T
tongueincheek
Guest
Hey man I'm sorry for not replying to this earlier but I've been busy and haven't read this forum for months. (
Now if you will go about a half to three quarters of a mile north of this tree and keep the same distance from the river, you will find a large, not to fresh, hole has been dug near another Beech about the same size as the "kettle" tree. That hole is where $80 Gs gold was found some time ago. This treasure was buried by Albert Pike in 1861 just as he was leaving Arkansas to enlist the Indians in IT to side with the Confederacy. Pike buried $180 Gs along the Little Missouri near where he once lived. The first 100 thousand in gold was dug up around 1911 by some residents of a nearby community. If you would look sort of southeast of your tree about 100-150 yards you will find a really big hole about 100 years old, its on the east side on the old road near a smaller Beech with the words AC White on it and Dixie carved on its south face. This is where the first cache came out. Research this and you'll find I'm telling you like it is. You might ask some of the old treasure hunters around Mena, Arkansas about the second cache being found, when and by whom. Either way you might improve your KGC treasure skills when you find the smaller hole up nearer the falls on the river. Sorry I won't tell you what was buried next to the tree telling where the cache was buried. Since that gold is already spent you might want to look for another of Pike's caches some miles west on the Kiamichi River near where it crosses the AR-OK state line.
Good Hunting
tic
Now if you will go about a half to three quarters of a mile north of this tree and keep the same distance from the river, you will find a large, not to fresh, hole has been dug near another Beech about the same size as the "kettle" tree. That hole is where $80 Gs gold was found some time ago. This treasure was buried by Albert Pike in 1861 just as he was leaving Arkansas to enlist the Indians in IT to side with the Confederacy. Pike buried $180 Gs along the Little Missouri near where he once lived. The first 100 thousand in gold was dug up around 1911 by some residents of a nearby community. If you would look sort of southeast of your tree about 100-150 yards you will find a really big hole about 100 years old, its on the east side on the old road near a smaller Beech with the words AC White on it and Dixie carved on its south face. This is where the first cache came out. Research this and you'll find I'm telling you like it is. You might ask some of the old treasure hunters around Mena, Arkansas about the second cache being found, when and by whom. Either way you might improve your KGC treasure skills when you find the smaller hole up nearer the falls on the river. Sorry I won't tell you what was buried next to the tree telling where the cache was buried. Since that gold is already spent you might want to look for another of Pike's caches some miles west on the Kiamichi River near where it crosses the AR-OK state line.
Good Hunting
tic