Recently I discovered an old baseball field on a small town property (now a field) and although I did not know the owner (my mom did) I reached out and got permission to hunt the field. I was happy to get the permission but the field was in corn all summer. No hunting the actual field but I did hunt the section in pasture and found a few wheats and a 1946 rosie. I sent the landowner a pic of the dime on Facebook messenger and he said come back any time. A few weeks pasted by and I had moved on to some good properties in town. Good for averaging about 3 silvers a trip and some tokens. Then one night I saw the landowner for the field post a picture of an old family reunion that took place at his farm house in the early 1900s. I asked if I could hunt his property and he said sure! I was excited - but then he said... you know, we had all kinds of family reunions, church picnics and school picnics on this farm through the year... Wait a second.. this sounds like a slam dunk yard for hunting. I was excited to make it out and on the weekend I brought my Teknetics T2 and the fun soon began. Day - 1. My first signal was a 1897 V Nickel, followed by a heart-shaped Woodsmen pendant. Soon after I kicked off the day with my first silver, an 1892 Barber dime! I could have been happy with just that but there were deep signals everywhere and I kept digging good stuff. Soon after came another barber, then a merc, then a barber! In between I was finding Indian heads (in great shape) and more nickels. Day 1 concluded with back to back Barber quarters (1898 and 1907). Day 1 totals was 7 silvers (5 were barber!), 7 indian heads, two V Nickels, two buffs and only 4 wheats - all in 3.5 hours! I couldn't believe how awesome this was. I showed the landowner and he was thrilled with the history and invited me to come back anytime. So did, a few days later. Day 2. I had about 2.5 hours to hunt. I made the most of it. My first signal was a shallow dime signal I had skipped the previous day thinking it was too shallow to be silver. There were actually two signals a foot apart giving me a dime reading. Both ended up being silver, a barber and a merc. Next silver was a 1946 walker. Followed it up with another merc and a war nickel to cap off a 5 silver day! Added three more Indians, a V nickel and a buff. Grand total for 6 hours of hunting - 12 silver (6 barber), 10 Indian Heads, 3 V-Nickels, 3 Buffalo Nickels and 11 wheat pennies (not pictured).