TNet'er hunt at a Whiskey Rebellion Site

pa-dirt_nc-sand

Silver Member
Apr 18, 2016
4,260
14,942
South Western PA
🥇 Banner finds
2
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
2
Detector(s) used
ACE 250 with DD coil
Equinox 600
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Met up for an early morning hunt with fellow local Tnet members HighVDI and MetalHeadz at a local public woods site.
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The woods have had an interesting history going back to the late 1700's when a group of angry farmers who also turned their crop into whiskey were not very happy with the new taxes imposed on their lucrative product.... So 500 of them gathered in these woods and attacked the tax collector who lived at the top of the hill and killed some of his associates and burned down his house. George Washington then sent several thousand of his men in to eventually straighten the farmers out.
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(Here's the park now)
We all found some coins, some wheats, Merc, mystery nickel sized coin, IHP and Buffalo, plus some buckles and a cool brooche.
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Here is the group shot of our coils and the keepers.
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We also removed about 10 lbs of metal garbage...
Here are my coins cleaned up.
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And a handful from Friday's lunch hunt.
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Pretty cool buckle I need to figure out how to straighten.
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Great time with the Pittsburgh guys and fun first hunt with MetalHeadz.

Good luck out there!
 

Upvote 25
NICE FINDS AND BUCKLE
 

Thanks again for the invite, Thad. Had a good time even though I thought we might need an oxygen tank on a couple of those hills....
 

Hopefully this is the first of many hunts as a group. Thad had a nice plan mapped out to hunt 3 sites in the area. The last site was challenging to navigate but I found the Merc there so it was worth it.
 

Ya know? Somehow that wouldn't surprise me very much.

...."T-net'er hunt.....whiskey rebellion" ? :dontknow::tongue3:
 

Hopefully this is the first of many hunts as a group. Thad had a nice plan mapped out to hunt 3 sites in the area. The last site was challenging to navigate but I found the Merc there so it was worth it.

Ya know....I've seen people kick up a stink about just typing in all caps or strange fonts. But nobody finds an annoying, un-ignorable,distracting, repeating animation ...even a beginning of worthy of a comment?:BangHead:

:dontknow: ??? :icon_scratch: :tongue3:

:tongue3:
 

Nice job organizing the group hunt Thad. Hopefully I can attend the next one.
 

Looks like a nice hunt. If the buckle were mine, I would cover the buckle with a towel, and grab each side with a pair of pliers. Pull slowly to straighten enough to get the buckle in a vice. Keep it covered with the towel, rag or paper towel to keep from scratching it. Then just turn the vice handle slowly to start straightening it. Each item has a million circumstances, but I use this method for metal items, brooches, coins, tokens, buckles and anything that is bent. It works real well. If you don't want to chance damaging or snapping the buckle, then by all means, don't do it. I have had great success, and have yet to ruin any of my "vice" items.
 

Ya know....I've seen people kick up a stink about just typing in all caps or strange fonts. But nobody finds an annoying, un-ignorable,distracting, repeating animation ...even a beginning of worthy of a comment?:BangHead:

:dontknow: ??? :icon_scratch: :tongue3:

:tongue3:

Haha I had to scroll down pretty quick. That thing will give you a headache.
 

Nice finds with friends...priceless! :occasion14:
 

Besides finding single coins and jewel, there may be buried treasures. Good hunting and good luck.
 

Looks like a nice hunt. If the buckle were mine, I would cover the buckle with a towel, and grab each side with a pair of pliers. Pull slowly to straighten enough to get the buckle in a vice. Keep it covered with the towel, rag or paper towel to keep from scratching it. Then just turn the vice handle slowly to start straightening it. Each item has a million circumstances, but I use this method for metal items, brooches, coins, tokens, buckles and anything that is bent. It works real well. If you don't want to chance damaging or snapping the buckle, then by all means, don't do it. I have had great success, and have yet to ruin any of my "vice" items.

I'm going to give it a try, if I post a pic it means some success, if I don't then I broke it to bits. Not a valuable piece, so in my opinion worth making look presentable vs its current pretzel state. Thx


[here!QUOTE=Honest Samuel;5764828]Besides finding single coins and jewel, there may be buried treasures. Good hunting and good luck.[/QUOTE]

We didn't have time to search the historical side of the woods, if we find some musket balls there, I would consider them treasure! Thx
 

Looks like a nice hunt. If the buckle were mine, I would cover the buckle with a towel, and grab each side with a pair of pliers. Pull slowly to straighten enough to get the buckle in a vice. Keep it covered with the towel, rag or paper towel to keep from scratching it. Then just turn the vice handle slowly to start straightening it. Each item has a million circumstances, but I use this method for metal items, brooches, coins, tokens, buckles and anything that is bent. It works real well. If you don't want to chance damaging or snapping the buckle, then by all means, don't do it. I have had great success, and have yet to ruin any of my "vice" items.

ImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1522772352.992030.jpgImageUploadedByTreasureNet.com1522772364.345174.jpg
Well, I tried bending the buckle enough to get in the vice, but it felt really brittle and looked like it was going to snap in a couple places (I've snapped my fair share of suspender clasps...). So, I tried my hand at annealing. Basically placed the buckle over a blue stove flame, turned dark red in about 30 seconds, quenched in cold water. Then took it to the vice. Was very easy to work after annealing. Major down side is that the heat burned off the silver plating (flame turned green, probably some chemical reaction). But at least it looks much more presentable in my opinion. Anyone familiar with this type of buckle?
 

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