@13:12 I have to admit, the soundtrack brought tears to my eyes as you revealed those beautiful finds. Truly Epic!! Felt like I was on the set of, “Dances with Wolves.” Epic video! !
Awesome finds Sam. Congrats on the half. Beautiful condition. Look like it was dropped right after being made. Almost gets you emotional finding something you’ve been wanting to find. Again congratulations
Greetings.I'm from Russia myself, I've been digging for 14 years and I know that it's always nice to find large portrait silver. Once I found 1 US cent of 1938 by myself. But we have places where people no longer live or the forest has already grown much more, but the cop style itself is very different from ours. Have a good find!
This was very exciting, the finds, the fields, the windy prairie, the epic music! Since I'm just getting started on the backlog of visits, I'm hoping the newly posted visits show less camera swinging...uff da, my eyes start to spin.
New to your channel just found this video. Those are some amazing finds, I have found many silver coins, but never a barber happen and that is a dream coin right there. Congratulations and good luck in your future hunts. I can’t believe all the coins you found even the Indian heads are amazing.
My God!!! A day you dream about. Congrats on some almost pristine finds. I hit the sub. button just to see if you do this good every day. Wasn't aware North Dakota got that hot! Freeze in the winter, sweat your a-s off in the summer. Great Vid, JM
You would love to hunt some of the early property’s I have hunted that go back to the early 1700s in Pennsylvania I’m still looking for my bucket lister the 1793 chain cent and of course any George Washington button
Sorry I missed this earlier - I've been so busy hunting myself! Great to see you hunting Sam, still hope that someday we can hunt somewhere together! Take care, Ro
Watching these vids, thinking back to the day these coins "were lost." Can't help but think how devastated that person might have been. Especially the dollar coin. Even if it was lost in the 20's -40's, that was still alot of money back then. And the coins lying on the concrete slab surprised me. How many may have been hauled away after the building was torn down? Were they stashed in a wall....or....? All in all, cool beans!!
I wish I knew what the approximate value was for those things. The ring, I'm guessing a couple hundred or so. Also, those coins had more value back then, and I wonder how people could loose them, apparently easily?
@@samsager1 Thanks for telling me that. I have an underwater detector, which goes down to 25'. However, it seems like there's plenty to detect, above ground. I also have books, on where to look, I just need the time.
Want a wonderful Barber 50. CENT Our families NORWEGIAN great Grandfather FREDERICK ELIAS NELSON was ONE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT JUDGES OF THE DAKOTAS ABOUT 1885 -1905 THEN HE MOVED THE FAMILY TO IDAHO. LOVE YOUR WORK I AM TEACHING HISTORY AND ENGLISH IN AUSTRALIA FOR PAST 35 YRS.
When you metal detect at these sites, do you have to ask permission first? I suppose abandoned buildings are a different matter, but somebody must own the land. Just curious before I go out there!
We will do what we want to do with our coins no matter what you say. They already have environmental damage. I don't sell them anyway. What I do with my finds is my business and mine alone.
Everyone calls them Indianhead pennies or cents. It's not disrespectful, that's just what they're called. By definition I'm "Native American" but I'm as white as it gets.