Dame is always the rock and root guy. It amazes me how glass bottles are underneath a rock and not be broken. Plus Mission Accomplished. And Waynos with a coin. What a day. Love the video😊
You had the can opener wrong end for end. The pointy end is actually what we called a can opener. Like a soda can or canned milk can. The bottle opener is the flat side.
Harvard University was founded on October 28, 1636. The Colonials were much more sophisticated than we give them credit for. The evolution of New England's stone walls is well documented. People kept Diaries and records. There are tens of thousands of firsthand accounts of what life was like in colonial times. Early boundary markers were carved into trees, or marked by large stones, piles of stones, and waterways. Fences were made of wood and sometimes the roots of pulled up stumps. If you were clearing a field for agriculture, you would bring the stones found on the surface to the boundary of your property and toss them on the ground. These were called, “tossed walls,” and stones would accumulate around the wooden fences. Shortly after the Revolutionary War, folks started stacking these into walls for both aesthetic, and practical reasons. I hope this helps. Have a good evening.
1943 & 1944. The attack on Pearl Harbor was on December 7, 1941 and War was Declared on December 8th. It took us a full year to realize that we could run out of Nickle without suspending it for use in coins.
As nickel was a strategic war material during World War II, nickels coined from 1942 to 1945 were struck in a copper-silver-manganese alloy which would not require adjustment to vending machines. WIKIPEDIA According to the Mint formula, these nickels are 35% silver. A few decades ago, there was a RUMOR floating around numismatic circles, that devious employees at the Mint had -- for their illegal purposes -- run a plate of nickels in pure silver. 🤷 Could be... But... If one were to broadcast their possession, Treasury would confiscate them as evidence of a crime. This served only to add fuel to the fire of Cultural Myth.
@@TerryArchibald-w5r As nickel was a strategic war material during World War II, nickels coined from 1942 to 1945 were struck in a copper-silver-manganese alloy which would not require adjustment to vending machines. WIKIPEDIA According to the Mint formula, these nickels are 35% silver. A few decades ago, there was a RUMOR floating around numismatic circles, that devious employees at the Mint had -- for their illegal purposes -- run a plate of nickels in pure silver. 🤷 Could be... But... If one were to broadcast their possession, Treasury would confiscate them as evidence of a crime. This served only to add fuel to the fire of Cultural Myth.
Mainer here, love your channel because this is how I like to dig. In the woods. Been following a long time. Great stuff.
at 9 mins and 36 seconds that piece your buddy dug was part of a side rail for a bed. The part that slides into the head or footboard.
Great digs, guys! I think your item @ 4:44 is a Colonial Codpiece. I could be wrong, though.
9:30 that is from a bunk bed! I had one when my brother and I were little growing up on the North Shore of O'ahu.
@stealth_digger My daughter had mine but gave it away not knowing I wanted it!
Dame is always the rock and root guy. It amazes me how glass bottles are underneath a rock and not be broken. Plus Mission Accomplished. And Waynos with a coin. What a day. Love the video😊
Good day. Nice diversity of finds.
@stealth_digger ??
Cool location and finds guys! Congratulations Dame!
So glad you found the missing links…sorry couldn’t help myself. Enjoyable video
Cool bottle
9:25 might have been a bed piece? Fun hunt. Thanks for sharing!!!
What is that big round thing to the left of where Wayne's found that Nickle ?
👍 Enjoyed
You had the can opener wrong end for end. The pointy end is actually what we called a can opener. Like a soda can or canned milk can. The bottle opener is the flat side.
Excellent Waynos....thanks for sharing,.
First.! The cast iron piece Dame found looks like something from a manifold outlet.
Stealth Diggers rock. ❤❤❤❤
Somebody was hiding those bottles me thinks.
So did they clear the fields of all the stones then stack them to show their property borders?
It's a shame but they don't respond to any questions .
Yes.
Harvard University was founded on October 28, 1636. The Colonials were much more sophisticated than we give them credit for. The evolution of New England's stone walls is well documented. People kept Diaries and records. There are tens of thousands of firsthand accounts of what life was like in colonial times. Early boundary markers were carved into trees, or marked by large stones, piles of stones, and waterways. Fences were made of wood and sometimes the roots of pulled up stumps. If you were clearing a field for agriculture, you would bring the stones found on the surface to the boundary of your property and toss them on the ground. These were called, “tossed walls,” and stones would accumulate around the wooden fences. Shortly after the Revolutionary War, folks started stacking these into walls for both aesthetic, and practical reasons. I hope this helps. Have a good evening.
Someone needed a nip or two to make it thru the day. Good hunt fellas, I reel this place a gourmet central0
That looks like a stainless steel boat handle end. Two end caps with a rod between
Thank you Charlie , Dame and Waynos for the adventure and seeing some nice finds !
Waynos, some of those 1941 war nickles are pure silver, I have 2! Nice little bottle Dame! (Glen (WV.)
1943 & 1944. The attack on Pearl Harbor was on December 7, 1941 and War was Declared on December 8th. It took us a full year to realize that we could run out of Nickle without suspending it for use in coins.
As nickel was a strategic war material during World War II, nickels coined from 1942 to 1945 were struck in a copper-silver-manganese alloy which would not require adjustment to vending machines. WIKIPEDIA
According to the Mint formula, these nickels are 35% silver.
A few decades ago, there was a RUMOR floating around numismatic circles, that devious employees at the Mint had -- for their illegal purposes -- run a plate of nickels in pure silver. 🤷
Could be... But... If one were to broadcast their possession, Treasury would confiscate them as evidence of a crime. This served only to add fuel to the fire of Cultural Myth.
@@TerryArchibald-w5r As nickel was a strategic war material during World War II, nickels coined from 1942 to 1945 were struck in a copper-silver-manganese alloy which would not require adjustment to vending machines. WIKIPEDIA
According to the Mint formula, these nickels are 35% silver.
A few decades ago, there was a RUMOR floating around numismatic circles, that devious employees at the Mint had -- for their illegal purposes -- run a plate of nickels in pure silver. 🤷
Could be... But... If one were to broadcast their possession, Treasury would confiscate them as evidence of a crime. This served only to add fuel to the fire of Cultural Myth.
Howdy.
I think the overload signal might’ve been the top of a water pump
Dame reminds me of Harrison Ford
Coil attachment point broke so 550 cord to the rescue
❤❤❤❤❤😊
118th!! YESSSSS!!!!!
190th lol
@@privateerwoodworksnmore3761 ish👍🏻
😊😊😊