive a box truck to Maine (I'm envious of you east coasters). Home is Kansas City, so a loong drive. During the trip, we passed the time by coming up with different ways to gamble on what we'd dig while there. One of the bets was how close to the date of the oldest coin we'd each dig. I dug this in a small orchard at the 1790's home of our host. The creepy part is, my guess for oldest coin was 1857. Add to the fact, my wife's first name starts with an S.
2) Hunting locally, at a vacant lot where a 1908 home once stood, I dug this chunk of concrete. Erractic signal, bouncing from high 40's to high 60's on my MXT, I had hopes of an entombed Indianhead. Brought it home, and sat it beside my computer for a week or so, to add to the anticipation.
Now my wife suppports my hobby, but could care less about it otherwise. However, this peaked her curiosity. So, we made a date out of it (yes, I'm such the romantic). At the time, we were redoing our kitchen, so right in the middle, on my tablesaw, I took a hammer and an old paddlebit and commenced to cracking it. As it broke into seperate pieces, my wife would run the pieces under the coil to see which piece it was in. Finally, it started to surface. I started to get more excited, as the edge seemed larger in diameter than an Indian. I'm now thinking large cent. Then it showed it's edge having curve. We ended up with a Cunard shipping lines button.
I knew of the more famous ocean ships of the Cunard line, but was unaware that the majority of their business came from producing riverboats. Started making more sense. Kansas City is a river town. So we tried to come up with theories on how it got there. I visualized it falling off a sailors jacket, while helping a friend build a home. Or several variations of this theme. However, a guy in our club suggested it might of been dredged out of the river while clearing a sand bar. And the sand used for local construction.
Anyway, thanks for lookin....
Regards,
Jules