Floored by What I Found in Just 3 Hours

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  • Опубліковано 4 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 329

  • @stubeast4031
    @stubeast4031 2 роки тому +10

    Farmers eating lunch in the field in the days before plastic ware. Sometimes my grandmother would take lunch out to the guys working in the fields.

  • @halrichard7518
    @halrichard7518 2 роки тому +36

    Adding to the comment about taking lunch to the fields. I would imagine that occasionally a piece of silverware might be dropped during an outside "social event" such as wedding, family reunion, or just a community-based dinner of some sort.

  • @MrMagz90
    @MrMagz90 2 роки тому +42

    I have another theory on the utensils. Here in Norway, a lot of meals were eaten outside during the work day. Especially when harvesting the grain in the late summer. I find alot of utensils metal detecting both old homesites and fields. Mostly spoons, but sometimes the odd fork and knife. I guess it was easy to loose when put down to the ground mixed within the straw and stubble.
    Btw: Great videos! Looking forward to every friday👍😊

    • @HokieJuju
      @HokieJuju 2 роки тому +8

      I was thinking the same thing. They would usually take their lunch with them out to the fields & woods back in those days. They had to bring the silverware with them & they probably carried the silverware in their pockets or in a rucksack with their lunch. The utensils could easily fall out of their pockets & if the rucksack had a hole in it, they could easily fall out & disappear forever!!!

    • @sandy-quimsrus
      @sandy-quimsrus 2 роки тому +6

      I think so too. There wasn't any take away that's for sure! It took most of the day to bake a loaf of bread so people would grab any leftovers for lunch when working or travelling.

    • @UserUser-ww2nj
      @UserUser-ww2nj 2 роки тому

      It is still happening . I went to a local park / forest in Vinnytsia a few days ago, walked a round and stopped for a break on my way back . There are a few benches so i sat down , looked to my left and there was a fork laying there on the bench . Someone had brought a snack with them , eaten and put the fork down then forgot it and went home . I left t there and hope the owner went back for it

  • @maxsands3861
    @maxsands3861 2 роки тому +3

    Many of my relatives had farms, they worked in the mourning early then they would all have a large breakfast, their wives would bring them lunch out in the field everyday. They always had lunch in the field.
    Hence utensils far from the house.

  • @RobFindsTreasure
    @RobFindsTreasure 2 роки тому +7

    The marriage of that rod and reel was awesome - a beautiful display piece for sure!

  • @glenlee9537
    @glenlee9537 2 роки тому +8

    always enjoy the music Brad, the videos go without saying

  • @stevehanken8520
    @stevehanken8520 2 роки тому +12

    FYI the aqua color of glass that you find in many bottles starts early and comes from Pennsylvania. When sailing ships came to America, many used sand for ballast, because they were not loaded as full as the cargoes of raw materials they would take back so the sand was off loaded and used to make glass. The sand wasn't pure by any means and held sufficient quantities of iron which tends to give glass that aqua marine color. Other chemicals in the sand created other colors and often this was simply random. Clear glass early on was only found when you needed to see the contents of the bottle, medicine for instance, and it was always lead glass and usually very fragile and small. Clearing glass became a technological problem in order to do it cheaply. Manganese was used to make clear bottles, but Manganese glass solarizes and turns blue in sunlight over time. Another chemical was tried that did a better job, but it too solarized a bit and gives glass a sort of wheat straw color and is caused by Selenium in the glass. Both Manganese and Selenium glass come late in the game, and often bottles were bought empty and filled from larger supplies found in barrels or jugs. Vinegar and whiskey being common liquids that were often taken by bottle from kegs.

    • @andrewbowles65
      @andrewbowles65 2 роки тому

      The only thing good that ever came from Pennsylvania was pencils and deli meat, your welcome

  • @jjsmith8956
    @jjsmith8956 2 роки тому +2

    As a Farmer's wife, I can tell you that many lunches are taken out to the fields in Summer and Fall. Silverware gets lost all too often. These days, it's cell phones that disappear into the dirt and hay. LOL!!

  • @user-ey9bt7fs6n
    @user-ey9bt7fs6n 2 роки тому +14

    They were on a picnic when sudden storm approached. They packed up everything so they thought. They grabbed their picnic basket and yanked their blanket from the ground to cover their themselves from the rain that had started, but did not see the two forks go flying through the air.

  • @allieregan5045
    @allieregan5045 2 роки тому +9

    Wandering in the woods is it’s own treasure…thanks Brad😊

  • @broadstken
    @broadstken 2 роки тому +2

    Forks and spoons..... A long time ago we were hunting an old farm place and kept finding forks and spoons, mostly the same pattern and probably 30 or 40 in about a half acre area. Very odd.... We talked with the land owner about it and found out that in the early 1900's his family kept pigs in that area and they would get buckets of food trash from a couple restaurants in town delivered to feed to them. So best guess is all of the silverware we found had been accidentally thrown in the trash by a dishwasher in one of those places.

  • @mamaneedmore2428
    @mamaneedmore2428 2 роки тому +5

    I'm from the hills of Tennessee and my favorite part of being in the woods was the smell of the dirt that I dug in. Nostalgic...

  • @keithmuncher9399
    @keithmuncher9399 2 роки тому +14

    Great hunt. This just shows that every time is not a banner day. You really have to swing the coil in order to find the good finds. Thanks for keeping it real Brad. Really enjoyed it.

  • @michaelwilliams374
    @michaelwilliams374 2 роки тому +6

    Always enjoy your channel. The other key is for a model T.
    Excellent finds.👍✌️

  • @kathyf3656
    @kathyf3656 2 роки тому +2

    Two forks? Maybe lost by kids sneaking off with a plate, fork, and a piece of not-quite-cooled pie. Or a young couple, out for a picnic. Or just the farmer's wife bringing him lunch out in the field while he worked. As always, a great video. I grew up in New Hampshire with relatives in Vermont. Your videos always make me a little homesick for the mountains of New England.

  • @johnwrinkle3443
    @johnwrinkle3443 2 роки тому +1

    To add to your thought on the forks, I was raised in Missouri until my parents moved to New Mexico in 1957. On our farm in Lebanon Missouri my grand mother would bring us lunch in the field while we were working hay. Maybe they were lost while the farmer was eating in the field,,,,,just a thought

  • @craig5323
    @craig5323 2 роки тому +1

    Hi Brad, Awesome video as usual! You should carry a small magnet 🧲 with you. Then a better guess as what type metal you have . Keep them coming! The neighbors are remodeling their shed. It's quite old, trees for rafters,hand hewn Post and beams construction. Well, they dug out for a foundation and leveled out the dirt floor under the plywood floor.Sooo I'm going to Have to go detect the dirt! The guy spread it all out and everything for me with his excavator! Couldn't be any easier! Thanks for the videos

  • @emileclede4510
    @emileclede4510 2 роки тому +2

    You are right, that the item is a fishing rod. If the threaded mechanism to hold the reel is at the back end of the rod, it is for fly fishing. If the there is more handle behind the threaded mechanism, it is probably a bait-fishing rod. The spinning-reel was invented early in the 20th century, but I don't know how popular they were in the US before the end of WWII.

  • @yuwish6320
    @yuwish6320 2 роки тому +2

    My father builds and repairs bamboo fly rods. Definitely the butt-end of a two-hand casting rod. The fittings are likely nickel or nickel alloy. They liked those because they don't corrode. I'll show him this when I see him tomorrow. Maybe he'll have some input.

  • @lindaopperthauser2284
    @lindaopperthauser2284 2 роки тому +6

    You are so gracious and thankful for all the treasure you find Brad. You are the only metal detector guy I watch. I enjoy your treasure quests each week.

  • @trolltaker
    @trolltaker 2 роки тому +1

    Its probably been mentioned already, but that is a Ford Model T key, I believe. Also, not a fly rod, but a casting rod. I think that may be what was called "greenwood". I'm not sure exactly what greenwood is/was, but it was replaced by split bamboo and later, of course, synthetic fibers. I thought at first that it was an umbrella handle, but you convinced me by showing it with the reel in place.
    Not your usual show, but we have a saying around here for days like that, "At Least Its Something".

  • @kingdevilz100
    @kingdevilz100 2 роки тому +24

    Awsome findes. I got s question would you do a Metaldetecting room Tour to show us your finds over the years would be very fun and intresting to Watch.

    • @GMMD
      @GMMD  2 роки тому +6

      ua-cam.com/video/8B_9iEV0FKM/v-deo.html

    • @erikcarey215
      @erikcarey215 2 роки тому +3

      He did do a video of his finds room but I would love to see another

    • @impunitythebagpuss
      @impunitythebagpuss 2 роки тому +2

      I'd love that...apparently I missed the previous treasure video!

    • @erikcarey215
      @erikcarey215 2 роки тому +2

      @@impunitythebagpuss thinking back i don’t think it was a video of just his treasure room but a video that included it. I wish I could remember what video it was, now my whole day is going to be trying to figure out which one it was. Like when you get a song stuck in your head and don’t know the name of it.lol lol

    • @randyduncan4672
      @randyduncan4672 2 роки тому +2

      @@GMMD never saw this video before of your treasures, but the real treasure was the vlog segment taking Bentley to the cistern trail. My son's 34th birthday was yesterday, that video brought back some beautiful memories of days with Jonathan alone with dad. Thanks!!!!

  • @normawinton6832
    @normawinton6832 2 роки тому +1

    Hope the loggers don't destroy the old cellar holes!😪love the cufflinks and the skeleton key. Love finding relics and hey, ya found the musketball and ox knob! Could have been alot worse. Maybe you'll find some bottles that the loggers dig up? Ya never no!

  • @JDsVarietyChannel
    @JDsVarietyChannel 2 роки тому +12

    Great hunt Brad! Due to the nature of the sites I hunt, I have a small handful of those aluminum thimbles. Still one of my favorite relics to find, especially the ones that were advertising pieces or for political campaigns. Took me years to find my first silver one, then I found another not long after the first. It seems like most of the post WW2 thimbles were aluminum once it became a mass produced metal. Prior to that many of them were still silver. Sites as new as the 1930's can still cough up the silver ones. It's usually early 1900's sites where I have found mine.

  • @Justfollowthecrumbs
    @Justfollowthecrumbs 2 роки тому +7

    Hello Brad, my first thought was ‘sniper coil’ (that tells you how much time I spend watching mudlarking/metal detecting). When I was a little girl in the 50s I was given a beautiful silver thimble, but I lost it and I still regret it. Loved the fly fishing rod, lovely memories that brings back to me here in South U.K. with trout streams.

  • @slimpickins9124
    @slimpickins9124 2 роки тому +5

    I am not involved in the hobby but I like watching your adventures. The areas you detect in look absolutely beautiful. Keep on!

  • @bigdawg30105
    @bigdawg30105 2 роки тому +2

    Brad, your newer key appears to be the standard Ford T-Model key. Great find! Always enjoy your videos!!

  • @phoebeandtilly
    @phoebeandtilly 2 роки тому +1

    I agree with you about walking in the woods. It’s better than going to church for me.

  • @johnscott1091
    @johnscott1091 2 роки тому +17

    Brad, another great episode... This is the best part of my Friday... Any chance that you might do an episode on how you actually clean up some of your finds?

  • @digginghistory76
    @digginghistory76 2 роки тому +4

    Another great hunt. That key and those cufflinks are amazing!

  • @janblake9468
    @janblake9468 2 роки тому +1

    I'm almost 77 and I remember shaker lids like that in my younger days.

  • @stephenbridges2791
    @stephenbridges2791 2 роки тому +5

    That is, almost beyond doubt, a fly rod. It was common for the wood portion to be split wood. Bamboo on higher end rods and local woods on lower end rods. The hook, although a little on the large side, is to hold the fly when the fisherman was relocating himself to a different area of the stream. Sometimes the maker mark is etched but, it is possible that one of that age would not have one at all. Not even a sticker, It is also possible the owner made it himself. People really into fly fishing still make their own, even to the present day. Nice find.

  • @old5andimer713
    @old5andimer713 2 роки тому +5

    Brad, another great day in the Vermont woods .. Thanks for posting and sharing with us .. I couldn't help but notice the lack of Black Flys, I have friends I'm sure who are rejoicing in NW Vermont .. The brass key is very similar to one I have for the locking mechanism to my late 18th C. Slant Lid desk .. usually, hollow barrel keys would be used for smaller utilitarian objects i.e Dresser Boxes, chests of drawers, and the like ... Whereas solid barrel keys were typically more durable and used for the more significant items in the Homestead, i.e. Desk, Blanket Chest, Sugar Chest and the like .. Overall, another adventurous day of discovery and questions .. Thanks !

  • @rikspector
    @rikspector 2 роки тому +2

    Brad,
    I see some beautiful big trees around you, it's so sad to think of that area
    ruined by logging!
    Cheers,
    Rik Spector

  • @bobalmendinger4930
    @bobalmendinger4930 2 роки тому +1

    Edge of the property or in Old stump holes. Those work out for bottle digging.

  • @patrickhawley7608
    @patrickhawley7608 2 роки тому +3

    Hey Brad I believe that second key is from a Ford Model T. Back then all of their keys were that exact kind/shape. Most of the time it would have the word “ford” but not always. Your skeleton key is my white elephant! Congrats on the day!

    • @rentsdue2
      @rentsdue2 2 роки тому +1

      I agree, should be a number on the smooth side, I have a # 56

  • @saintsefo4763
    @saintsefo4763 2 роки тому +4

    11:42pm Fri: just finished watching your video. I loved every piece you found, but especially the two keys and the thimble (not sure why, I just do). Thanks for sharing your knowledge of the items as well 👍🏽⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 2 роки тому +1

    Hi Brad, some really nice finds, especially the salt shaker lid, the cufflinks and of course the fishing rod which is such a cool find.
    Thank you for sharing, much love. xx 💖

  • @erikcarey215
    @erikcarey215 2 роки тому +6

    Some really cool finds today,thanks brad!

  • @beepseatsfindingfoodtreasu8756
    @beepseatsfindingfoodtreasu8756 2 роки тому +1

    The links were a great find but that fly rod handle is a rare find. That would have been a loss for sure. great day even if it started off slow. Thanks Brad nice video. happy fourth! 🇺🇸

  • @Materialworld4
    @Materialworld4 2 роки тому +2

    You always have interesting videos Brad, professional, well crafted, and thoughtfully engaging. My ancestors moved from Manchester, England, to America in 1834. They then made their way to California in 1845, by following a mountain man named Caleb Greenwood on the second year of the California Trail from Idaho. James was a member of the Bear flag Revolt in 1846, and journeyed from Sacramento, to San Francisco, to Monterey where he was ordered to take Jacob Leese, and Mariano Vallejo prisoners back to Sutter's Fort. My great great grandmother owned a lot at Kearney and Vallejo Street in San Francisco from 1848 to 1850 where she lived in a tent on Telegraph Hill. I have multiple photos of Eliza's tent sitting high above Yerba Buena Bay. After James panned for gold starting in 1848 they moved to Sullivan Road in Green Valley, inland from Bodega Bay. He built a log cabin on the property, and in 1930 my grand father lost the property at the beginning of the Great Depression in 1930-31. I know there has to be things on that property, but I have no way of getting to it. Let's just say it's frustrating. But at least I have 8 generation of my family in photographs, which includes both sides of each marriage going back to 1844. Nicholas was born in 1798 in Manchester, England, where he was a millwright working on 5 story cotton mills for his son's future wife's family. His boss lost all his cotton mills after gambling with the local lords, and losing everything after trying to recoup from one of his massive mills burning down. My great great grandmother became a debt slave, and worked in a factory 14 hours a day along with a sister, and brother. The father escaped a Debtors Prison, and the family escaped by going on the underground railroad from Manchester to Liverpool, where they boarded the ship Atlantic to Rhode Island in 1834. So in a nutshell that is why your videos fascinate me on one level, but also you are great at what you do Bard. Wish you all the best Brad, and good hunting.

  • @johnnyphillips9735
    @johnnyphillips9735 2 роки тому +3

    Nice finds Brad every day in the woods is a good day my house still uses those skeleton keys

  • @jeffmitchell1841
    @jeffmitchell1841 2 роки тому +1

    Nice finds. Your more modern key looks like a Ford Model T key. If so it would be about 100 years old.

  • @karlborgfeldt
    @karlborgfeldt 2 роки тому +1

    I found my first scythe handle piece yesterday. Man they sound good through the detector. Quite happy with it though as my country is young and to find something that old is cool.

  • @davidjones5062
    @davidjones5062 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for posting content I can watch with my six year old granddaughter. She found it interesting and had lots of questions about what you were doing.

  • @zw5509
    @zw5509 2 роки тому +5

    They had outhouses then? At least for the earliest homes. Those are classically the best place for all kinds of bottles and more. Always a fun journey with you. Remember, aluminum was considered a precious metal until they established the electrolysis process for refining. So an aluminum thimble may have been an expensive gift. People wore cardboard cuffs and collars until quite recently. Lid is part of a Cruet set maybe? For the table.

  • @GilbertNichols
    @GilbertNichols 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the video. I'm watching from a rehabilitation center in Green Cove Springs Florida for medical reasons and I would rather be where you are, doing what you are doing. Keep posting content and I'll keep watching.

  • @monkcheetah8203
    @monkcheetah8203 2 роки тому +3

    It was a while until I finally found a old Skeleton key. I found one this year they the next week in a totally different spot found other! I have to admit when u said you weren’t finding anything good so u showed the fork I smiled. I was thinking even Brad has slow days. Then u took the words out of my mouth. There’s no place I rather be then out in the woods Metal detecting. Even on a slow day. Great video has always. MC&TT 🐆🐆

  • @jefflawrentz1624
    @jefflawrentz1624 2 роки тому +1

    This has to be one of the most rewarding hobbies. I think your brass key is to a box lock for a door. Furniture keys are usually “Barrell” keys. Nice finds!

  • @billseka4141
    @billseka4141 2 роки тому +4

    I like your channel, very cool.

  • @memorydetecting
    @memorydetecting 2 роки тому

    You are so freakin good. The best in this industry. Not just because of your great finds but because of your ability to add context to the time period. Your da man.

  • @bestgrams3951
    @bestgrams3951 2 роки тому +1

    Great music, wonderful finds, thanks for sharing.

  • @rondathiesen9317
    @rondathiesen9317 2 роки тому +2

    It's always so pretty when you go in the Vermont woods! Come up to Colo and dig! Great finds after all! I do wonder if the keys were in the same families also! If things could talk!!!!!😂 what stories they'd tell! Have a great safe 4th of July weekend! 👍🙏😘

  • @lynnschmidt8421
    @lynnschmidt8421 2 роки тому +1

    Great video and thank you 👍 👍 👍

  • @pattyd9380
    @pattyd9380 2 роки тому

    Great hunt and awesome finds. Love the skelton key and keys are a favorite find.. Still looking for a thimble. Thank you for sharing your adventure. Keep swinging. Peace

  • @memorylaine
    @memorylaine 2 роки тому +1

    As always I look forward to your videos! I really like the cufflinks that were connected... All in all for a day that started out slow I think you did really good. As always I enjoy the shots of the fungi and the trees and the surrounding areas. And I just enjoy listening to you talk. So I'm looking forward to seeing another video next Friday from my favorite metal detecting guy. Ty!

  • @dwightpickens2895
    @dwightpickens2895 2 роки тому +2

    Great video love love the old artifacts

  • @richardthomas1743
    @richardthomas1743 2 роки тому +4

    Good morning Brad! You had some good finds, personally my favorite is the Brass Key! Happy 4th of July to everybody!

  • @fredross3089
    @fredross3089 7 місяців тому

    Fork and spoons; don't forget prior to 1960 or 70's, most folks did not have AC. On warm summer days it would be very warm inside the house but pleasant outside. Most rural folks had an outdoor table or two so they could have their meals outside where it was cooler. Many folks also had what was called a "Summer Cabin" or "Summer Cookhouse" añd did much of their cooking and eating outdoors. Citified folks loved to visit their friends and relatives in the country to enjoy, what was to them, the "country experience" of eating outdoors (and in some cases, a free meal). Also, these folks weren't as todays people who, when the kids wanted to play, thought it was fine to take the silver-plate outside to dig in the dirt and leave the stuff behind. Also remember, the grass was not cut short and manicured to a perfect 3/4 inch Bermuda grass show lawn. The grass was normally allowed to grow long to graze cows, horses, and sheep, even just outside the back door. Most country folk before the 1930's did not even know the meaning of the word '"lawn mower". When the grass got too long, it was cut with a sickle bar (powered by a horse and later a tractor), then raked into rows with a hay rake (same power source), and forked into the hay wagon for storage in the barn. So the most probable reason you find pewter spoons and forks with your detector is not the carelessness of children leaving it outside during play nor dumping the stuff with the compost bucket, but because someone dropped it while eating outdoors and could not find it in the grass. When you make up stories to explain your finds, you really have to place your mind in the past and forget current society and modern norms.

  • @BackroadsMetalDetecting
    @BackroadsMetalDetecting 2 роки тому +1

    Brad, check inside the thimble for a makers mark. I found my first thimble this spring and hoped it was silver, but (like you) I assumed it was aluminum because of its light weight. I was surprised to find a makers mark, sterling stamp, and size on the inside when I pried it open enough to clean out the inside. Another great video, even if it was a slower day for you. Thank you for showing you are a mere mortal like the rest of us. Jim

  • @EZDiggin
    @EZDiggin 2 роки тому +1

    I'm really surprised that you haven't found a silver Thimble yet Brad!!!!! The 2nd one I ever dug is a sweet silver thimble. Happy hunting and be well

  • @mattbyrne1822
    @mattbyrne1822 2 роки тому

    Hands down the best Metal Detecting show on UA-cam. So historical and educational. Keep up the great work 👍

  • @joebrown1382
    @joebrown1382 2 роки тому +1

    Nice fork & key. Love the cuff link. Fly rod is very interesting but IMO the key was the find of the day. Love old keys.

  • @susanchapman7332
    @susanchapman7332 2 роки тому

    Thank you Brad, I enjoyed my visit to the Vermont woods and your funds!

  • @judithfairchild8620
    @judithfairchild8620 2 роки тому

    Perseverance pays off big time. My dad had a fly rod similar to that. He was born in 1909

  • @halbud
    @halbud 2 роки тому

    I stared at those beautiful locks for 5 mins. trying to visualize who used them last! The square nails are a great idea!!

  • @michaelolsen2348
    @michaelolsen2348 Рік тому

    That's exactly what happens to me. I'll be metal detecting but finding lots of glass. That's when I decide to take a few days to dig and look for bottles. Awesome video. Makes me wanna search the nearby woods.

  • @mac4sale
    @mac4sale 2 роки тому +7

    The aluminum thimble doesn’t seem to have the corrosion I would expect, but not having any experience you might be correct. My first thought was “German Silver” as an alternative material. I alway enjoy the slow pan still life you include in you videos. 😊

  • @halspencer6613
    @halspencer6613 2 роки тому

    That bottle top is from a set of various sized bottles held in a metal, usually silver plated, set called a Condiment Set. The set usually was on a base that would swivel.

  • @jim-do5pt
    @jim-do5pt 2 роки тому

    as always, a quality video and music. Super Finds! Patience and Persistence does it - always!!

  • @debbiegauthier6201
    @debbiegauthier6201 2 роки тому

    The salt shaker top is from a caster set, in the old days every house had one on the table, it would have usually 5 bottles, 2 with glass stoppers for oil and vinegar, salt and pepper and a fifth one for dried mustard. (I would have put sugar in it) often had a small spoon in that one.

  • @federalexpression
    @federalexpression 2 роки тому +1

    I would think that a picnic prior to the advent of disposable cutlery would have involved the forks, spoons and knives you find. It's easier to lose a fork than an entire plate. Maybe they get dropped in tall grass and the owner can't find them or can't hear them fall and don't know they are lost until they get home and count them. Ar you going to try to re-trace your steps to find one? If the daylight is gone, you don't have a prayer of finding it.

  • @d.w.holder7730
    @d.w.holder7730 2 роки тому

    Since you do a lot of metal detecting in the woods. Here's you a tip that may come in useful. If there are any fallen trees around you that you can move when you are close to an area that you are finding items. Move the tree trunk and detect under it. I have done this in several places where Civil War battles have been fought. I have found some of my best items under old trees.

  • @foneman12134
    @foneman12134 2 роки тому

    Great video Brad,, definitely the highpoint of our Fridays. that flat key is a Model T Ford ignition key

  • @Juliestreasures1964
    @Juliestreasures1964 2 роки тому

    Very cool video Brad-Thanks for bringing us along my friend. ATB Pull Tab

  • @kellyhawes9293
    @kellyhawes9293 2 роки тому +5

    I ALWAYS like your finds, like you I wonder about the people who had the items .

  • @lylebrimingham7369
    @lylebrimingham7369 2 роки тому

    Some one told me that when they used feathers to wright , They used a shaker jar to shake some kind of dust on ink to help it dry faster when they were writing several pages , that shaker cap likely went on one of those kind of shakers ,
    I think I have seen old travel stationary sets with a shaker and a ink well both in them .

  • @piratepete842
    @piratepete842 2 роки тому +1

    the salt shaker lid likely had a brass/copper body..ive a full example of one..and it contained salt at one time

  • @sickofthissh
    @sickofthissh 2 роки тому

    Hi Brad. Years ago I was walking along a North FL beach. I found a piece of broken clear glass, smothed by the waves and sand. On this little piece of glass was written MILK. I gave it to my sister.

  • @troyfritch2754
    @troyfritch2754 2 роки тому

    I enjoy watching your hunt every Friday. My wife and I vacationed in Maine last week and on our way back to our home in Ohio, we stopped in your state to eat at a beautiful restaurant named Publyk's in Bennington. Great food and beautiful view. You live in a beautiful state my freind.

  • @Roosterdoodler
    @Roosterdoodler 2 роки тому

    Nice relaxing video, thanks for taking us along!

  • @robinsmith5442
    @robinsmith5442 2 роки тому +24

    At my house the silverware disappeared because my husband used them for tools.

    • @ZeldaRosenthal
      @ZeldaRosenthal 2 роки тому +2

      I occasionally do the same thing. 😜

    • @paulabonin3637
      @paulabonin3637 2 роки тому +3

      My kids threw them away when cleaning their plates.

    • @ninaappelt9001
      @ninaappelt9001 2 роки тому +2

      @@paulabonin3637 Mine too. Wish I had all the money I've spent in replacement silverware throught the years.

  • @hardluckclub7271
    @hardluckclub7271 2 роки тому +1

    years ago way before i started metal detecting, i was on a jobsite digging up the old part of town. looked down and saw something silver. turned out it was a sterling silver salt shaker lid. so cool, it had stars and crescent moons for the shaker holes. wish i still had it. scrapped it with a bunch of old scrap silver not long after finding it. wish i kept it dang it b

  • @marcycollinshtd4life
    @marcycollinshtd4life 2 роки тому

    I have a grandmother clock aka a mantel clock that my husband's grandpa found in a dump. He took it and had the clock itself repaired back in the 30's and it is still working to this day.

  • @marykaystreasures
    @marykaystreasures 2 роки тому +4

    This was most educational and as always when you're metal detecting there's times when you do not find ranything but you found some awesome finds I enjoyed your video thanks so much 👍👍👍🗝️🙂

  • @raymondhoule6108
    @raymondhoule6108 2 роки тому

    Picnicking was popular in the early 20th century. Another possibility for finding random cutlery. Is the guy was out in the fields or in the woods he'd have to either take a lunch or one would be brought out to him. Also camping, kids playing, and getting thrown out are possibilities as well.

  • @Objective-Observer
    @Objective-Observer 2 роки тому +1

    Absolutely! Pic Nics were starting to be the Rage in late Victorian, Early Edwardian era. However, they took mostly finger foods: 1. so they didn't have to haul heavy cutlery around, and 2. It was a novelty to eat everything with your hands. With matching forks, in the 20's... yeah that would make sense. You can't eat potato salad with your fingers, but you could eat cold fried chicken with them.
    However, after looking once again at the fork's decorative stamps... that is OBVIOUSLY Art Nouveau... so Edwardian Era. President McKinely through Teddy Roosevelt's administrations.
    This could have been Granny's old cutlery that wasn't as prized in the 1930s or 40's, toward the end of the life of the house. Consequentially, they let the kids play with it.
    I can easily see a Gibson Girl wearing those cuff links in the top button of her blouse.

  • @susangray1609
    @susangray1609 2 роки тому +1

    The top you found and called it a salt shaker could very well be from a condiment or cruet container. They had bottles for vinegar, oil, mustard and salt and or pepper shakers. I have my great grandparents and the tops are very similar to what you found.

  • @TreasureTracker
    @TreasureTracker 2 роки тому

    I'm glad you still got some cool finds even if others have detected there before! That old copper key is really neat! Congrats and GL and HH!

  • @roxannaweaver2155
    @roxannaweaver2155 2 роки тому +2

    I have a thing for old keys. I like the shapes of them, how different they can be, and, like you, I wonder what they go to. I only have 3 right now but I'm keeping my eyes open at the yard sales, thrift shops, and when out and about looking at the ground. The cuff link, forks, and fly rod are very cool. The designs are a wonder.

    • @rentsdue2
      @rentsdue2 2 роки тому

      The second key is for a ford model T I believe. The smooth side will have a number and the side with the groove will say ford.

  • @wrxs1781
    @wrxs1781 2 роки тому

    Good video, and now my thoughts on the abundance of spoons. When my children (3) were smaller they were always taking spoons for either the sand box or make believe tea parties and the like. We had a rural property and who knows how many are still out there.

  • @impunitythebagpuss
    @impunitythebagpuss 2 роки тому +1

    Aaaarrrgghh...blackfly alert! On your left temple? Good luck hunting history....you are on the menu!

  • @fedupnow61859
    @fedupnow61859 2 роки тому

    The salt top might be for powered sugar. They used to be on the top of a glass decorative container. if they are larger they are for powdered sugar, if it is smaller holes it was salt. Found a few in old dumps

  • @mandybrown7758
    @mandybrown7758 2 роки тому

    Such great finds always a awesome adventure 👍Nice video Brad

  • @crowrebar640
    @crowrebar640 8 місяців тому

    Mr. Martin - you are someone who I think is very trustworthy and believable. I would bet a LOT of money on your being forthright because of this. Then you attempt a fiction production. You can tell I enjoy your productions - I think I have enjoyed each and every one. To see you "fictionalize", I think, tarnishes your believability somehow. I can't wait for your next adventure. Thanks for what you do.

  • @coina-dig-tion6322
    @coina-dig-tion6322 2 роки тому +1

    cool stuff! don't know how I guessed that was a key before you removed the dirt but I saw a shape that shouted key to me. okay, I'm psychic today I guess. When you said you may have found something never before found the first thing I thought was Thimble. Then I thought he's found plenty of thimbles so that wouldn't be it. Then, you said it might be a silver thimble and I'm thinking wow......that's..........weird.

  • @janas7088
    @janas7088 2 роки тому

    Great looking fork. Awesome skeleton key. Beautiful cuff link.

  • @ashleysweeney2463
    @ashleysweeney2463 2 роки тому

    Brad you always find these old stone walls! The outhouses can’t be far away from the house. Look up how to probe out a privy it is so much fun trying to find bottles:)

  • @Ozcreepycrawly
    @Ozcreepycrawly 2 роки тому

    Been watching for a couple of years.. first time commenting.. You rock Mate.. love your show.. I am a detectorist from SA Australia..

  • @mr2hound
    @mr2hound 2 роки тому

    I think that second key is from a Ford model T ignition, seen those before. As for finding eating utensils, I find quite a few spoons & forks, maybe the folks couldn't go home for lunch while working or they had a picnic in the woods then lost them, today those would be plastic sports & get tossed. Good video.