Hi Gyspy. This is Judy Wolford I am from A little Town called Louisa Ky. Some day I will buy me a metal detector. I have my knife my pin pointed and a sand bucket. But I have to get a gratte metal detector.I am 69 years old and when I save the money to buy one. I just want to go with you one time Also wont your book. Love watching you. My God always bless you.
@@JudyWolford Hi Judy! Best of luck! You can probably find a used Garrett metal detector online somewhere. That might be a less expensive way to get started. Would love to detect with you sometime. Have a great day! ~ Gypsy
Nice murder weapon there. Sweet first year Ihp,and out of the dump again, you pull treasure. I remember when you scraped out that" Holy _____", "No Way" Roman coin out of that dump. You Love, always have the patience, as well as the skill it takes to find the treasure. As always, great hunt, great friends, great video.
You girls better run, not walk back to that property! If that Indian head nickel was 1800s , there has to be more relics and things over there! Nice finds girls ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💜 Have a wonderful week.
Hey Gypsy. Greetings from Rochester NY. Just purchased your book off of Amazon. Should have it in a few days. Question when cleaning that Indian head I noticed that you didn’t want to use water on it. Can you explain why? Thank and have a great day.
Hi Bob! Thanks so much for purchasing my book. I go more into cleaning coins in my book. Older Copper coins once they’ve been in the ground for a long period of time they form many layers. These layers when wet you can strip off from the natural patina that has built up on the coin. You can strip the natural patina away when trying to clean copper coins wet. It is best to clean copper when dry. Using a dry brush or a toothpick to scrape away the first few layers of dirt. Silver coins don’t form those layers so therefore it’s always good to rinse your silver coins with water. I hope this helps. Happy hunting! ~ Gypsy
Thank you Gypsy.....this explains it perfectly. I've dug some nasty Indians and wheaties with my Apex and my AT Pro. I have used different methods to try to clean them so I could at lease read the date. I'll have to start carrying toothpicks ion my bag. Thanks again. @@ZeroDiscrimination
I thought so too at first. But, it was made of a very thin aluminum and I found 2 others in different areas. I think it’s from the old spinning fireworks. But, not for certain. Thanks for watching!
@@edb7549 You can get a Viper coil for your Apex. Or if you get the AT max you can get a AT viper coil for it. I like it because it’s thinner which gives you better separation in trashy areas but you still have the length of the coil that gives you good depth. It’s worth the money to me.