meMiner
Bronze Member
- Jul 22, 2014
- 1,047
- 1,177
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab 800,
Fisher CZ21, F75SE, Gold Bug 2.9 & Minelab GPX 5000
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
I don't know about you, but my time in the gold fields always seems "rushed".
On my last trip, it was a combination of bad weather, bad partner and overall limited time (2 weeks and travel). I was in northern BC and when the rain moved in, it came quickly and hard. I was with somebody who worried about bears, hated getting wet (rain, crossing creeks, etc) and he rushed me whenever I was detecting. It was worse when he was hungry, thirsty or tired. I won't be going back with him ever again. If I found a bullet or scrap dozer metal, he instantly made the assumption that it was a bad spot to detect (do you notice that people who know nothing, talk like they are experts?). Of course, he would not just leave me alone, because he would not walk back by himself and had nothing to do when he got there. On one hike that was 7KM into a creek, he sat down at 6KM and refused to go further. He said I could go on, but "frick", how much time can I spend at the destination knowing somebody is sitting and waiting?
The point of this is no matter what, I always seem to be rushed. I am wondering how best to use my time effectively in that situation? Do I simply pick a very small spot and clean it out? Do I rush from interesting spot to interesting spot, with the idea of trying to find a goodie and then come back later?
On my last trip, it was a combination of bad weather, bad partner and overall limited time (2 weeks and travel). I was in northern BC and when the rain moved in, it came quickly and hard. I was with somebody who worried about bears, hated getting wet (rain, crossing creeks, etc) and he rushed me whenever I was detecting. It was worse when he was hungry, thirsty or tired. I won't be going back with him ever again. If I found a bullet or scrap dozer metal, he instantly made the assumption that it was a bad spot to detect (do you notice that people who know nothing, talk like they are experts?). Of course, he would not just leave me alone, because he would not walk back by himself and had nothing to do when he got there. On one hike that was 7KM into a creek, he sat down at 6KM and refused to go further. He said I could go on, but "frick", how much time can I spend at the destination knowing somebody is sitting and waiting?
The point of this is no matter what, I always seem to be rushed. I am wondering how best to use my time effectively in that situation? Do I simply pick a very small spot and clean it out? Do I rush from interesting spot to interesting spot, with the idea of trying to find a goodie and then come back later?
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