I always enjoy watching your digs. You very patiently clean up the site, dig out the modern stuff and then comes the relics. I appreciate being able to see the old things.
ha ha ha Loved the Flash reference Charlie. Ming the Merciless indeed! What a classic! Good to see you Charlie sweeping the woods in search of hidden treasures. You were nicely rewarded for your efforts too.
At 10:15, I think that is a stovetop “ burner” lid. Do you see the hinge on one side? Of course, I could be wrong, but it truly reminds me of an old, cast-iron stove!
Sweet bounty of artifacts DC thank you for another great exploration and your sharing of your knowledge and wit live love laugh dig explore K.D.I.O. adiggted to metal detecting
Wow Charlie, Great dig. I really enjoyed it. I love all the finds. Very cool and very interesting place. I look forward to your next trip there. Kelly/Indiana
Iron is interesting. I live next to an old cellar hole of a farmhouse built in the 1830’s and which burned in 1932. I have found hundreds of cut square nails that are actually still usable, yet the round wire nails used in later construction at the same site are rusted down to nothing. Forged iron items often have near-original condition under the surface rust as the remaining slag in the iron acts as a rust barrier.
I am always so thrilled to see what you find after a good clean up Charlie, I have no idea what most of what you find are or were but its interesting things you found in the ground there. I vaguely remember the piece you found before when you found the folded piece of metal, I couldn't read the writing on it but it straightened up pretty well. And as for the piece of metal with words on it , I've thought a lot about it but have no clue what it could have been. The old iron spoon bowl was a nice find, something personal as was the lantern part, it's finds like that that make the people come alive to me. It's been wonderful to be in your company for a while Charlie, thank you for keeping my mind occupied with thoughts of the past. Take care and stay safe please my friend love and hugs to you and NinJen Mary-Ellen LFOD
Thank you for the another great adventure and seeing some amazing finds ! Take care , stay safe and healthy with whatever you maybe doing next ! Doing well here in Kansas .
Hey Charlie the something at 4:17 with the two grooves in it looks like a wick holder for an oil lantern. The spikes on the adjuster knob would Sir in the grooves to move the wick up and down. Found a lantern top in pieces last night and it looks just like it
The piece you said was something at 4:30 roughly was what held the wick in the center of the lantern and the two slots were where the gears pushed the wick up and down.
Would love to see a sifting video in one of these iron infested cellar holes. Like all the collapsible tools maybe a mini backpack sifter in the works too?
Cool Charlie, you showed us what a little raking can do. It sure paid off. Probably more to come. Thanks Charlie for all you do. Joyce. ARROW *🎱. ❤️. 🇺🇸.
YEA!!!! The day can start now. Maybe you can do a NT video just going over the different coils we have now seen on the F19 that you use. It looks like there have been 3 different ones. I am still catching up on older videos so I may have missed it. A swing over a target with the different ones would be very educational for us beginners. As always, thanks for the daily dose of NT.
Charlie, just having the gear to get in and really do the searching like you have been with the added coils like you have been is the game changer. Glad this all worked out with Fisher👍. I knew once you had the tools the finds would pop out more constantly🙌. Really happy for you and the crew!!!
Productive time cleaning the spot and rewarded with some interesting finds! Good job Charlie. Seems your videos fly by faster and faster all the time as good things tend to do. Thanks for bringing us with yet again! EYNT!
Hey , Vinny here . Would love to see some drawings of how these homes with the stone cellars might of looked ? Did they really use all those small stones ? They must of been cabins built on top . Just wondering , thanks so much .
Every weekend???? Its history central here . A Bronze Age Chariot mount being one of my best finds .. problem being that the Museums are already over flowing with the things. They dont want then.
I always enjoy watching your digs. You very patiently clean up the site, dig out the modern stuff and then comes the relics. I appreciate being able to see the old things.
The rake is such a great idea to clear all the overburden. Not many detectorists would have thought of it.
U r the only metal detector that does this. I never understood why they don't clean area first to metal detect. Bravo sir
ha ha ha Loved the Flash reference Charlie. Ming the Merciless indeed! What a classic! Good to see you Charlie sweeping the woods in search of hidden treasures. You were nicely rewarded for your efforts too.
Great episode DC. This show more then any other has certainly shown the importance of keeping your hole clean!
Always have to keep your hole cleaned up lol
@@dannybell926 🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Nice sorting and cleaning. Best way to get to those deeper targets. Thanks for sharing, good luck, happy hunting and take care.
Happy Friday Not Thursday 👍🤣👍🍀
definitely found cool things! it pays to clean up the dirt & it’s surface to find relics! ~ninjen ~
At 10:15, I think that is a stovetop “ burner” lid. Do you see the hinge on one side? Of course, I could be wrong, but it truly reminds me of an old, cast-iron stove!
Great job from Alabama!
I love my telescoping rake. Great saves Charlie
Sweet bounty of artifacts DC thank you for another great exploration and your sharing of your knowledge and wit live love laugh dig explore K.D.I.O. adiggted to metal detecting
Wow Charlie, Great dig. I really enjoyed it. I love all the finds. Very cool and very interesting place. I look forward to your next trip there. Kelly/Indiana
Remington sewing machine is the cast part. Great video Charlie! NT is fantastic.
Iron is interesting. I live next to an old cellar hole of a farmhouse built in the 1830’s and which burned in 1932. I have found hundreds of cut square nails that are actually still usable, yet the round wire nails used in later construction at the same site are rusted down to nothing. Forged iron items often have near-original condition under the surface rust as the remaining slag in the iron acts as a rust barrier.
10:15 top to a wood burning stove 🌹
I am always so thrilled to see what you find after a good clean up Charlie, I have no idea what most of what you find are or were but its interesting things you found in the ground there. I vaguely remember the piece you found before when you found the folded piece of metal, I couldn't read the writing on it but it straightened up pretty well. And as for the piece of metal with words on it , I've thought a lot about it but have no clue what it could have been. The old iron spoon bowl was a nice find, something personal as was the lantern part, it's finds like that that make the people come alive to me. It's been wonderful to be in your company for a while Charlie, thank you for keeping my mind occupied with thoughts of the past. Take care and stay safe please my friend love and hugs to you and NinJen Mary-Ellen LFOD
Very productive hunt Charlie. Some good targets after your clean up, good move.
Nice day Charlie little cleaning and you found some pretty good stuff not mad for the area you're working in how many times aint be that👍
Thank you for the another great adventure and seeing some amazing finds ! Take care , stay safe and healthy with whatever you maybe doing next ! Doing well here in Kansas .
Hey Charlie the something at 4:17 with the two grooves in it looks like a wick holder for an oil lantern. The spikes on the adjuster knob would Sir in the grooves to move the wick up and down. Found a lantern top in pieces last night and it looks just like it
The piece you said was something at 4:30 roughly was what held the wick in the center of the lantern and the two slots were where the gears pushed the wick up and down.
Would love to see a sifting video in one of these iron infested cellar holes. Like all the collapsible tools maybe a mini backpack sifter in the works too?
Cool Charlie, you showed us what a little raking can do. It sure paid off. Probably more to come. Thanks Charlie for all you do. Joyce. ARROW *🎱. ❤️. 🇺🇸.
YEA!!!! The day can start now.
Maybe you can do a NT video just going over the different coils we have now seen on the F19 that you use. It looks like there have been 3 different ones. I am still catching up on older videos so I may have missed it.
A swing over a target with the different ones would be very educational for us beginners.
As always, thanks for the daily dose of NT.
Charlie, just having the gear to get in and really do the searching like you have been with the added coils like you have been is the game changer. Glad this all worked out with Fisher👍. I knew once you had the tools the finds would pop out more constantly🙌. Really happy for you and the crew!!!
That c thing with a pencil holder on the end is from a protractor, cool find !
You mean a compass
Hi Charlie great relic finds! I Got out found stuff brought it home to clean up to check history on them. Love your videos.
Productive time cleaning the spot and rewarded with some interesting finds! Good job Charlie. Seems your videos fly by faster and faster all the time as good things tend to do. Thanks for bringing us with yet again! EYNT!
Not Thorsday was good &().Cool hunt...Brother yeyeyeye. ..
Hi Charlie another good dig. I was thinking that thing with letters on it look like Roman numerals to me.
I think the relics on 9:00 and 10:10 are a piece of door and the top of an old round woodstove
Maybe damper??
And yes the other looks like the door section of a wood stove
Notary Public Seal used with wax in 1700s
Great finds Charlie.
The hinge with two screws still in it indicate that place either was burned or the door was left to rot.
The round silver colored thin object came off of old license plates, I have found many of these, except mine were from Michigan.
Lantern volume knob that is the description of the week, crank it to 11 then enjoy your Not Thursday
New technique, like it! Some pieces look like pieces of old stove?
Soooo good!
I think that round thing with the number three on it was something to do with the chimney pipe part of a wood stove...
I was thinking a chimney dampener.
Nice. it's like here, you gotta scratch out the old timer's junk to get to the gold nugget layer
Awesome vid!!
Gotta to be selective in the curbside goodies but definitely so much in the detecting😁.. I love this stuff 🤘🏼🤘🏼
#microdetecting
👍👍Nice hunt!
good digs!
That piece of sheet metal looked like part of a saddle
At 8:04 my first guess was protractor like many others but now I am thinking the arm that held the needle for old phonograph.
wood burner, stove top, swivel lid, 10.11.
Nice 👍🏻 dig!
the something you found was a wick holder for lantern
Cast iron frame for a stove top stove door
Hey , Vinny here . Would love to see some drawings of how these homes with the stone cellars might of looked ? Did they really use all those small stones ? They must of been cabins built on top . Just wondering , thanks so much .
Could the round thing be a stove burner lid?
hi
do we get another update at your private pioneer settling again? that was somehow great to watch
That file does not look too rusty...bet you could clean it with a brass file card and use it!
You need to get over to the UK ... we have cellar stuff going back to the Bronze Age!!!!
If I lived in UK, I'd be out metal detecting every weekend, looking for site of the battle of Watling Street.
Every weekend???? Its history central here . A Bronze Age Chariot mount being one of my best finds .. problem being that the Museums are already over flowing with the things. They dont want then.
MIINC roman mumerals?
I bet that plate is a W C for water closet.
Those are stove parts
Now I've got Flash Gordon soundtrack in my head...
oh brother. Now I do too.
Just think of what else you might find in that hole
the piece at about 8:04 looks the arm from a radius compass , the piece that held the pencil.
Just what it is...c. 1890 to 1930’s.
Could it be a paper press seal? Clamp it onto paper to produce the state seal embossed on the paper like a notary seal?
Digger Charlie what if the item you found around time marker 5:30 - 5:36 was to be a W instead of and M ?
anniversary clock pieces? the gears?
It looks like those seals could have come off of an old land deed
On average how many hours do you detect each week ? where are you getting you research from on these older site?
👍
Work to be done... just who did not show up ?
Total bunch of "PaahnZEES!" - Arnold.
8:53 Stove door frame.
Explain how digging relates to music.
I think your MING is WINCh
maybe it’s WINC
👍🏻❤️🇨🇦