Sluicing / Crevicing out on the River

Aug 27, 2019
6
7
Sunnyvale
Detector(s) used
Whites TDI SL
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
It had been almost two months since I had been to the river. My previous trip was 3 days long. I spent the first day on the bear river, and the following two at the mineral bar (North Fork). I arrived at bear river campground early, around 8:30 am and began looking for a place to set up my BGT super mini. I walked upriver, away from the parking lot and started digging. I didn’t have much luck and the bazookas fluid bed kept on getting clogged. I spent the following two days at the mineral bar - downstream by the bend working the bedrock. The NF American River was incredibly scenic and relaxing (at low cfs :) ). While i’m a new ‘prospector’ and didn’t have any past experiences to compare to. I figured the gold was good. It was a nice mix of a few of my favorite things - nature, the river, and of course gold.

I’ve been very busy recently and finally had a chance to drive back up to the Auburn / Colfax area this weekend. I brought a few new toys / tools with me this time; a metal detector and various tools for crevicing. Over the past month I caught the gold bug watching prospecting videos on youtube(California Mother Lode, etc), reading TreasureNet posts, and chatting with golden mojo (_thank you_ for all your well written educational messages).
I intended to split up my time spending a day detecting and a day crevicing. I had a list of potential mines to detect however I discovered they were on private property / claimed land. onxmaps was a great resource which provides a nice overlay on top of google maps, clearly showing what was private property. I highly recommend it. I was planning to detect the bedrock & gravel bars around the river until I learned it is illegal to detect on ASR land https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/502/...burn Sector_Possession of Metal Detectors.pdf I ended up spending both days on the NF of the river by Yankee Jims road (thanks goldenmojo). It was incredibly beautiful; exposed bedrock sprawled throughout the canyon. I spent some time close to the bridge but also went down to Bunch Canyon downstream by the bend. There is nothing quite like relaxing on the river. (see pictures below - WOW!)

I also wanted to see Iowa Hill. On a whim I drove up to the small town not knowing what to expect. At first I was underwhelmed, expecting more history to be on display, until I read the plaque. It described the fires that burned the town to the ground 3 times within ~50 years (1857 /1862 / 1920). I was quite surprised, signs of hydraulic mining were everywhere...and the ground displayed few signs of recovering/

Enjoy these pictures I took while out on the river.

Bear River: https://imgur.com/a/KbuqnGL
Mineral Bar: https://imgur.com/a/NpwDFzt
Yankee Jims: https://imgur.com/a/6brvJsL (The Best Photos)
 

When I was growing up in No. Cal. the early 70"s, that area was one of my favorite spots, around Forest Hill and Yankee Jims. There was an area around there called "Munford (or "Mumford") Bar - Using a rocker box I made for an 8th Grade history project, I recovered 5 ounces out of a crack in bedrock there, in just a couple of hours. $175 was a fortune for a 14-year-old kid in 1972!!!
 

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