The Silver Buckle find made by Craig B.
It was a chilly day with temperature in the low 40's
and the wind gusting slightly. The hunting fever struck me early that
morning and I gathered my detection equipment and headed out.
Wondering where would be the best place to go, I recalled an old
abandoned house near Oklahoma City that a friend had given me permission
to hunt some time ago. Not having had a chance to hunt it yet, I
said to myself today would be the day. By the time I arrived at
the old house it was good and sunny and I was itching to get started.
I looked over the site. The old house was still standing yet pretty
run down, and the yard was terribly overgrown. It looked like a
tough place to hunt.
The badly neglected grass had constantly fallen over through the
years and was consequently about three inches thick. The ground
was saturated with cockle burrs and stickers. Needless to say, my
high hopes for an easy hunting site fell several notches down the
scale.
Since the site looked so difficult to hunt, I reasoned to myself
that others may have thought the same thing and passed it up as
well. Anyway, the matted grass was so thick, any hunter that had
previously been there could have easily missed something. I decided
to give it a try.
I pulled out my Electroscope Model 20 and began scanning in the
front yard. After scoping there for a few minutes, and upon receiving
no signals, I moved around to the side yard. Still no signals, so
I moved around to the back yard and on my first sweep the scope
locked onto something. I moved about 10 feet to one side and scanned
again with the same result.
Figuring where my two lines crossed, about 40 feet away near an
old tree I moved into the area pinpointed by my Model 20, and boxed
out a 4 x 4 square. I ended up with the tree right in my way. Since
this was as close as I could get with my Electroscope, I went back
to my car and pulled out my conventional metal detector with an
eight inch coil.
Returning to my scoped area at the old tree, I began searching
with my conventional detector. Nothing but a couple of nails. Since
there was three inches of matted grass above the ground, I figured
that I wasn't getting much depth and I changed over to a twelve
inch searchcoil.
I began operating in the all metals mode at first since I did not
want to miss any deep targets. There were a lot of signals in the
search area now ( and I do mean a lot) so I dug a couple of sample
holes and came up with several more nails.
Seeing the nails as a problem, I turned up the discrimination,
I figured that with the combination of a large coil and a little
discrimination, I'd get rid of those nails and still have good depth.
This worked great. Now my entire pinpointing area had only two
targets. The first one I dug turned out to be a plow point down
about seven inches deep. I rechecked the hole after removing it
and found nothing below.
I began digging the second target. I was down about eight inches
when I hit a large flat piece of steel. I widened the hole and found
the edge and pried it up. It was an old wood burning stove lid.
Confused, I swept the hole again and still received a slight signal.
I continued digging carefully down another two inches or so and
hit another object at ten inches deep. I could see a slight glint
in the dirt. I uncovered the object and painstakingly dug out around
it, gently removing it from the loose soil.
To my surprise and satisfaction, it was an engraved belt buckle
which I thought might just be silver. I checked the hole again with
my conventional detector and there were no further targets. I also
rescoped the area with my Electroscope and received no further signals
so this had to be what I had detected earlier.
I scanned the rest of the back yard and around the house but did
not pick up any more gold or silver readings. I decided to put my
scope up for the day.
I pulled out my conventional detector again and spent a couple
of hours searching around the yard for pennies, nickels or any interesting
artifacts, which I found a few, but no more gold or silver. I decided
to call it a day and headed for the house.
At home, I shined up the belt buckle and inspected the markings.
As I had suspected, engraved on the back of the buckle were the
two nicest words to any hunter "STERLING SILVER".
The front was ornately engraved and shows someone's initials. It
makes a wonderful addition to my collection and marked my whole
day as a success.
I have always enjoyed the hobby of metal detecting for its sense
of excitement. It's just plain healthy to get out, breathe the fresh
air, enjoy time with my son, Corey, and get a little exercise.
Now that silver and gold can no longer hide from me under those
big pieces of iron I enjoy more finds than ever before!
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