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Sunday, December 31, 2023

12/31/23 Report = Being Open To Amazing New Possibilities in the New Year. Top Discoveries of 2023 by One Media Outlet.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


The Coral Castle in Coral Gables Florida.
Source: See link below.

Maybe you've seen it.  It is a tourist attraction called the Coral Castle in Coral Gables Florida.  One man, a small man of about 135 pounds, carved from the coral beneath his feet and moved into place, using only a tripod composed of three logs about the size of telephone poles and pulleys, created amazing structures built of solid coral blocks weighing several tons each.

Below is what the web site says.

We invite you to tour our sculpture garden in stone, built by one man, Edward Leedskalnin. From 1923 to 1951, Ed single-handedly and secretly carved over 1,100 tons of coral rock, and his unknown process has created one of the world's most mysterious accomplishments. Open every day, the Coral Castle Museum welcomes visitors from around the world to explore this enchanting South Florida destination.

Here is the link.  Coral Castle Museum

Maybe you don't believe that.  Maybe you believe he used heavy equipment or had help from aliens or something.  But if what the web site says is true, Mr. Leedskalnin accomplished something many people to this day would think is impossible.  He knew how to do something that others still do not understand.

I kept starting today's post and then stopping.  I tried three times but after a few paragraphs stopped.  Then last night around 3 AM I awoke thinking about the Coral Castle, which I was reminded of while watching William Shatner's TV show not long before going to bed.  Was that what I was waiting for?  Was that the missing piece?  Was it just coincidence or was it my subconscious mind or something bigger in the universe putting things together?  It is easy to doubt any or all of that. 

There are a lot of questions.  How does the mind work.  How did the universe begin?  Big Bang or God?  In any case, it is well beyond my imagination and understanding.  What is known is miniscule  despite man's ignorant arrogance.  Like one grain of sand in the universe.

We do that, you know.  Our world shrinks to the size our mind permits.  We dismiss or explain away what we don't understand or can't grasp.  

Now I want to bring this home.  I've seen people who think they know a lot, and I've seen doubters at work.  And there is time to doubt, but you can doubt the wrong thing.  There are times when doubting can be a big mistake.  If done at the wrong time, it can actually limit what you will accomplish.

Perhaps instead of doubting that one man could cut huge blocks of coral and lift them and move them into place to create something like the Coral Castle, it would be more productive to think about what could be learned.  We can look for mystical explanations, as some like to do, or we can be awakened to new and real possibilities within ourselves.  There are times when we can learn from others.  Our lack of understanding can be a signal to awaken rather than doubting and explaining away what we don't understand.

I've seen detectorists doubt what other detectorists have found.  They don't think it is possible to find so much.  Maybe they don't think the conditions were right.  And the conditions probably were not right where they were, but they didn't see everything.  They' might not know how it was done, and because of their limited experiences, doubt that it was.

Indeed, a person's concept of what is possible is limited by what he has personally done, seen or can understand.  But there is always more.

I've seen doubters. and certainly doubt things at times myself.  And there is times when you should doubt, but is better to be open abnd expand your ideas of what you think is possible.  

Afterall, what do we really understand?   Scientists understand almost nothing when it comes down to the big questions, but they like to think they are the smartest beings that exist, that there is nothing bigger than what they can see or comprehend, and they will never be held accountable to a higher standard than their own.

Professing to be wise, they became fools (Romans 1:22).  A fool does not delight in understanding,  But only in revealing his own mind (Proverbs 18:2).

I already said I was going to bring this home and started to a couple times, so what does all this have to do with metal detecting?

Once upon a time there was a detectorist who brought a lot of gold finds to his metal detecting club every month - many more than anybody else in that particular club, and it wasn't long before the other club members started to accuse him of cheating somehow.  They didn't believe so much could be found by one person every month.  Instead of benefitting from what they were seeing and getting the idea that it might be possible to find a lot, they instead discounted what they were seeing.  I noticed that after a few monthly meetings they quit looking at the many finds this one detectorist brought in.   It seemed that they preferred to deny the possibility rather than consider that there was something they could learn.  People can be like that.  They can be their own biggest obstacle.

Sometimes it might seem like there isn't much out there, but there is.  It might not be as easy as you would hope.  Conditions might not be good where you've been hunting.  But there are always other places - if you want it enough. 

It is easy enough to say the beaches haven't been good or there is nothing out there.  You might be able to bust out of that if you are willing to investigate new places, explore new strategies or generally work harder and smarter.

I can understand why the less successful club members couldn't believe how much the more successful member was finding.  Their experience was different.  They hadn't done it themselves and didn't know how to, but they were wrong to believe that it wasn't possible just because they hadn't done it.  They would have been better off to give some thought to how it might actually be possible.  If you don't think something is possible, you probably won't accomplish it.  You won't put the effort in to make it happen.  

You might remember my formula for metal detecting success.  One of the biggest factors is the time and effort you put into it.  Consistent success requires a lot of work, and each success builds or adds to your knowledge and skill level as well as your success level.  

To see my formula for metal detecting success, use the following link. Treasure Beaches Report: Pt. 2. (2020 and Beyond). : 5/4/20 Report - New Revised Formula For Metal Detecting Success. Gruesome Bit of Treasure Coast History. (tbr2020.blogspot.com).  

Don't expect the treasure you seek to come to you.  Your metal detector isn't a magnet that draws treasure just because you go out and wave it around like a magic wand.

The really big days are rare.  You likely won't have them unless you are out there grinding - a lot.   But if and when they happen, those days can expand your understanding of what is possible.

I know I have limited myself many times in different ways, and sometimes I regret not hitting it harder, especially those times when I know I left a lot behind.

I've told about some of my big days before and some of them could have been much bigger.  I remember a time when there was a target or two or three in every square foot.  I just couldn't dig it all fast enough.  And I regret only working four hours each of two days.  I could have worked for 12 or more hours each day.  There are people who have done that.  I probably could have multiplied my finds by three or more times if I had done that.  I came back the second day, and it was still producing at the same rate.  But it all disappeared after the second day.  While I was out there on the second day, I saw the clouds roll in and the weather change as I hunted.  I looked up at the sky and thought that might be the end coming.  The next day (the third) when I returned, it was all gone.  I'm sure I left much more behind than I found.  It was my fault.  

I told once about two people who worked every low tide for months.  There are people who work through the night.  I've known some of those.  

At one beach, many nights I would see flashes of a flashlight blink on and off in the distance way up the beach.  I knew it was another detectorist working but didn't know who it was.  For a while I thought it might be one person, but eventually found out it was another when I crossed his path one time as he was coming off the beach before daylight.  We both laughed and said hi as we passed in the night.  He is someone I still know and occasionally talk to these many years later.  By the way, those kinds of people generally won't tell you a lot about what they are doing, but they are generally working longer and harder than most - and with good results.

Perhaps I've gone on too long.

As we come to the end of one year and get ready to start another, I want you to know that you are not likely to accomplish anything you think is not possible, so be open to the new and wonderful possibilities of the New Year.

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CNN Wire listed some of what they considered a list of the "top" discoveries of 2023.  Here are two of them.

When 22 woven sandals discovered by Spanish miners in 1857 were first carbon dated in the 1970s, they were thought to be about 5,000 years old. But new analysis from the Autonomous University of Barcelona and Alcalá University in Spain has found that estimation to be shy of about 1,000 years: In September, researchers announced that the footwear, made of plant fibers, are, in fact, the oldest known European shoes.

Preserved thanks to dry conditions in the cave in southern Spain, along with an assortment of fiber baskets and other goods, the sandals demonstrate “the ability of prehistoric communities to master this type of craftsmanship,” according to an author of the study...


I've said before that I am very skeptical of some archaeological dating techniques, including carbon dating.  Here is an example where carbon dating first produced a date of 5000 years, which was later changed to 1000 years of less.  That is a big difference.

Here is another discovery from the same article.


Move over, (fictional) “Heart of the Ocean,” because there’s a new Titanic necklace ready for the spotlight. A piece of jewelry featuring the tooth of a Megalodon, a prehistoric shark, was identified in the ocean liner’s wreckage by the deep-water investigation company Magellan, as part of its undertaking an ambitious project to produce a full-size scan of the ship, which has been at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, some 13,000 feet deep, since the infamous disaster in 1912.

Richard Parkinson, CEO of Magellan, called the necklace “astonishing, beautiful and breathtaking.”

“What is not widely understood is that the Titanic is in two parts and there’s a three-square-mile debris field between the bow and the stern,” Parkinson told British television network ITV in May. “The team mapped the field in such detail that we could pick out those details.”


Cool find.  If you look at the picture in which that necklace appeared, you'll notice a lot of other interesting items, many of which appear to be natural history rather than the kind of thing that was the focus of so much of the movie.

Here is the link for the rest of that article.

The 15 best art, design and archaeology discoveries of 2023 (fox17online.com)

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Happy New Year,

Treasureguide@comcast.net

Friday, December 29, 2023

12/30/23 Report - Big Numismatic Conference in Orlando. Gold and Metals Prices Up This Year. Taking Care to Protect Your Skin.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


Florida United Numismatists Jan. 2024 Convention.



The show in January is renowned for being the bellwether event on the numismatic calendar. With over 1500 dealersHeritage Auctions, exhibitors and over 10,000+ of the most avid collectors, the FUN show kicks off the year on a high note. Make your plans early to attend this monumental numismatic event!

Check out the other tabs for further information about our FUN Convention.

Admission to the show is FREE to the public! Show attendees must first stop by the public registration booths and pick up their “HELLO” badge before entering the bourse floor.


Of course, Sedwick Coins will be there and accepting consignments for their next auction.

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Gold Soars Over 13% in 2023, Silver Ends Nearly Flat.

In 2023, the performance of precious metals varied, with gold showing a significant increase, silver making a very modest gain, platinum experiencing a solid decline, and palladium seeing a substantial decrease in value.

On Friday, gold for February delivery fell by $11.70, or 0.6%, to settle at $2,071.80 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange...

Here is that link.


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As you probably know, this wasn't my best year.  A lot happened.  Among the other things, there is one other thing I wouldn't take the time to mention except I think it might help someone else.

I've been going for daily radiation treatments.  It is nothing all that bad.  It is daily, which is the worst part of it.  It is called short burst radiation therapy.  I don't expect to die from it or anything, but it takes up a part of every weekday for six weeks.  It is for skin cancer - a type which isn't the most aggressive or worst.  I've had the same type surgically removed before, but because of the location of this one, the radiation was judged to be a better option than surgical removal.

Here is the thing.  Sun exposure can cause skin cancer, particularly if you are fair skinned.  
The damage accumulates over the years and can finally catch up with you after many years of no noticeable symptoms. 

It, therefore, is a good idea to protect your skin.  Use sun block or other protection.  When you are young and haven't had any problems, you might not take it seriously enough to take the precautions.  I didn't.  I didn't like using sun block and had a lot of time on the beach in the sun.

The people I see going for the same treatment are all older, and most, but not all are men.  One is a cowboy and looks like it.  It is obvious he spent a lot of time in the sun.

You will probably not take this too seriously if you haven't had any problems yet, however, you might be able to avoid future problems if you take the precautions and protect your skin.  If you don't like sun block, you can use neck gators or other coverings.

I didn't really want to talk about this today but did because it might help someone avoid the same problem.
 

Good hunting,
TreasureGuide@comcast.net


12/2923 Report - Army Corps Dredging Local Waterways. Spread of Horse Culture. Metal Detecting Aluminum and Iron Coins. Tracking Sand.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.

Areas of IWW and OWW to be Dredged (in Green)



Jacksonville, Florida --

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Jacksonville District, will begin maintenance dredging of sections of the Okeechobee Waterway and Intracoastal Waterway in the vicinity of St. Lucie Inlet on or about January 3, 2024.

The USACE dredging vessel Murden is expected to remove approximately 25,000 cubic yards of shoaling material over a 12-day period. Once under way, operations will be ongoing 24 hours per day, seven days a week until completion. Dredge material placement will be to a pre-designated St. Lucie Inlet Impoundment Basi..n.

Boaters and navigators are advised to maintain safe distances and low wake speeds in the vicinity of the dredge and attendant equipment, and to follow signage and crew instructions to maintain public safety during the dredging operation...

Here is thte link.

USACE Jacksonville to begin OWW, IWW dredging first week of January > Jacksonville District > Jacksonville District News Releases (army.mil)

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Don't forget that when sand is building up one place it is always coming from someplace else, so when you see it building, ask yourself where it is coming from.  When you get that answer, you might very well have a good place to hunt.

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A new study from a University of Colorado Boulder researcher, conducted with colleagues in Argentina, sheds new light on how the introduction of horses in South America led to rapid economic and social transformation in the region.

William Taylor, an assistant professor of anthropology and curator of archaeology in the Museum of Natural History at CU Boulder, says this research shows that the story about people and horses in the Americas is “far more dynamic” than previously thought.

“Our findings from Patagonia show that the spread of horses, the emergence of horse-based ways of life in the southernmost areas of South America, was both rapid and largely independent of European control,” says Taylor, who has studied horses since 2011. “From almost their first arrival on the shores of the Americas in the 16th century, horses had an impact at a continental scale.”

Here is the link for more about that.

Anthropologist finds that South American cultures quickly adopted horses | Colorado Arts and Sciences Magazine | University of Colorado Boulder

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Yesterday I talked a little about aluminum coins.  If you routinely discriminate aluminum, there might be times when you want to change that. Some good things are made of aluminum, as well as other metals that you might typically discriminate.  If you are in a place where they have coins made of different metals like that, you might want to take that into consideration.

For example, if you are detecting in St. Lucia, which I have done a few times, they have coins that are made of a very light metal.  Not sure for certain if they are made of aluminum, but it could be.  When I visited that island, I found many coins in the shallow water, that if I were discriminating, I might have easily missed.  

Likewise, you can find coins with iron content in places like Germany.  Once again, that means you might not want to use the same metal detector settings that you use when detecting beaches in the United States.  Think about what you want to find and how the coins and other targets vary in different locations.  

Of course, being a tourist destination, when detecting in Florida, you'll occasionally find foreign coins here that you might miss when discriminating, though not as many as when detecting in areas where their coins are made of different materials.

Also, the lighter (or should I say, less dense) coins of some of the Caribbean Islands, such as St. Lucia, will move differently and you might want to focus on different areas of the beach.  Those coins, being made of different metals will be found in good numbers in areas that you might not bother to check when metal detecting in the United States.  Being less dense, they will naturally settle differently on the beach.

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SurfGuru Surf Chart for St. Lucie Inlet Area This Week.


How time flies!  It will soon be 2024.


Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net




Thursday, December 28, 2023

12/28/23 Report - Munimula and Valuable Aluminum Coins. The Most Viewed Blog Posts of 2023 and the TBR2020 Blog Since 2020.


Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


Very Rare Aluminum Cent.


... OK, it’s no big leap of logic to ask the question: did the United States ever issue any aluminum coins? The short answer is “no,” but it’s the longer answer that contains a story that has become a collector favorite and something of a legend. It seems that in 1974 the United States Mints in Philadelphia and Denver did indeed produce aluminum 1-cent pieces sporting the familiar image of Honest Abe, as records indicate that 1.4 million were coined – but never released. One apparently did make it out of the building in Denver, however, as a gift – an unauthorized and unsanctioned gift – to the assistant superintendent. It was his heir who tried to sell it, and the folks at the Secret Service stepped in and put a halt to it. One end result of the release of this single coin outside of the Mint is that, yes, there is now a lone aluminum piece that the collecting community can claim is valuable....

Here is the link for more about that.

The Lightest of Collections: Aluminum Coins - Numismatic News

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What do you think their cutlery was made of when Napoleon III had his prestigious guests over for food? Silver? Gold? The answer may surprise many, as they used aluminum cutlery, while less-esteemed guests used silverware. Aluminum is the most abundant metal in Earth’s crust (8.1%). However, it does not naturally occur in its pure metallic form. Instead, it occurs naturally in alums, a compound found in various minerals. The Greeks and Romans used alum as medicine and dyeing cloth. Metallic aluminum was finally discovered in 1825, although the first refining processes proved costly.

Napoleon III was born in April 1808 and died in January 1873. When he first rose to power in 1851 and had access to this ghostly light metal, he attempted to produce armor and weapons for the French Army. His idea was quickly put on the shelf once it became apparent how costly it would be. Only a few kilos of aluminum were being produced annually at this point. Manufacturers were mainly unwilling to abandon using metals like iron, brass, or bronze. Instead, aluminum was used by the elite as jewelry, silverware, plates, etc.

The Washington Monument was officially completed on December 6, 1884, when a 9-inch, 100-ounce aluminum pyramid was placed there. This final addition was a lightning rod because of its conductive properties. It was the largest piece of aluminum known to date, being displayed at Tiffany & Co., New York City, prior to the completion of the monument. A more practical method for refining aluminum metal was discovered in subsequent years. As a result, the price of aluminum dropped significantly, falling far beneath the price of gold, then silver.

Aluminum coins (world coinage included) have a stigma of being cheap. They are the coins you find for 10 cents a pop at your local coin shop in the bin by the front door. However, I always ask myself, “when was it struck?” If it was struck before the mid-’80s, you more than likely have a piece with a low mintage. The United States Mint struck pattern and die trial coins in aluminum. These coins are highly sought after by collectors because of their sharp, watery, gunmetal look and extremely low mintages. The first pieces were struck in 1863 and were consistently made through 1885 – right before the price of aluminum plummeted. Check that bin by the front door next time you visit your local coin shop. You will probably not find one of these pattern pieces, but you may find a significant coin flying under the radar....


Here is that link..

Aluminum Coins – Rarer Than Gold? (pcgs.com)

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Do you know what Munimula or Muni-Mula is?  I always remember it from an animated cartoon of the 1950s, I think it was the Rocky and Bullwinkle show, in which one of the characters said, "munimula is aluminum spelled backwards."  I can't find any evidence of that online now, but I did find Muni-Mula used as a location name during a Rough and Reddy show.  I'm pretty sure I remember it from Rocky and Bullwinkle though.  Anyone else?

Funny how some things just stick in your mind.  I don't remember which character said it but I distinctly remember one of them saying, "Munimula is aluminum spelled backwards."

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Continuing with my Treasure Beaches Report review of the year - here are posts that were the most viewed posts of 2023 from the tbr2020 blog.

Three were from back in February when we had some erosion and interesting finds.  The others were from this Fall and Winter.  Three were from November and three from December.



We had a long boring summer of sanded in beaches.

Taking a look at the all-time most viewed posts of the tbr2020 blog (which was started in 2020) we see the following top ten posts.



All but one of those is from November of 2022.  You might remember that we had some big surf and erosion and interesting finds back then.  

I've said several times that November to February provides some of the best beach metal detecting on the Treasure Coast.  During the summer months the monotony is occasionally broken by hurricanes or storms that provide brief periods of better hunting.  Of course, the treasure salvage season also provides occasional big finds during the summer months, but it seems in recent years that the salvage guys are slower to reveal big finds and often hold off for months before finds are revealed.

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Looks like the next few days will see nothing bigger to a two or three foot surf on the Treasure Coast.

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net



Wednesday, December 27, 2023

12/27/23 Report - Interesting Ring Find and Research to Identify. Top Viewed Posts of the Year: Green Cabin Wreck, Seminoles and Gorget Find, Beach Emerald, etc.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.

Two Views of Ring Found by Russ P.


Here is the email Russ P.  sent along with these photos and picture..


I recently found a ring on the beach that I wrote off as a junker because it was made of sterling (marked 925). But after reading some of the articles you linked, I went back and now believe it may be an antique black diamond ring circa 1915! I'm still waiting for a response from the Antique Jewelry University for help in confirming.

I used my diamond tester on it and all the stones tested positive for diamonds. Then I did some research and found a maker's mark from Darling & Co CC in Rhode Island circa 1915.

I suppose what threw me off initially was that it was made of silver and not gold. Another thing to consider is that there are modern vintage reproductions like the one I found for sale made by Miabella at Walmart online. It's extremely close but has a square stone and not the same maker's mark.

Russ. P.

The Maker's Mark (above)
and Information on the Manufacturer (below) of Russ's Ring.


Thanks for sharing your find and observations Russ.  Nice Find.

Like I said before, the making the find is only the beginning.

===

At the end of the year, it is customary to look back and reflect on what went on.  Analyzing what happened in the past is a good way to learn and improve.  

Today I decided to look at the most viewed posts of 2023 in the treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com blog. 

 As you'll recall, I started the Treasure Beaches Report years ago.  That was back in 2008 or thereabouts.  The blog got so big that it was difficult to find old posts when you wanted to review something.  The blog simply got too big, so in 2020 I started a separate blog (this one) for the newer posts, but people still often go to some of the old posts in the old blog.  There is a lot of information that was posted over the years.  In fact, treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com had days when there were ten thousand or more views.  

Anyhow, people often go to the old treasurebeachesreport site to view older posts from past years, and I wanted to see which of the many old posts got the most views in 2023.

Here is the list of most viewed posts from the old blog from the most read (top) to tenth most read posts (last).



The most read, not surprisingly, is the one that appears first when you go to the old blog. All it does is direct the reader to the new blog, so it isn't very significant.

The second was a post about the Green Cabin wreck or the San Martin which lies just south fo the Disney resort at Wabasso.

The third ranking was a post that could get a high number of views because of its position in the old blog rather than its subject matter.  It was the last of the regular posts to appear in treasurebeachesreport. and appears on the first page below the notice to the new post when you go to treasurebeachesreport.  Bottom line, I'm not sure if it was viewed a lot because of its position or its content.  Undoubtedly its position had something to do with it.

Fourth on the list is another one that undoubtedly was highly viewed because of its position.  The main topic, though, was the eroding South Hutchinson Island beaches.

Next, and fifth on the list, is a very old post from 2010.  It is about a find that looks like a gorget and Seminole silver more generally.  Its ranking would appear to be primarily due to the content. 

There were at least a couple additional posts following up on that post,such as this one.


You can see numbers five through ten. Three of them were late 2020 posts, and therefore benefitting from their position in the blog.

The other two were about melted beer cans, metals and space debris and a big Treasure Coast beach emerald find. Bot of those were posts that I pointed to in recent posts when the topics came up again.

When I have new information on an old topic, I sometimes provide links to old posts, and that, of course, increases the number of views of those old posts.

I'd say that taking into account all factors, the list suggests that the topics of the Green Cabin wreck, Seminole silver, the beach emerald, melted beach metals and space debris were popular topics.

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Current Surf Chart from SurfGuru.com.


As you can see, the surf will be decreasing the next few days.

The wind is from the west.

Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

12/26/23 Report - Importance of Conservation and Resources to Check. Hey Grandpa, Whats for Dinner! Decreasing Surf.

 

Written by the Treasureguide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.



I like nativity scenes.  John C. sent me the picture above along with the following reminder.

Hey, just wanted to wish you Merry Christmas. All my Great Christmas memories, are with my family, As a child, knowing, you just had a recent loss, I'm sure some of your greatest Christmas memories are also with family,

 Anyway funny story about your medallion, going through a Tumbler,, Back in the 90s I found this solid little EO,  At  Corrigan's, And my friend Billy would come over and see it sitting on my coffee table, Next to my couch, and say,  hey when are you gonna bust that Eo open,and see what's inside,? Well after he left, I Got curious, and finally decided to grab my little hammer and Started hammering, I knew it was iron so I wasn't that concerned with it being anything of too much value,

 Well out popped two perfectly preserved little cannon balls, About the size of tennis balls, From the smaller swivel cannons, So at least I was somewhat educated enough to keep it in a little bowl of water, For a couple of weeks, Lol  Before I decided to donate it to my little historical museum here in Sebastian, So long story short, after a couple 3 days go by, I get this frantic phone call,  On a Monday morning, from Eileen Westfall, she was in charge of the museum at the time, Telling me that something horrible happened to my artifacts, So I get down there, and To my surprise, my perfectly shiny little cannon balls literally looked like 2 mushrooms, It was the strangest thing, they completely imploded, Lol,

 Anyway, I was still pretty green, at the time, but I sure learned a  valuable lesson of the importance of proper conservation, Lol

 Our Savior is born, our Greatest Christmas gift, 🙏✝️🌲


Thanks for the reminder on conservation as well as the Christmas image and greeting.

Iron finds are especially difficult to deal with.  They do tend to fall apart if not properly treated, and it takes a long time.  I haven't done any posts about conservation lately, but it is extremely important.  

Finding an object is one thing, but that is only the beginning.  Then comes the conservation and research, both of which can take a lot of time to reach a successful conclusion.

I've said before that sometimes a detectorist might not be ready for a good find.  Finds can be unappreciated or ruined if you don't have the experience to know how to handle them properly.

I've made my share of mistakes.  Sometimes the learning comes at a steep price.

Here is one older post providing some tips on conserving iron artifacts.


Take a look.

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While talking about nativity scenes during this Christmas season, several things came to mind.

"HEY grandpa, what's for supper?"  That was the lead-in for a bit they used to do on every Hee Haw show.

Did you know there is a difference between hay and straw?  There are a lot of manger scenes done by people who don't know there is a difference.

Did you ever hear of a drinking hay or hay hat?  Neither of those would work.  Straw and hay are not the same.

Straw comes from grain stalks, such as wheat, barley and oats.  

Hay, on the other hand is a leafy grass, like Timothy or Alfalfa.  

So what would you find in a manger?  It would most likely be hay - not straw.

Straw is stiff and high in cellulose.  Animals can't digest it well.  It is typically used for bedding - not food.

Hay is eaten, and would more likely be in a manger, while straw would be on the ground and used for bedding. 

The word “manger” comes from the Latin word manducare which means “to eat.”  

Seems fitting for the Bread of Life to be laid in a manger.

I noticed a manger scene just the other day with several bales placed around.  Bales are pretty anachronistic for nativity scenes.

I spent several summers throwing around thousands of bale of hay and producing straw while harvesting grain.

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Surf Chart From Surfguru.com.


As you can see, the surf continues to decrease.

Good hunting,
Treasureguide@comcast.net



Sunday, December 24, 2023

12/25/23 Report - Merry Christmas. The First Christmas Nativity Scene. One of My All-Time Favorite 1715 Fleet Finds. And a Mistake.

 

Written by the Treasureguide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals and founder of the Catholic Church's Franciscan Order, began the Christmas tradition of nativity scenes (also called creches or manger scenes) because he wanted to help people gain a fresh sense of wonder about the miracles that the Bible records from the first Christmas.

Up until Francis set up the first nativity scene in 1223, people celebrated Christmas primarily by going to Mass (a worship service) at church, where priests would tell the Christmas story in a language that most ordinary people didn’t speak: Latin. Although churches sometimes featured fancy artistic renditions of Christ as an infant, they didn’t present any realistic manger scenes. Francis decided that he wanted to make the extraordinary experiences of the first Christmas more accessible to ordinary people.

Francis, who was living in the town of Greccio, Italy at the time, got the Pope’s permission to proceed with his plans. Then he asked his close friend John Velita to loan him some animals and straw to set up a scene there to represent Jesus Christ’s birth in Bethlehem. The nativity scene could help people in the area imagine what it may have been like to be present on the first Christmas long ago...

Here is the link for more about that.

First Nativity Scene: Saint Francis Christmas History (learnreligions.com


I don't know how to say this, but I really like St. Francis.  That is a poor way to express what I mean, but I'll let it go at that.  And one of my favorite all-time 1715 Fleet finds is the Franciscan medallion, which was found years ago at John Brooks beach, is shown below. 

I didn't have any idea what I had when I found the object.  In fact, it remained in a pile of heavily corroded and encrusted metal detected coins before I finally decided to dump the coins in a tumbler.  When I took the coins out, I discovered that one of them was not a coin at all, but rather a religious medallion.  It was so encrusted that it originally looked round and I thought it was a coin like the others in the pile.  After removing the coins to check on them (fortunately I don't leave things in a long time before checking on them), I could see that it had a cross-like shape and was definitely a medallion instead of a coin.  

[Note: Be very careful about what you put in a tumbler.  What a regrettable mistake I made!]


Franciscan Medallion Showing St. Anthony of Padua
Being Forgiven Upon the Return of a Stolen Psalter.


The medallion shows St. Francis forgiving St. Anthony (on his knees).  My readers provided that information.  

St. Anthony is the patron saint for lost objects.  What a coincidence!  Finding a Franciscan medallion depicting the patron Saint of lost objects.  


Back of Same Medallion Showing a Prayer


With the help of the readers of this blog, the mystery of this medallion, including the Latin prayer on the back, was solved.

I was told that the words on the back are a blessing that St. Francis wrote to Brother Leo.

"Benedicat tibi Dominus et custodiat te;
ostendat faciem suam tibi et misereatur tui.
Convertat vultum suum ad te et det tibi pacem"


I was able to clearly make out the following words on the medallion: Custodiat, ostendat faciem, miseratur. and convertat vultum.


That prayer is known as the "May the Lord give you peace" prayer.

Here is the translation.

"The Lord bless you and keep you;
may He show His face to you and have mercy.
May He turn His countenance to you and give you peace."

One of the blog's readers, Moe, provided the translation.

Here are two of my original posts on the medallion, including a bit of additional information.


12/24/23 Report - Reales and Escudos for Sale in Treasure Coast Stores. Getting More For Your Finds.

 

Written by the Treasureguide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


Small Sample of Treasure Coins for Sale at St. Lucie County Stores.

I went Christmas shopping with my wife and while she shops I take a look at the Treasure coins for sale.  It seems that many of the jewelry stores in the area offer a good selection of treasure coins, including a good number 1715 Fleet coins.

At one location the coins included a number from the West Bay Trading Company.  They were in plastic envelopes and had the West Bay labels.  Many were small reales such as those you might find at Bonsteel or John Brooks.  For my taste, many were overly cleaned, but many people like them bright and nice and shiny.

The coins shown above are in pendants.  You can see the prices on a few of them.  

I noticed a few that were labeled as eight-reales that simply seemed too small for that denomination.  I'm not sure they were labeled correctly.  

Below are some more.  Many were professionally graded and encapsulated.  


Another Sample of Treasure Coins for Sale in Local Stores.

Even if you find rather than buy your treasure coins, browsing doesn't hurt.  You can find out the prices that are being asked and become more familiar with a larger variety of examples.

I can't imagine buying a treasure coin, but I still enjoy looking at them and learning.

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One thing that was confirmed to me this year is how important it is to sell well if you want to get good money for your finds.  Jewelers will only offer about 80 percent of the value of the gold in your jewelry.  They might advertise that they won't buy your jewelry for scrap, but they will give you more because they will buy it as jewelry, but the fact is that they will offer only about eighty percent of the value of the gold for the vast majority of items.  There are a few exceptions, but those items are very rare and include signed items such as those by Tiffany or some other highly desirable maker. For gemstones on rings, they'll generally offer nothing for most and only a fraction for very nice examples.  Then once they buy them, they'll mark them up three hundred percent or much more.  Of course, a lot of it, they melt for scrap.

I know they have to make a profit.  They have expenses.  They have to pay rent, salaries, taxes and all of that and still come out with a profit, but that doesn't help you.

They have their explanations to justify it all.  I told you about diamonds, for which they'll typically offer you very little.  They'll tell you about the new lab diamonds bringing down the value of natural diamonds, which are virtually indistinguishable from natural diamonds, for example.

One nice diamond ring I was told by a jeweler was a 20-, or 25-thousand-dollar diamond ring but a couple jewelers, including the one telling me that value, offered $7500 or less for the same ring.  It was explained that the main diamond in the ring had a small chip, and the diamond would have to be recut, and recertified, or whatever they call it, by GIA, etc. etc. before it could be sold.

And an antique necklace that I thought was very nice, I was told was old-fashioned and nobody these days would wear it.  That makes it hard to sell and worth almost nothing to a jeweler.

All of that might sound bad, but that is not my point.  You can sell well if you take the time and do the right things - if you cut out the middleman and sell directly to the person that will give you a good price - and that in most cases will not be someone who plans on reselling or scrapping the item.  

Sell antiques to people who most appreciate antiques.  And it gets more specific than that.  Sell that unique cat ring to a person that collects cats.  To get the best price for your finds, you have to find the right person.  You might or might not have the time or desire to do that.

The internet makes it easier to reach interested buyers, but it also increases the competition items that are common.  It also takes time to clean, photograph and post items for sale.  

Selling well is a huge topic that could take all day.  I've posted on that topic several times before, each time addressing only a small part of it.  You'll find some of those posts in treasurebeachesreport.blogspot.com.

One thing you can do is turn a virtually unsellable item into something more sellable.  Here is just one example.

Fossil Nuchal Turtle Scute Necklace.

And at the top of this post you will see several reales made into attractive pendants.  That is one way to transform a find into something more sellable and therefore more valuable.  

As I've said before, you can take classes on jewelry making and turn tarnished unsellable silver items into brand new items.

Or turn a fossil that almost nobody would buy into a necklace.  Add a leather cord and bail and that is how this hard to sell fossil nuchal turtle scute was sold.

A lot of it is just finding the right person, but you can also do a lot to transform finds so they can be sold for more.

One of the stores I visited yesterday while my wife was shopping was selling several pendants featuring 1715 Fleet Kang Hsi shards.  

I'll quit there today, but if you want to get the most for your finds, instead of selling them to a pawn shop or jewelry store you might take the time to find the right buyer and/or transform your item to make them more sellable.

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Good hunting,

TreasureGuide@comcast.net




Saturday, December 23, 2023

12/23/23 Report - One Shopping Day Left. Mayan Calendar. Beta Sigma Phi. Recent Finds on Treasure Coast Beaches.

 

Written by the TreasureGuide for the exclusive use of the Treasure Beaches Report.


Mayan Calendar Find.

On 12/4 od this year I mentioned calendar medals and that I had found a Mayan calendar medallion.  I couldn't find it to post at the time, but I just ran across another.  I had forgotten about this one, but since I found it, decided to post it today.  The other one I found is tarnished and smaller.  Neither of those that I found are old.   They are very common and used a lot in modern jewelry and design.

The Mayan Calendar consists of three separate corresponding calendars: the Long Count, the Tzolkin (divine calendar), and the Haab (civil calendar). Each of them is cyclical, meaning that a certain number of days must occur before a new cycle can begin.

The three calendars are used simultaneously. The Tzolkin and the Haab identify the days, but not the years. The Long Count date comes first, then the Tzolkin date, and last the Haab date. A typical Mayan date would read: 13.0.0.0.0 4 Ahau 8 Kumku, where 13.0.0.0.0 is the Long Count date, 4 Ahau is the Tzolkin date, and 8 Kumku is the Haab date...

Here is the link for much more information about the Mayan calendar.when

The Mayan Calendar (timeanddate.com)

The Mayan calendar predicted the end of the world on Dec. 21, 2012 CE.  Of course that was the source of a lot of discussion back then, and it is no surprise it would be on the winter solistice.

See The Maya Calendar and the End of the World: Why the one does not substantiate the other - World History Encyclopedia

Here is the link to my previous post on calendar medals.

Treasure Beaches Report: Pt. 2. (2020 and Beyond). : 12/4/23 Report - A Beautiful Day on a Treasure Coast Beach and a Nice Metal Detector Find. Calendar Medals. (tbr2020.blogspot.com)

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Beta Sigma Phi Charm Find.

This tiny charm is not silver or gold but has a bit of history to it.

In April 1932 Beta Sigma Phi was incorporated under a charter granted by the state of Missouri. Today, Beta Sigma Phi is a nonprofit corporation which maintains a contract with Walter W. Ross & Company for business management of its affairs. In addition to the International Constitution, each chapter composes its own bylaws.

The organization started out under the name: "The National 'What to Read' Club". Walter Ross, the founder of Beta Sigma Phi, visited Vinita, Oklahoma, where librarian Leona Schroers agreed to help establish a chapter in the town, and introduced Ross to Sally Rogers McSpadden, sister of the humorist Will Rogers. McSpadden was active in the Oklahoma Federation of Women's Clubs, as well as other women's organizations, and advised Ross to change the organization from an association to its present form, along with changing the name. A new framework for the organization was developed, with the Greek letter name derived from the sorority's motto: the letters, "Beta", "Sigma", and "Phi" were the first letters of the Greek words for "life, learning, and friendship"...

I believe I have found a gold and enamel Beta Sigma Phi pin before, or maybe it was another sorority. 

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Finds by Mark G.

Mark G. sent the following email with the accompanying photos.

I’ve been reading a few recent posts of foreign coins being found. I read the Treasure Beaches Report every morning and I do appreciate when finds are shared. Friday I was out doing a third strike on a beach and found my first foreign coin (even Canadian).  First one was a 2 cent EURO (looked like a penny) and the second one had a silhouette of Queen Elizabeth, combine that with a ring and I was anxious to look over my finds. The ring was plated the EURO is only 2 cents and the most interesting was the East States Caribbean .25 cent piece. Queen Elizabeth appears on many coins however her appearance on the East Caribbean States coin is not rare they have been in circulation since 2002 (or earlier for some striking’s) and are still in circulation. Unfortunately I made a rooky mistake and either hit it with my scope or put rusty iron in the same pouch as the coin and completely obliterated the date on the coin. Not rare but interesting; how did that Euro get there how did that East Caribbean States coin get on that beach?

 

Note: The East Caribbean Staes consist of these Islands:

·         Anguilla

·         Antigua and Barbuda

·         British Virgin Islands (BVI)

·         Dominica

·         Guadeloupe

·         Montserrat

·         St. Barts (St. Barths, or St. Barthelemy)

·         St. Croix (USVI)

·         St. Lucia

·         Trinidad and Tobago

 

 

Foreign Coin Found by Mark G.

I once did a series of posts on foreign coins and compiled a list of the countries.  Those posts are probably in the original TreasureBeachesReport.blogspot.com.  Here is one.

The Treasure Beaches Report Direct From Florida's Treasure Coast.: 3/22/12 Report - Foreign Coin Detector Finds & More

We compiled an extensive list, including coins from countries you possibly never heard of.

Since Florida is such a popular tourist destination, you can find a lot of foreign coins on the beaches, especially those of South Florida.

Marks finds have been seasoned by being on the beach a while.  It is a good sign that seasoned coins are still being found on our beaches.  That means that there is still a good chance of even older things.

Thanks for your report Mark.

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Surf Chart from SurgGuru.com.

There is still some decent surf out there, and still there is some surfing on the Treasure Coast beaches.  The surf will be decreasing in a day or two, though.

Unfortunately the wind direction isn't helping a lot, but we are getting some barely negative low tides.


I was just reminded that Dec. 23 is the anniversary date of the Immaculate Reception, which, if you are a football fan, you might remember occurred in 1972 when Franco Harris made the play that changed Steeler's football.  I sat on a airplane in the seat directly behind him about two years ago.  He is now passed away.  Steelers football is dead now too.   When you get old you see a lot of things come and go.  

Good hunting,

Treasureguide@comcast.net