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I kept scanning, getting no other good signals
and few junk signals until I got about 20 feet into the yard. It was another
Indian, 1889, about six inches deep. Again, the soil was all gravel beneath
the sod. 'That's not good', I thought. I was lucky again. Hopefully the
whole yard wouldn't be that way. Well, it was. I dug several junk signals
and a few surface Memorials. The gravel was everywhere underneath the sod. I
usually give up quickly when I find this situation because I know the ground
is not natural, undisturbed soil, but the two Indians kept me hanging in
there. I searched for another 30 minutes or so before I hit a nickel signal
near the driveway. It was loud, so I expected a Jefferson Nickel. Surprise,
surprise. It was a 1911 nickel in good shape only two inches deep. And the
soil was normal this time. I worked along the driveway toward the big maple,
getting a couple more surface pennies. Then, between the drive and the tree,
I got another loud signal that read 180. It was even louder than the other
surface coins. I dug another two inch deep coin in normal soil again. It was
an 1876-CC Seated Liberty
quarter! It was only VG, but still hard to believe!
I
had hunted up to the tree on the main yard side earlier and found the gravel
went right up to the tree, but it wasn't there on the driveway side. Maybe
my luck would keep up. It did. The next signal was a deeper one closer to
the tree and reading 180 on the meter. I thought maybe I would get a dime
this time. I cut a four inch deep plug from the black topsoil and removed
it. Lying in the bottom of the hole was a soil coated quarter with a Seated
Liberty eagle looking up at me. I couldn't believe it. I just stuck it in my
pocket without even looking at the front. I guess I was hoping if I waited
until I got home with it, it would turn out to be a Capped Bust quarter. I
wanted to carefully wash it anyway to prevent scratching it by rubbing off
the dirt. I mentally noted that a hundred years ago, that maple tree would
have been just the right size for tethering a horse.
I covered the rest of the yard, gravel or no
gravel, getting only one more coin. It was a 1920 wheatie. I also made sure
I went back and dug the few loud signals I had passed over thinking they
were surface Memorials. Most of them were. The rain had started again just
as I finished the yard up. When I got home, I washed the other quarter and
found it to be an 1858 in Fine
condition. Too bad so much of the yard had been disturbed. I wondered if the
huge old house had been a boarding house in the 40's or 50's and the whole
thing gravelled for parking. The conspicuous lack of wheaties makes this
unlikely. I actually think the yard had been hunted before. The 6000-D I
used to use would have missed the two indian heads in the gravel and the
nickel. The first quarter was probably passed over as a surface coin and the
second missed because it gave such a deep signal. The loop would have had to
go directly over it to hit. I have a feeling it will be a long, long time
before I equal that yard again, if ever! It's days like that one that keep
us going.
Addendum:
The next Monday, exactly one week later, I returned
to that house after work and went over the yard again. I dug every
signal that could even remotely have been a coin and got two more Indian
heads. And guess what? One of them was another
1871! It was in no better condition than the first, but imagine that!
I got not only two seated quarters from that yard, but TWO
1871 Indian heads!
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