Compass
Forum Supporter
Drove 2 hours south to hunt a beach I used to go to when my son was going to college in the San Diego area. I knew I might be on to something when no fewer than 7 other hunters showed up. All the hunters were very cordial and sociable including Romy from this forum who also made the road trip.
I had to switch from the Dual Field to the Excal because of the iron and the fact that digging in the exposed rocks was pretty brutal and I wanted to only dig when I got decent signals. As the tide went out I started to find a few wheat pennies and even a mercury dime and a silver ring.
I decided to try a flat area away from the rocks which wound up being a layer of sand on top of soft clay. By this time I was detecting in about a foot of water. Immediately, I got a strange but solid low tone on the Excal. I haven't used it enough to recognize all the different sounds but it was lower than those from nickels but didn't sound like a bottle cap. After a quick scoop and a rinse I couldn't believe what I was looking at. Pressed into the sides of a football sized clump of clay was a thick yellow gold chain.
A gold chain has been on my bucket list for some time now but this one certainly looked worth the wait. I found one end and slowly pulled the chain away from the clay. I could feel the weight of the chain grow as one link after another became liberated and two feet of chain later she was free.
Later in the hunt I added a little 1.5 gram signet ring and called it a day.
I know that chains are often heavier than they appear to be and I was hoping that this would be the case. I was thinking maybe about 20 grams but was blown away with the 31.2 gram total of 14K! The clasp seems fine and no links are damaged. I'm wondering if someone put it in their pocket for safe keeping?
I've often thought that it would be nice to find a gold chain that I would like enough to wear and this is it...
...and it fits!
Thanks for looking and happy hunting everyone!
I had to switch from the Dual Field to the Excal because of the iron and the fact that digging in the exposed rocks was pretty brutal and I wanted to only dig when I got decent signals. As the tide went out I started to find a few wheat pennies and even a mercury dime and a silver ring.
I decided to try a flat area away from the rocks which wound up being a layer of sand on top of soft clay. By this time I was detecting in about a foot of water. Immediately, I got a strange but solid low tone on the Excal. I haven't used it enough to recognize all the different sounds but it was lower than those from nickels but didn't sound like a bottle cap. After a quick scoop and a rinse I couldn't believe what I was looking at. Pressed into the sides of a football sized clump of clay was a thick yellow gold chain.
A gold chain has been on my bucket list for some time now but this one certainly looked worth the wait. I found one end and slowly pulled the chain away from the clay. I could feel the weight of the chain grow as one link after another became liberated and two feet of chain later she was free.
Later in the hunt I added a little 1.5 gram signet ring and called it a day.
I know that chains are often heavier than they appear to be and I was hoping that this would be the case. I was thinking maybe about 20 grams but was blown away with the 31.2 gram total of 14K! The clasp seems fine and no links are damaged. I'm wondering if someone put it in their pocket for safe keeping?
I've often thought that it would be nice to find a gold chain that I would like enough to wear and this is it...
...and it fits!
Thanks for looking and happy hunting everyone!