Well, it is finally Spring. After such a long Winter we thought it might not arrive. And with Spring comes yard sale season. Time to clean out Winter's clutter and make a few dollars. This is a great time of year for treasure hunting also. You can find all kinds of treasures being sold in driveways and front yards. My better half is the pro in this type of treasure hunting. Although the season has only just started, she came up with this great jewelry last week. The two bracelets are 14k gold, really nice, and cost $1 each. What can I say, if she paid retail for them they wouldn't be treasure, right? The necklace and earrings are unmarked and are costume from the 1940's or 50's and were the same price.
The gold mesh bag was today's find for a dollar. It is is perfect condition, and has a row of diamonds or rhinestones across the top. Very nice, maybe 1930's vintage. We are just researching it now. You just never know what is out there. As Mel Fisher used to say, "Today's the Day!"
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Visit a Gold Mining Ghost Town
Any treasure hunter dreams about ghost towns from time to time. Just don't get caught in one after dark! The State of California has preserved an authentic gold-mining ghost town named Bodie that you can visit today. I drove to Bodie several years ago and it is truly a neat place to visit. The state has preserved it as it was left almost 100 years ago, with bottles still on the bar in the saloon, and boxes still on the shelves in the general store. Bodie boomed in the late 1870's when gold was discovered, and went from a population of 30 to over 10,000 in less than 4 years. Then big gold strikes were reported elsewhere, and the fortune seekers rushed off to stake their claims in places like Tombstone, Arizona. Bodie's Main Street, pictured here, once had 65 saloons on it, and all the mayhem that you can imagine.
Bodie is preserved as a State Historic Site today, so there's no treasure hunting allowed, but it is rich with memories and history. Bodie is located between Yosemite and Lake Tahoe in eastern California. For additional info and Bodie Photo gallery click here. Definitely visit if you have the opportunity. Bodie is a piece of American hiistory you won't see elsewhere.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Surprise Sweepstakes Win
Well, the treasure is coming in but kind of slowly. No matter, it's still coming in stea1dily. I dug up a 1945 silver quarter at an old house site that was under construction. I have to get back there with the Ace 250 but it's been raining for 4 days straight so I need to let the mud settle a bit. CRH has been slow but steady. After the big snowmelt, the street finds have slowed a bit, but still coming in as well. I was surprised to receive a sweepstakes win in the mail today from a sweepstakes I entered several months back. It was a Dollar General sweep and one I considered very winnable. Only open 30 days, many prizes from $100,000 grand prize down to 400 4th place prizes of a $50 DG gift card. Lo and behold, as you see in the photo, I won 6th prize of a $10 DG gift card. Ha ha, that wasn't even listed in the rules! Oh well, I'll take it. Treasure comes in all forms.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Melting Snow Gives Up Treasure!
After being surprised to find 69 coins during my walks in January, I was amazed to come up with 90 in February, including the 20 I found in airports, which I talked about in an earlier post. That's the equivalent of a couple of times out with the metal detector. Since it's been so snowy and frozen, I wasn't able to get out with the detector at all in February, so I'm happy that moneywalking finds have picked up. I got a big surprise in a vending machine when I pushed the return button and a silver 1964
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Indian Head Coins
I used to collect coins when I was younger. It's still fun to go to a coin show now and then to see some coins you never get to see. I was looking at a $10 gold coin a while ago and got to wondering how many Native American US coins there are. It turns out there are quite a few. I think they are some of the most attractive designs on any US coins. It's not a coincidence that they were designed in the early part of the 20th century during the Art Nouveau and Art Deco periods, when a lot of utilitarian items were designed more attractively.
I collected up pictures of all the Indian coins and posted them in an article Native American Coins of the US. The stories behind some of these coins are pretty interesting. The Buffalo nickel came through the efforts of President Teddy Roosevelt, who was an outdoorsman and had traveled in the west. He thought the previous nickels were too plain, and had an engraver study portraits of Indian chiefs to come up with a realistic face on the obverse side. Other coins like the Indian head penny and the $10 gold Eagle pictured here actually portray Lady Liberty wearing an Indian headdress.
Anyway, take a look, there are some pretty neat-looking coins in the collection. Also, I looked up Canadian coins online and I didn't see one that had an Indian design. I think one had a Haida totem pole, but thats it. I wonder why that is. Tied closer to the crown until just a few decades ago I think. Interesting.
I collected up pictures of all the Indian coins and posted them in an article Native American Coins of the US. The stories behind some of these coins are pretty interesting. The Buffalo nickel came through the efforts of President Teddy Roosevelt, who was an outdoorsman and had traveled in the west. He thought the previous nickels were too plain, and had an engraver study portraits of Indian chiefs to come up with a realistic face on the obverse side. Other coins like the Indian head penny and the $10 gold Eagle pictured here actually portray Lady Liberty wearing an Indian headdress.Anyway, take a look, there are some pretty neat-looking coins in the collection. Also, I looked up Canadian coins online and I didn't see one that had an Indian design. I think one had a Haida totem pole, but thats it. I wonder why that is. Tied closer to the crown until just a few decades ago I think. Interesting.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Airport Money
Here is a handful of coins I found last week on a trip. All except one were found in airports. 19 coins plus a Philadelphia transit token that has a copper strip through the middle. If you are interested in foreign coins, airports are also a good place to do some coin hunting if the opportunity presents itself. Back home now, waiting for these piles of snow to melt and see whats been dropped in them. Looks like that might take a month or so, though. Oy.
Friday, February 12, 2010
Visiting the Mel Fisher Treasure Museum
Well, since the snows continue to pile up in my prime treasure-hunting grounds, I needed a way to stay motivated. What better place to keep my treasure fire stoked than at Mel Fisher's Treasure Museum in Sebastian, Florida? Mel Fisher made some amazing discoveries right off the beach not far from here, where the 1715 Plate Fleet went down in a storm. The 1715 Plate Fleet wrecks continue to produce treasure since being discovered over 40 years ago.
Mel Fisher, as you know, is most famous for recovering the treasure of the Atocha near the Marquesas Islands off the Florida Keys. The Atocha and it's sister ship, the Santa Margarita, also continue to give up their treasures to Mel Fisher's treasure hunters.
The Treasure Museum in Sebastian gives a great history of Mel's treasure hunting exploits in Florida. He sold his dive shop in California to spend a year salvaging the 1715 Plate Fleet without promise of pay. His year paid off handsomely as he at one point found "a carpet of gold coins" in a small ravine on the ocean floor. He moved on to hunting for the 1622 fleet which included the Atocha.

The museum has a short film, then you can tour the fantastic finds that Fisher and his treasure hunting team have found from both fleets, which are pictured here. There is a gift shop with authentic gold and silver treasure items for sale. You can also get replica coins and jewelry molded from the originals.
The Mel Fisher Treasure Museum is a great stop if you are in the Sebastian area. You can see some of the most amazing treasure ever found, and just drool at divers on the film bringing up fistfuls of gold escudos and buckets of Spanish silver coins.
Mel Fisher also has a treasure musem in Key West, Florida where you can see similar Spanish treasure. Also check Melfisher.com for further info. Oh, I don't have the detector with me on this trip but I did find a penny washed up in the wet sands while walking on a beach just up the road. The treasure beaches continue to produce.
Mel Fisher, as you know, is most famous for recovering the treasure of the Atocha near the Marquesas Islands off the Florida Keys. The Atocha and it's sister ship, the Santa Margarita, also continue to give up their treasures to Mel Fisher's treasure hunters.
The Treasure Museum in Sebastian gives a great history of Mel's treasure hunting exploits in Florida. He sold his dive shop in California to spend a year salvaging the 1715 Plate Fleet without promise of pay. His year paid off handsomely as he at one point found "a carpet of gold coins" in a small ravine on the ocean floor. He moved on to hunting for the 1622 fleet which included the Atocha.
The museum has a short film, then you can tour the fantastic finds that Fisher and his treasure hunting team have found from both fleets, which are pictured here. There is a gift shop with authentic gold and silver treasure items for sale. You can also get replica coins and jewelry molded from the originals.
The Mel Fisher Treasure Museum is a great stop if you are in the Sebastian area. You can see some of the most amazing treasure ever found, and just drool at divers on the film bringing up fistfuls of gold escudos and buckets of Spanish silver coins.
Mel Fisher also has a treasure musem in Key West, Florida where you can see similar Spanish treasure. Also check Melfisher.com for further info. Oh, I don't have the detector with me on this trip but I did find a penny washed up in the wet sands while walking on a beach just up the road. The treasure beaches continue to produce.
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