I Would Never Have Metal Detected Here - Glad I Did!!

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  • Опубліковано 15 жов 2024
  • Had the landowner not told me the forgotten history of this place I never would have guessed it.
    Original music by Brad Martin
    www.GMMD.us
    / greenmountainmetaldete...
    / green.mountain.metal.d...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 382

  • @GMMD
    @GMMD  4 роки тому +66

    Hey Folks! For daily and up-to-date posts, I invite you to join the Green Mountain community outside of UA-cam! If you’re a Facebook user, stop on by Facebook.com/GreenMountainMetalDetecting and for Instagram users you can find me @Green.Mountain.Metal.Detecting. Hope you enjoy today's video!

    • @jerryfuller2423
      @jerryfuller2423 4 роки тому +2

      While not a huge haul, you found evidence of a family's life on the mountain.
      Beautiful day for a trek through the mountains.

    • @ramonahaubrich
      @ramonahaubrich 4 роки тому +1

      I was subscribed and had notification on. Somehow I was unsubscribed. Here I thought you were taking a break. And yes I have it on Facebook as well. 😁

    • @peterrobino9383
      @peterrobino9383 4 роки тому +3

      St Ann was an important saint of the French canadians. There is a good chance the people that lived there were originally from canada.

    • @bobcruse624
      @bobcruse624 4 роки тому

      I suspect the "horse " shoe was the black smith was goofing around. Enjoy your escapades!

    • @timothyberglund2528
      @timothyberglund2528 4 роки тому

      I really enjoy your show Brad I've been over to Nova Scotia I bet that's a good area to find old coins and stuff like that too huh

  • @HighTones
    @HighTones 4 роки тому +63

    I cannot figure out how you find enough hours in a day to Record you own music, create your own crafts and ship them, record your videos then edit them all and still find family time... Amazing but glad you do. I enjoy all your videos!

  • @nancyschaillee7656
    @nancyschaillee7656 Рік тому

    Oh, Brad! Your videos are second to none! Your photography, music, gentle nature, knowledge...I'm guessing you excel at EVERYTHING you set your mind to! Well done, and THANK YOU!

  • @sammccloud3395
    @sammccloud3395 4 роки тому +7

    Nice finds! The pointed horseshoe is a Mule-shoe looking up "Identifying horseshoes: Antique, Treasure hunting, metal detecting" has a Pinterest diagram of horseshoes. The two dial oil lamp is a simple duplex burner oil lamp, which the wick spaced more evenly gave more light and burned fuel more efficient. Thanks Brad!

  • @kathyf3656
    @kathyf3656 4 роки тому +5

    Lots of work today. But as always, I love your filler scenes with nature, moss, and trees. Especially the pot and the single leaf. I enjoy the artistic work as well as the finds. I grew up in New Hampshire and camped both there and Vermont, so your videos always remind me of home. Thank you...

  • @mollyhollypollydolly8760
    @mollyhollypollydolly8760 4 роки тому +14

    You make the most breathtaking-beautiful videos. (You should be nominated for most beautiful UA-cam videos 🤣)Thank u for all ur hard work u put into these gorgeous videos!

  • @annabinnie448
    @annabinnie448 4 роки тому +2

    The oil lamp probably had two wicks. They would have been able to change out the burner parts as they wear out over time. That is why you find so many burners and not the oil lamp bases. The two wick base was a common way to create twice the light with one lamp. They were used to light larger areas of the home. Love your videos . Thanks for sharing your adventures.

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  4 роки тому

      Thanks for the info, Anna!

  • @WW2HistoryHunter
    @WW2HistoryHunter 4 роки тому +8

    Great sharing as always. Thanks for doing that and greetings from WW2HistoryHunter

  • @normasavitsky489
    @normasavitsky489 4 роки тому +7

    I Love your UA-cam videos! They are entertaining, Historically informative, family-friendly ( Love seeing your wonderful family) and the unique nature shots are so Beautiful and Refreshing to the soul for those of us who cannot get out to metal detect and explore ourselves. I can't forget to mention your creative music and arrangements, Love hearing them.

  • @Homebrew58
    @Homebrew58 4 роки тому +15

    The salt shaker top could be the top of a bottle that held water for sprinkling onto clothes while ironing clothes. I believe they were called laundry sprinklers. I've seen early 1800's versions that screwed onto an ornate glass bottle shaped like a laundry girl or other figure.

  • @MrJento
    @MrJento 4 роки тому +65

    Brad- more than you want to know about shoes. The shoe you found is a “keg” horse shoe modified for some second usage. Horse hoofs are nearly circular. A mule hoof is quite narrow by comparison. There are horse shoes and mule shoes, ox shoes too for that matter.
    Starting in the civil war industry had progressed such that horse shoes could be stamped by a press in one shot. They were sold in wood kegs weighing about 80 pounds, thus called “keg” shoes to differentiate from hand forged and shaped shoes. The more rural areas kept to forged custom shoes longer, while in the city keg shoes became the norm.
    By 1900 almost all shoes were keg. The clip, that small tab of metal on the toe, keeps the shoe of a working horse from slipping under load. Keg shoes had no clip. The farrier “turned a clip” on a hot shoe with a hammer on the anvil, then “set” the hot shoe to the hoof burning the clip into to toe of the hoof. The shoe is removed, quenched, and nailed to the hoof. This method is still done today. It smokes and stinks but is not painful for the horse.
    Your shoe was used. The worn and rolled sole surface, and almost worn off fuller tell that story. The heel caulks were drawn out on a forge into points. To make something clearly. Who knows what? Old shoes get used for anything imaginable on a farm.

    • @burrichgrrl57
      @burrichgrrl57 4 роки тому +1

      Vulpes vulpes It doesn't look used to me, it looks unfinished. There are no holes punched yet and I think that the heels still need to be cut off or formed into cleats or heels. As they are, of course, they are so long that they would be stepped on and pulled off accidentally.

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 4 роки тому +1

      burrichgrrl57 hi! Looking at the video it looked like faint holes clogged with rust and dirt as he turned it in hand. I have never seen a keg or hand shoe made with spurs like that. Keg shoes start as a bar which is rolled into a near ring then hot stamped to make a complete shoe in a two step process. When hand forged it is about the same just a lot of hammering. But I see no reason to draw out points only to cut or forge them off. Regardless Brad comes up with the unusual!

    • @burrichgrrl57
      @burrichgrrl57 4 роки тому +2

      @@MrJento Yes, i'm familiar with keg shoes, modern ones at least. I don't see any holes punched yet and Brad himself commented that there were no holes. If it lacks holes then it would make no sense to form it to be used for another purpose. Why waste a good shoe when there are probably dozens of used ones hooked over a bar somewhere in the yard or barn. My husband, a retired farrier, immediately thought it was an unfinished, non-keg shoe shaped partially to save time and effort, possibly by an apprentice. Granted, the heels are kinda weird. At any rate, these videos are always so interesting.

    • @charlie7057
      @charlie7057 4 роки тому +1

      Didn’t know horse shoe details as you put them, thanks for education

    • @MrJento
      @MrJento 4 роки тому +4

      burrichgrrl57 i suppose anything is possible with what must be a 100+ year old shoe. The pointed heels dont really make sense on keg or custom. Seems like a lot of extra work to make a staple from a new shoe. One thing we can conclude is this channel is interesting!

  • @GaryRandall
    @GaryRandall 4 роки тому +26

    My 78 year old mother loves your videos and waits for your next one to come out. :) FYI

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  4 роки тому +2

      That's awesome, Gary!

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 4 роки тому +3

      Awe, but her true self (Soul) remains as ours - timeless. Only our vessel ages.
      😘

  • @SharkRangler
    @SharkRangler 4 роки тому +1

    Spikes horseshoe: You said the site was a logging site. The horseshoe may actually be something similar, or one modified to hold two logs together. A log dog if you will. Excellent vid man. Always enjoy watching them with my kids.

  • @danielburgess7785
    @danielburgess7785 4 роки тому

    I hope you don't mind but I point to your channel as an example of what a You Tuber can be starting out and how, with effort, they can achieve. You've come a long way and should be appreciated for all your work.

  • @davidhiatt5384
    @davidhiatt5384 4 роки тому +6

    The horseshoe resembles a farriers blank. The “shoe” would be forged and fitted on site, tapered ends allow for rapid heating for the length and nail holes would be drifted. I’m not an expert just makes sense in a logging situation where livestock was used to skid logs. Great video Brad! Thanks.

  • @mariamjehn7071
    @mariamjehn7071 4 роки тому

    As always...fantastic. love to you and your lovely family...from OOB...Maine...thanks so much for you videos.

  • @ranchstockstray8684
    @ranchstockstray8684 4 роки тому

    Beautiful scenery! Thanks for taking us along!

  • @petevermouth5567
    @petevermouth5567 4 роки тому +1

    The deer ( and squirrels, et all) can smell the acorns under the leaves. They then dig them up to eat. Squirrels/chipmunks bury nuts, then locate them by smell in the winter. Skunks smell grubs/worms and dig them up. What I saw on your video could have been any of these.
    Pete

  • @dawnconner6123
    @dawnconner6123 4 роки тому

    salt, sugar, spices and tea were VERY valuable. there were special cabinets to lock up all of these things. tea even had a special small 'box' of a pretty shape. ive seen a pear shaped one carved out of a single piece of beautiful wood. and it had a tiny lock in it. im a history freak so i love your videos. we have a wonderful history over here in WV. good luck on you next trip to the woods.

  • @bruhyoutube511
    @bruhyoutube511 4 роки тому +10

    Very nice 👍👍👌👌
    Happy hunting and greetings from Switzerland 🇨🇭

    • @bruhyoutube511
      @bruhyoutube511 4 роки тому

      Yeah on some places it’s really beautiful, but I would visit the USA because it’s also a very nice country with other landscapes😁😁👍👍

  • @creativturtle01
    @creativturtle01 Рік тому

    I love your videos, Brad! Always looking forward to the next one. Now I’m looking through all the old ones I’ve missed. Fantastic storytelling and nature shots with the metal detecting. Love it.

  • @wilsonrawlin8547
    @wilsonrawlin8547 Рік тому

    Perfect woods for metal detecting and hunting. Nice finds!

  • @stephanie8327
    @stephanie8327 4 роки тому

    I work overnight so when I get home I’m exhausted but a little wired. I’ll get in my pjs and get in bed and watch one of your videos during my wind down time. When it’s done I’ll restart it turn the volume to low and set my phone next to me. Your voice and the music are so soothing I fall asleep in no time !!! Your videos are multi purpose! Lol! thanks for all you put into your videos we enjoy it so much 🙏🏼

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  4 роки тому +1

      So glad to hear that, Stephanie!

  • @johnlea8519
    @johnlea8519 2 роки тому

    Your videos are worth watching just for the beautiful photography, the rest is so interesting I look forward to each and every video you make.

  • @user-ey9bt7fs6n
    @user-ey9bt7fs6n 4 роки тому +2

    Another great metal detecting video, history lesson and great footage of the Vermont woods. Thanks again.

  • @QuestForDetails
    @QuestForDetails 4 роки тому +1

    looks like your doing good my friend, happy 2020, we made it ! rock on !

  • @alanwbelcher
    @alanwbelcher Рік тому

    First, Brad, I have to say that your videography is fantastic, and the presentation is so well done as to be riveting. Now, just FYI, at 6:20 bears will also dig up the forest floor like that, looking for beech nuts or acorns. Since you saw deer in your situation it was probably them.

  • @davidbrooks4285
    @davidbrooks4285 4 роки тому +10

    Ever since I started watching your videos last year I am totally amazed at what you find

  • @brucecrouch6654
    @brucecrouch6654 4 роки тому +29

    Great video as usual. I think the piece you first thought was part of a spoon is actually a ladies hair comb they wore in their hair for decoration. Just my opinion.

  • @g.s.7022
    @g.s.7022 4 роки тому +1

    Great, a new video and, as always, interesting information about various finds. Thank you, I'm looking forward to the next one and wish you a good time👍💫☘️🤩

  • @Steve-Pitt
    @Steve-Pitt 4 роки тому +19

    Ahhh yes.... it's Friday. Beer, pizza and GMMD!

  • @MrJento
    @MrJento 4 роки тому

    Brad- more than youll want to know about metal roofing. To my knowledge brass, an allow of copper and zinc, was not used for roofing. It was expensive, brittle when rolled, and prone to corrosion. By 1900 the most common metal roof was rolled mild steel coated with zinc, “galvanized”. Pure copper or copper with a tin wash was also used, but it was expensive and not probable in a back-woods setting. So if your fragments are copper they might be old roof. If brass consider some larger domestic item. Brass tubs and trays were used in powder mills, and powder making was often located at a charcoal source, but not usually as late as 1900.

  • @sportclay1
    @sportclay1 4 роки тому

    The horse shoe I believe is an unfinished winter or caulked shoe. the points would have been turned down (same direction as the toe caulk) when the farrier fit the shoe to the horse and the nail holes punched at that time. Most timber cutting was done in the winter as the frozen ground made it easier to haul the log sleds. Bigger operations even had water sleds that sprinkled water on the snow/road to firm it up and provide a slick surface to haul on.

  • @davidzellers3537
    @davidzellers3537 4 роки тому +1

    What you have is a working mule shoe. As you know back in those days things were used for many uses. A lot of times men would also turn down (sharpen) the points on a shoe so that it could be used for a tie off point when driven into a tree or a log, either to tie off livestock or for rigging to move the logs around.

  • @AcrossthePlains
    @AcrossthePlains 4 роки тому +4

    Brad, it may not be the star of the show, but I love the oil lamp spinners....so many people seem to overlook them and miss out on some of the clues in the area! Great hunt man!

  • @richardwarnock2789
    @richardwarnock2789 4 роки тому +2

    Brad you got that coin the clock real cool the lamp with two dials interesting for sure Thank's again!!!; )

  • @christineingram55
    @christineingram55 4 роки тому +1

    You found some great things there ..the thing with the heart on looks like something decorative,perhaps a brooch or even for the hair ..Its amazing what can be found under the ground,giving a little glimpse into the past.And best of all you do. All that in such beautiful surroundings 😀

  • @TVSNOWOWL
    @TVSNOWOWL 3 роки тому

    That Horseshoe is the large one I am every seeying in 55 years. Amezing found.
    I am hope one come over to usa and detect together. cheers from the netherlands eu

  • @floydiandreamscapes5145
    @floydiandreamscapes5145 4 роки тому +42

    I wonder if that Catholic Medallion has anything to do with Saint Anne's shrine in Isle La motte Vermont?
    The Shrine is in the Islands on Lake Champlain. It's been there for at least 100 years.

    • @Marcel_Audubon
      @Marcel_Audubon 4 роки тому

      unlikely - the shrine uses the French spelling (Anne) consistently. Those religious medals were common among Catholic school children probably through the '60s and were often given as awards by the nuns for for doing good work in class. They exist for almost any Saint imaginable even today. The Shrine doesn't have a monopoly on St. Ann(e), even in Vermont. There are a lot of people devoted to St. Ann and her hubby, St Joachim. They are also the subjects of Islamic devotion.

    • @adkbeau
      @adkbeau 4 роки тому

      That's what I said

    • @normkirkland1999
      @normkirkland1999 4 роки тому +1

      Efficient processes to extract aluminum from ore were not developed until the mid-1880's. Before then, aluminum was a rare metal, selling at over a dollar an ounce and was used primarily for jewelry. The Saint Ann medallion could possibly date to the early or mid-1800's and, if so, might be more collectable than it first appears.

  • @conitorres9774
    @conitorres9774 4 роки тому +3

    Wow, that opening scene was wonderful

  • @dianefiske-foy4717
    @dianefiske-foy4717 2 роки тому

    I love the music of your videos 👏🏻🥰‼️

  • @gregorybarr6112
    @gregorybarr6112 4 роки тому +3

    I like the information that you give on your videos. I never knew what a thimble was for until today! I should have asked my mother or grandmother!

  • @Metrorenovationsandmore
    @Metrorenovationsandmore 4 роки тому +3

    Man I absolutely love your vids! The music, the scenery and of course the finds! Easily one of my top 2 or 3 favorite md'ing channels! Thank you from down here in Atlanta!!

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks so much!!

  • @elissadaly5561
    @elissadaly5561 4 роки тому

    The Trees are such beautiful colours

  • @joyceclark8476
    @joyceclark8476 4 роки тому +1

    Hi Brad! 🙋‍♀️ Happy Friday! Another great video today. Cool things you found. Did the home owner let you keep anything? I take finding the Saint Anne medal a very good blessing for us all today watching. It’s making sure we keep Faith and Hope in the forefront. Carry on and appreciate your time and efforts. Later... Joyce. West Haven, Connecticut. U.S.A. 🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @alaskahammeryukonvarietych6793
    @alaskahammeryukonvarietych6793 4 роки тому +3

    Very interesting finds, Brad. The religious metal was my favorite followed by copper & the heart heel plate. Awesome fall color drone footage, sweet video as always

  • @cynthiaswearingen1037
    @cynthiaswearingen1037 4 роки тому +1

    Brad, what an interesting area! I love the heel plate and its story, and the medallion was an amazing find. In old pictures, I've seen those horseshoe-shaped items used to hammer into logs, for dragging them out of the woods. You had a great day's hunt!

    • @jimgriffiths9071
      @jimgriffiths9071 4 роки тому

      I concur. I've found similar around old sugaring operations. Same idea. Dragging in logs for firewood.

  • @TheSassy1962
    @TheSassy1962 4 роки тому

    I used to work with historic event mule and horse driving teams and that looks exactly like the shoes all the single pack mules wore. The extended length has something to do with weight distribution and stability when packing the weight of gold on mountain trails. This would make sense that it was found near a St. Anne's medallion, since she is the patron saint of gold and silver MINERS.

  • @danawrigleywalkingstickand5677
    @danawrigleywalkingstickand5677 4 роки тому +2

    If those berry bushes had small thorns on them, they're probably bar berry. (They looked a lot like the ones growing around here, anyway.) I read somewhere that they were dual purpose: ornament and protection. People would plant them under windows to deter thieves.
    A couple of folks have mentioned that the horseshoe may have been repurposed as something to tie things to. Probably true. If it had no nail holes in it, it may have been accidentally ruined by the blacksmith before it had a chance to be on a hoof. Get the iron too hot and it starts to burn, making it unfit for shoeing.

    • @lindahutson9099
      @lindahutson9099 4 роки тому +1

      Dana Wrigley definitely looks like barberry bushes. My dad planted them at our house in the mid fifties. They got wicked thorns on them

  • @earlmenefee3603
    @earlmenefee3603 4 роки тому

    I like the heel plate and the story behind it hope the landowner let's u keep it

  • @LongIslandsHardcoreDetectorist
    @LongIslandsHardcoreDetectorist 4 роки тому

    Wonderful hunt my friend 👍🏼

  • @metalsharxs
    @metalsharxs 4 роки тому

    Super nice hunt & you worked hard for it. Enjoyed watching & learned a lot about the history of the area. Loved the religious medallion find. Take care & HH! 👍😎🦈🦈

  • @edwardenglish1519
    @edwardenglish1519 4 роки тому +1

    Your supposed spoon with the heart is likely a hair pin or comb that would go along with the heart heel plate.

  • @TinaLouise528
    @TinaLouise528 4 роки тому

    Nice area. Thanks for sharing!

  • @SheepDogActual
    @SheepDogActual 4 роки тому

    I’m a new detector, been watching your videos for a while now. Learning a bunch. Fun to watch.

  • @Cletushandyman
    @Cletushandyman 4 роки тому

    Good day bro, I am thinking the horse shoe shaped object may be a type of trowel for gardens to shape the rows. Keep up the hunt I appreciate ya

  • @suzannemorriss2744
    @suzannemorriss2744 4 роки тому +1

    The horse shoe find could be a pitch fork that had a wooden pole? Hi there from England.

  • @gregf438
    @gregf438 4 роки тому

    Love the heel plate story. Good stuff 👍

  • @waynelewis881
    @waynelewis881 4 роки тому +18

    Sometimes used horseshoes would be reforged to other purposes. That one was probably made into a large staple that was driven into a post or tree to be used as a hitching ring or to slide a pole through for a gate.

    • @kayesdigginit1519
      @kayesdigginit1519 4 роки тому +1

      That's an idea that I think would fit this scenario 👍

    • @themobleys
      @themobleys 4 роки тому +2

      Good idea!

    • @joebrown1382
      @joebrown1382 4 роки тому +1

      Could very well be that indeed.

    • @superbee-di5tp
      @superbee-di5tp 4 роки тому

      wayne lewis ,very good reply. I think you nailed it.

    • @chrismsmalley2626
      @chrismsmalley2626 4 роки тому

      Yep that is probably what it is . A hammer in drag link for pulling logs to the kiln .

  • @nansea9691
    @nansea9691 4 роки тому +6

    This Friday seemed to take longer than usual to get here!! Good job Brad!! Love your videos. Keep going!

  • @AbandonedMaine
    @AbandonedMaine 4 роки тому +4

    Striking how park like the forests are up there. Out here in Eastern Maine, its usually thickly covered with pine and bramble bushes.

  • @kathymoll7010
    @kathymoll7010 4 роки тому +1

    Wow I totally enjoyed this video and story. I have often wondered what happened at some of the old old spots I've detected. Some you actually can feel a vibe good or bad at. Your videos are amazing and so beautifully filmed.

  • @marielg9143
    @marielg9143 4 роки тому

    I think you do amazing work great finds cool place

  • @925inder2
    @925inder2 4 роки тому +1

    One day I got to put as much effort into my video. Yours are always top notch and getting better. Great work and stories Brad. ATB, Sebastian

  • @flthunderdigginwrob3162
    @flthunderdigginwrob3162 4 роки тому

    Brad, another great video, glad you hunted a place where you normally wouldn't. Some very cool relics, and great job pulling out the one coin!!! Congrats.
    Rob
    Florida Thunder

  • @WIGTV
    @WIGTV 4 роки тому

    Awesome place to hunt. Y’all had a heck of a day. Congrats on your relics.

  • @stephengales3701
    @stephengales3701 3 роки тому

    The glimpse that I got of the bush looks like what we call a Sparkleberry Bush in the South. Always look forward to Friday.

  • @milliesimbeck7108
    @milliesimbeck7108 4 роки тому

    Just started into metal detecting. Great videos and love all your wilderness shots!!!

  • @iknklst
    @iknklst 4 роки тому +14

    "Let me see if I can make out what it says on the bottom of these two broken bottles..."
    "Hmmm....B R A D L E Y D O N T F O R GE T T O D R I N K Y O U R O V A L T I NE"

    • @sissinoklahoma2057
      @sissinoklahoma2057 4 роки тому +2

      Haha I see what you did there! 🤣😁

    • @unoleagotiya5583
      @unoleagotiya5583 3 роки тому +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 can never go wrong with Christmas Story reference 🤣🤣🤣😆😆😆😆

  • @onwardsandupwardsrockhounding
    @onwardsandupwardsrockhounding 4 роки тому +1

    Nice finds. Great information to paint a picture of time. Onwards and Upwards!!

  • @brucewheeler483
    @brucewheeler483 4 роки тому

    Love your videos and all the information you provide, but one statement you made in this on may be backward. That was the comment about farmers following the charcoal burners; it happened the other way around. Much of Vermont, including mountaintops when possible, were farmed, but people left them to move west to the better lands in western New York State and Ohio, and beyond in the early 1800's. Their farms grew up to brush and small trees, and when they were the right size, were excellent for charcoal making. In Connecticut, walking through the woods, one would often find "fairy circles", a circle on the ground perhaps 20 to 30 feet across when no brush or trees grew. If you dig down an inch or two there will be a layer of charcoal, and this was where they had built their piles of wood to burned it to charcoal. After the charcoal burners were finished, the areas they cut grew up to the kind of forests we see in many of your videos.

  • @willynthepoorboys2
    @willynthepoorboys2 4 роки тому

    Super video, thanks for the upload.

  • @shootthemoon6072
    @shootthemoon6072 4 роки тому

    Good to see you're not frozen out of (or to) the ground this year. Great finds. 👍👍✌✌

  • @dhankins51
    @dhankins51 4 роки тому +1

    You always have such good history as well as photography!

    • @dhankins51
      @dhankins51 4 роки тому

      and your music is so good

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  4 роки тому

      Thank you!!

  • @memorylaine
    @memorylaine 4 роки тому +3

    Great video! Couldn't sleep and thought yes... Friday! The ladies heel piece was interesting... Beautiful as always! Would like to know what the odd horseshoe/not a horseshoe is. Happy fan here..

  • @2FunWoolyboogers
    @2FunWoolyboogers 4 роки тому

    Hi Brad. Phyllis and I think the Heel plate and the dohickey thing with the heart on the Handle go together. Maybe it was a "shoe horn" to match her "evening out" shoes. Enjoyed the video immensely. Thanks for the time, perspective and quality.

  • @THEDRAGONBOOSTER8
    @THEDRAGONBOOSTER8 4 роки тому

    Some nice finds ,the views were amazing.

  • @calvinhoward2407
    @calvinhoward2407 4 роки тому +13

    Lady's of the night (blush grin) so polite

  • @camillefulton7709
    @camillefulton7709 4 роки тому

    NICE FINDS, WONDERFUL EXPLANATION FOR LADIES SHOE HEEL LOGICAL 😊
    I ENJOYED THE TRIP AS ALWAYS, THANKS BRAD.
    CAMILLE AUSTRALIA

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 4 роки тому

    Hi Brad, I would say the item at 16:08 could be either a little hand mirror or brush as part of a cosmetics set. A very cool day with some great finds, it all tells a story of the people who settled there all those years ago. x

  • @petevermouth5567
    @petevermouth5567 4 роки тому

    Go over to Wells, Vt find Bullfrog Hollow Road. and check out some of the abandoned quarries. They quarried roofing slate starting in the 1850's.

  • @borderprepper
    @borderprepper 4 роки тому +1

    Hey neighbor...The "horseshoe" looks more like a Log Dog to me. Sort of a staple used by timber framers to hold timbers/boards together temporarily while being worked on. Ever come to the Northeast Kingdom to detect??

  • @MsDawggysLuckyLife
    @MsDawggysLuckyLife 4 роки тому

    I just followed you on Fb..yay! Thank you!

  • @margaretphipps2494
    @margaretphipps2494 4 роки тому

    Love the way you show nature in your videos the colours are amazing
    your finds great xxx 🇮🇲

  • @christywerpy63
    @christywerpy63 Рік тому

    The blue and white graniteware pot you found poking out of the ground is worth some money depending on the how the seams were made. There are avid collectors of enamelware/graniteware.

  • @theresaclancy6091
    @theresaclancy6091 4 роки тому +5

    Famous shrine of St. Anne in Fall River, Ma. Many miracles and many many pilgrims would travel far and wide to go the shrine. The metal could be from there. You can find miracle prayers to St. Ann on Google.

  • @stormygcannon1229
    @stormygcannon1229 4 роки тому +3

    Thank you once again. Love your music do you have cd's. So happy to see you early Friday morning. Old people time table early mornings or late time doesn't matter as long as we happy :)

  • @bobbyjohnson4734
    @bobbyjohnson4734 4 місяці тому

    Man if its an unfinished horse 🐎 shoe from black Smith then its awesome and very lucky to find !!!

  • @sandischmidt5028
    @sandischmidt5028 4 роки тому

    Yay! I got my Brad fix again with you detecting.....thank you so much.

  • @kayesdigginit1519
    @kayesdigginit1519 4 роки тому +2

    I never would've thought of expensive brass being used as roofing material 🤔 interesting! I'm going to agree with those saying the handle piece you found was probably a woman's hair comb. Those designed women's heelplates are really cool and pretty (regardless of the possible intended use)! I hope the landowner let you keep that one 🤞 I'm very glad you were able to find a coin there. It gives somewhat of a date for those living there. Another excellent video Brad, thank you for making the and of my week a welcome wake-up on Fridays ☺

  • @JenniferHayesJVG
    @JenniferHayesJVG 4 роки тому +1

    Nice finds! Enjoying your videos!

  • @suzannemarie1223
    @suzannemarie1223 4 роки тому

    Awesome video and the music ..... loved it.

  • @sylviajones4907
    @sylviajones4907 4 роки тому +1

    Looking into the Collins' lamp-works....might have been my relatives!
    Loved the ♡ shoe heel.
    Thanks for your hard work in producing your lovely videos.

  • @scottsatterthwaite4073
    @scottsatterthwaite4073 2 роки тому

    It's an old video but, that's not a horseshoe at all. It is a pipe clamp of the type used to hold a pipe or pole or similar to the side of a building. The tab at the top of the arch was where you struck it to drive the spikes into a timber.

  • @dat2ra
    @dat2ra 4 роки тому

    Brad. Your vids are so high quality and interesting. The only thing I think needs a bit of improvement is the camera aim when you first show your find in your hand. But I just get excited to see what you have! Good inters and I really like your followers' suggestions. Thanks a lot from a detector in Cali.

  • @YsabetJustYsabet
    @YsabetJustYsabet 4 роки тому

    Nice hunt! As for that medallion, I've done a bit of home-casting myself and I'll bet it's fairly pure tin rather than aluminum due to age. Tin's melting point is so low that you can cast with it using a stove-burner, though most often it's mixed with lead; I've had a few high-quality items of pure tin, and when cleaned up they looked very silvery and bright but were much lighter in weight than silver itself. Aluminum was officially discovered in 1825 but it's not a metal you can smelt easily-- it takes some serious chemical working to draw from bauxite. BTW: Saint Ann, among other things, was the patroness of miners.

  • @pettyeddie2000
    @pettyeddie2000 4 роки тому

    Good morning Brad !! The heel plate and the pendant were very cool. I found the story behind the heel pendant very interesting. See ya next Friday !

  • @justinwelker6610
    @justinwelker6610 4 роки тому +1

    Great video 👍 thanks Brad

  • @pjfoltz8810
    @pjfoltz8810 4 роки тому

    Awesome finds, as usual

  • @handygent45
    @handygent45 4 роки тому +1

    What about the outhouse locations? Digging up a honey hole would be my first target.