Love the bottle you found with what was left of the tobacco can. But the little bitty bottle was awesome too. You two had a great hunt. Miss little Rosie though.
What no little Rosie? The rain must have scared her off. Interesting place. Nice relics. I think that buckle is a Bezel off a ladies' watch. Looked like thick scrub you would need to walk through so detecting would be very hard I would say. looked like a good spot.
My heart skipped a beat when Josh pulled that whiskey bottle... then I realized it was broken, bummer! The bottomless whiskey jug is a rare jug indeed. Great video. Can't wait for the next!
The several years I lived in Kitsap County, back in the 70s, the thought never occurred to me to go relic hunting! I knew about the logging that went on, back in the day, but I had other interests at the time, being a teenage boy!😉 Nice finds!
I found a brass bed headboard out in the middle of nowhere in SW Washington. I'm 70 and I know lots of old bottle dumps on the Columbia river if anyone wants to know a few, I will share
Started doing this over 50:years ago no metal detectors just our hands grew up in Columbia gorge found lots of camps and relics still have them don’t know what to do with them misery whips,stove doors and legs pieces of donkey sleds,damper out of donkey stack,found a bull prick leaning on a tree on old rr grade, found rr switches there still in woods they weigh couple hundred pounds,loved doing this stuff but can’t hardly walk in brush any more woul love to talk to you guys
This is awesome! I’m heading out to a couple remote logging camps in a different part of WA tomorrow. I’ve spend quite a few years researching and exploring mining camps and logging camps, and have found some really cool relics lost to time. It’s amazing how to the naked eye most of them look entirely untouched from civilization. I talked to an old timer years ago who told me a tale about an entire train that derailed in the mountains, but it’s so remote that it’s very difficult to even access let alone find. I’m hoping to rediscover it some day. Do ya’ll have any helpful tips for research besides old maps and Lidar? I’ve had some luck with history books as well but that’s about it.