Good Wednesday afternoon from MT.. the thing at 920ish looks like part of a sled or something a shoemaker would use, upside down. 🤷 thanks for sharing your walk through the forest. I'm enjoying the peaceful sounds and sunlight through the trees. 16:10- a picnic sight? I can see a woman in early 1900s attire accompanied by her beau, in my mind's eye.
I recently found a new spot in my town that is now a cane field, I’ve been detecting it every day. I found a WW1 button and another gold plated button. A copper ring and only 2 coins so far. A wheatie about 1911. And a very nice IHP 1893. Beautiful.
Sir shouldn't you be wearing gloves ?? I worry that you may pick up something bad. I love watching your video's. Do you keep anything you may find on your adventures ?? I just started watching your video's so I'm playing catch up. Thank you for taking us on your great adventures Hope you find some great things of history. 😃😉🌹❤
A friend of mine found a site on an old map that was known as a house of ill repute. A Church now stands on the site. There were a coupe of really old oaks on the rear property line. He found a half dime under a big old root. Location is key. Drunks drop stuff, always have, always will.
Plowing a garden or small field turns up rocks. Farmers would carry them to the edge forming lines of rocks. Sometimes on property lines sometimes just field edges.
Finding old settlements or whatever you call them. Is very cool. I’ve learned to use a hand held GPS to find where I am on the map but also to make waypoints of finds so I can come back to the same place easily.
Very interesting! This is the second video I've watched from you in this area, and I can't help but notice all of the wonderful botanical treasures you are passing over.
Ketchup was the most sold condiment in the mid to late 1800's. Apparently some soul who lived at this site proved that. Interesting spot on a Not Thursday
Well I'm going to say about 55 years ago,l'm 67 my father and I took a walk up the little fish creek feeding penn lake in north east Pennsylvania and I found a set of logging links at a site which was a oker mill in the 1800 hundreds and I still have them kind of neet.
O , so you never make a mistake, you’re so cool. Most people learn from their mistakes, and aren’t afraid to admit it. Not everyone is perfect, like the guy that built you house, or you car , but then they are just low life’s lol
A pet peeve of mine, too. You’d think in an era of typing to communicate, it would change that. Too to two Knew new Know no Just to name a few I see all the time
I was invited to see a hole found in the build of a bank. It led me into an unexplored cave. The old place I was looking at had once been a mated pair of Saber-tooth Tigers east of the Mississippi River. State law said it to be protected. Which is why reader had no clue.
"Iron Age things"????? industrial age things might be more like it. there are rows of stacked rocks all over New England, stacked and rowed for land boundaries but most common are clearing land to plant crops. and from the beginning of European settlement here lots of logging. cuz, you know, the king needed that lumber.
You don’t know what you’re talking about, Yes there are rocks piled up out there that were moved by settlers for farming and roads People like yourself can’t see or understand the difference in the time periods they were constructed and by whom
Are a lot of these “walls” found, potential skirmish lines from the revolutionary or Civil Wars? My first interpretation, or edges of small fields/pastures? Clearing rocks from an area, why not stack them? The iron finds appear to be old abandoned farm equipment/dump?
Well, through the video it is all new growth...do not see large aged trees...so farm land...ahhh, think again...there is plenty of farm land used on sides of mountains in W. Virginia, MD, and etc. With the washout you found, that's probably why they moved on...a bad choice in the first place for farming - novice farmers? So, bottles still showing above ground means they are not that old because the rotting foliage would have buried them over the centuries...Moonshine still...wheres the closes water source?
Hi there. I do enjoy your channel but i do believe that wall was an excellent find an archaeologist would probably be happy to check it out but I don't believe that's from a Sasquatch I believe that's from a long time ago some type of settlers possibly even the Vikings for all we know.
Good Wednesday afternoon from MT.. the thing at 920ish looks like part of a sled or something a shoemaker would use, upside down. 🤷 thanks for sharing your walk through the forest. I'm enjoying the peaceful sounds and sunlight through the trees. 16:10- a picnic sight? I can see a woman in early 1900s attire accompanied by her beau, in my mind's eye.
Very real. THAT is way more typical detecting day than a lot of the UA-cams showing treasures every few minutes.
Awesome video Charlie thank you so very much for sharing love bottles 👍👍❤️
Found an intriguing spot. Can't wait for you to go again. The bottles were cool finds. Great video😊
Charlie, I've watched from the beginning, your show is evolving nicely!
I recently found a new spot in my town that is now a cane field, I’ve been detecting it every day. I found a WW1 button and another gold plated button. A copper ring and only 2 coins so far. A wheatie about 1911. And a very nice IHP 1893. Beautiful.
Charlie how about doing a bottle dig there, those were such great finds! God Bless! (Glen) WV.
Sir shouldn't you be wearing gloves ?? I worry that you may pick up something bad. I love watching your video's. Do you keep anything you may find on your adventures ?? I just started watching your video's so I'm playing catch up. Thank you for taking us on your great adventures Hope you find some great things of history. 😃😉🌹❤
Thanks Charlie, I’m loving your Not Thursdays. ❤️🙏🇺🇸
nice discovery, can't wait to see what you find.
A friend of mine found a site on an old map that was known as a house of ill repute. A Church now stands on the site. There were a coupe of really old oaks on the rear property line. He found a half dime under a big old root. Location is key. Drunks drop stuff, always have, always will.
That's all he found?!
That wall might be 250 years old, but I don't see a tree that looks over 75. I think that was pasture less than 100 years ago.
Or a garden maybe
Plowing a garden or small field turns up rocks. Farmers would carry them to the edge forming lines of rocks. Sometimes on property lines sometimes just field edges.
"Conjunction Junction, what's your function?"
Finding old settlements or whatever you call them. Is very cool. I’ve learned to use a hand held GPS to find where I am on the map but also to make waypoints of finds so I can come back to the same place easily.
Oh boy more adventures !!
Nice spot. Stove and bottle find, sweet.
Enjoyed 👍
Very interesting! This is the second video I've watched from you in this area, and I can't help but notice all of the wonderful botanical treasures you are passing over.
I learn a lot watching Not Thursday.
Do you ever find a Hot Wheels out there? I have found them almost everywhere I go.
Not suggesting it’s the case here, but in Vietnam they farm on the sides of mountains
Could have been a cook house for a logging camp.
Ketchup was the most sold condiment in the mid to late 1800's. Apparently some soul who lived at this site proved that. Interesting spot on a Not Thursday
boom let's go let's go treasure and adventure ✌👵
Watched this on a Friday.
I like the finds but I love the history as you hunt. Thank you
9:12.... upside down pie.😅
Well I'm going to say about 55 years ago,l'm 67 my father and I took a walk up the little fish creek feeding penn lake in north east Pennsylvania and I found a set of logging links at a site which was a oker mill in the 1800 hundreds and I still have them kind of neet.
I've heard that some of those old rock walls may have been built and used for herding and hunting animals by ancient humans.
I wonder what this looked like when it was in its prime?
Hello Charlie 😊
That looks like a victorian fire surround , I took one out of an old building in maidstone kent eng; that would be worth a good bit if it's whole
Link to your shovel doesn't work. just a heads up. Merry Christmas!
I'm in Mass. Just starting out this coming spring!
I hope you recovered that stove piece if it was whole. Also those bottles or at least the one beer bottle.
thanks
Same for people who don’t use caps. And those stupid dot dot dot. Shows zero intelligence.
O , so you never make a mistake, you’re so cool. Most people learn from their mistakes, and aren’t afraid to admit it. Not everyone is perfect, like the guy that built you house, or you car , but then they are just low life’s lol
@@thomastjg53 relax .. i just watched .. lol
Temple or Peterborough?
The big flat rock could be an old fireplace mantle?
You're: you are
Your: regarding belongings or properties
A pet peeve of mine, too. You’d think in an era of typing to communicate, it would change that.
Too to two
Knew new
Know no
Just to name a few I see all the time
I was invited to see a hole found in the build of a bank. It led me into an unexplored cave.
The old place I was looking at had once been a mated pair of Saber-tooth Tigers east of
the Mississippi River. State law said it to be protected. Which is why reader had no clue.
Scouted and found a promising new area to further detect. Yipee!
You're out in the woods metal detecting and at 9:10 found pi.
forest camp or maybe a forest ranger's camp with sheds and such.
"Iron Age things"????? industrial age things might be more like it. there are rows of stacked rocks all over New England, stacked and rowed for land boundaries but most common are clearing land to plant crops. and from the beginning of European settlement here lots of logging. cuz, you know, the king needed that lumber.
You don’t know what you’re talking about,
Yes there are rocks piled up out there that were moved by settlers for farming and roads
People like yourself can’t see or understand the difference in the time periods they were constructed and by whom
The Algonquins said the stone walls were here before the Europeans arrived. One thing I learned in my 57 years on this earth is history is a lie.
Are a lot of these “walls” found, potential skirmish lines from the revolutionary or Civil Wars? My first interpretation, or edges of small fields/pastures? Clearing rocks from an area, why not stack them? The iron finds appear to be old abandoned farm equipment/dump?
All those bottles in area, probably their dump.
Looks like battle positions
The 2 first bottles look 1920
I have stone walls in my woods
Well, through the video it is all new growth...do not see large aged trees...so farm land...ahhh, think again...there is plenty of farm land used on sides of mountains in W. Virginia, MD, and etc. With the washout you found, that's probably why they moved on...a bad choice in the first place for farming - novice farmers? So, bottles still showing above ground means they are not that old because the rotting foliage would have buried them over the centuries...Moonshine still...wheres the closes water source?
Hi there. I do enjoy your channel but i do believe that wall was an excellent find an archaeologist would probably be happy to check it out but I don't believe that's from a Sasquatch I believe that's from a long time ago some type of settlers possibly even the Vikings for all we know.
👍
Breweries listed under Worcester, MA 89 Bowler Bros. Ltd. Brewery - Start Date 1883 End Date 1918
Maybe it's an old deer camp?
These walls were property lines or what??
Charlie, do you ever need someone to metal detect with
8:40.....10 lbs of AU😅.
Who spent so many hours building a wall?
all places are equally old
Boyscout or hunting cabin
Maybe hunters cabin?
The 2 thick pieces of metal you found are not "hundreds and hundreds of years old," as you claimed. Surely you know better than that.
WTF
THOUGHT YOU FOUND BIGFOOT STRUCTURES OR DOGMAN DENS
-1
Stacked rocks a retaining wall for a road. Or cart path.
*you're
You're
Boring, Im snoring! 😊
"When you are" not when your.
When you're unable to write a vid title correctly using valid elementary English then we know not to trust what you're spewing.