meggie
Elite Member
Say 12 gold rings are lost at a single beach each year (conservative estimate)that would amount to 1200 rings over the past 100 years.
Multiply that by say 10 beaches ,that's jumped now to 12000 rings .. What if it was double that amount or even more?
My beaches where I live in Australia are mainly small,about half a mile long on average .. so if your beaches stretch for many miles adjust my theory to say units of 10 or more street blocks.
Of course many would be lost either beyond reach or just too deep to detect.
Others would be detectable especially after big storms and huge seas or even recent fresh drops.
My best month was in March 2013, 15 gold rings .. total for that year was 76.
I might add that I put in over 500 beach hours (126 visits) as well that year.
Just my view .. think about it!
Multiply that by say 10 beaches ,that's jumped now to 12000 rings .. What if it was double that amount or even more?
My beaches where I live in Australia are mainly small,about half a mile long on average .. so if your beaches stretch for many miles adjust my theory to say units of 10 or more street blocks.
Of course many would be lost either beyond reach or just too deep to detect.
Others would be detectable especially after big storms and huge seas or even recent fresh drops.
My best month was in March 2013, 15 gold rings .. total for that year was 76.
I might add that I put in over 500 beach hours (126 visits) as well that year.
Just my view .. think about it!