Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.
I thought it would be nice to have a thread dedicated to these fascinating and historical coins, a venue where I can share my enthusiasm for these coins and one where we can share information and coins, perhaps instilling the collecting bug in some of you who are interested and need just a nudge to become full blown cob collectors.
I have accumulated and documented many cobs over the past 40 plus years. I have posted many here and at CoinTalk. My postings are rather messy, not very systematic, jumping from one mint or king as I pull coins for photographing. Please bear with me, and I hope that the coins posted herein are both entertaining and informative.
I'll start with coins that I have photographed on file. I'll continue to post and please share your cobs. If you have any questions, I will try to answer them to the best of my knowledge.
Colombia, Bogota, 8 reales, Philip IV, 1660s, PoRS NR. Purchased from Superior Galleries in the early 1990s.
KM 7.1
27.1 grams
I was fortunate to win this coin in a Superior auction. The pillars and waves cobs from Bogota are quite expensive and often salvaged. This coin, with its slightly oxidized surfaces might be from a salvage, but it is full weight and attractive in its crude way, with strong centers on both sides. With cobs in general, collectors will pay more for coins with complete or nearly complete center strikes.
This cob shows typical areas of strength and weakness in the strike, so even with the obverse date situated towards the coin's center, the last two numerals are muddled and weak, the last one really not visible. For a while I though the date was 1665. I am pretty sure that the third numeral is a 6. With the help of Krause, that puts the coin in the period of 1663-1665.
The Cob Corner - World Coins - Numis Forums
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Below is an interesting story that might give a glimpse of the future
Taryn Compton, who goes by @basketballmumma on TikTok, recently shared her frustrating experience at her bank when she attempted to withdraw $3,500 in cash—only to be told that the branch no longer handles cash at the counter. The unexpected policy change left her stunned, and her video about the ordeal quickly went viral....
Below is the link for the rest of the article.
She tried to take out her own money but the bank had a surprising new rule | Trending at Upworthy
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I got this alert yesterday and added to yesterday's post, but you missed it if you read the post earlier in the day.
Alert Description
* WHAT...A strong southward-flowing longshore current will exist at all central Florida Atlantic beaches today, in addition to a moderate risk for dangerous rip currents. * WHERE...Coastal Volusia, Brevard, Indian River, Saint Lucie, and Martin Counties. * WHEN...Through late tonight. * IMPACTS...The southward-flowing current could pull swimmers into deeper water, making them more susceptible to dangerous rip currents. It will also generate strong rip currents near piers, jetties, and reefs.
Instruction
Swim near a lifeguard. If caught in a rip current, relax and float. Don't swim against the current. If able, swim in a direction following the shoreline. If unable to escape, face the shore and call or wave for help.
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Source: Surfguru.com |
Good hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net