Delighted to hear that, Nicola. The coinage was all in small denominations, but they could have been stolen property, some child's savings perhaps, or even the 'shrapnel' (small change) from a larger robbery. Really enjoyed your video. All the best from New Zealand.X
The bag and passport possibly belonged to a homeless person or beggar. All that small change would suggest a beggar. Also I think I saw a coin under the white stone when you found the tiny coin 😁
We get RAF jets flying on training missions here (I live by the shore of a Scottish loch), very low flying, and if we wave the pilot will almost always "wave" back by doing that left then right wing dipping movement! You'd think they would be moving too fast to see us, but no, we nearly always get a "wave" from the RAF, and it always makes me smile ❤😊😊.
I saw the bag’s contents as the leavings from a robbery. The wallets are completely empty, which could mean that the robber found cards and paper money, and decided not to deal with a hot passport. As for the coins, might s/he have left them in the bag to weigh it down when s/he threw it into the Thames? Would the police share with you what they learn from the passport?
Hi Nicola! Finding the false teeth reminded me of a story my elderly Aunts told me. Their father,, my grandfather got false teeth but they hurt him. So Grandpa took them out, put them in his pocket. He then walked up their country road to check on his cattle in the field. Well, some time later, my Aunts who were little girls at thia time, travelled the same gravel road home from school. They came upon the false teeth, lying in the middle of the road. They were too frightened to pick the teeth up, so they kicked the dentures all they way home along the gravel road. When they arrived at home, they ran into the house, triumphantly announcing they found their Dad's dentures on the road and brought them home. With shouts of relief, Grandpa asked where his dentures where only to find them kicked to the front porch, with every last tooth chipped or broken! Sending love from Canada🇨🇦❤🇨🇦❤
Having worked on an archaeological dig in the past (Jordan valley, Israel, 1977), I think that it would be neat for you to mark out a 2-meter x 2-meter square and limit yourself to just looking in that one square, only going as deep as the PLA allows, and then see all of your finds from that one, small, area of the foreshore -- I bet that you might find things spanning modern to medieval (maybe Roman!), and quite a variety -- from such a small spot!
The blue enameled NHCIF badge was produced by Thomas Fattorini, an old family-owned business of 195 years that produced emblems, ceremonial swords, badges and insignia for car companies such as Bentley, badges also for schools, conferences and awards for private individuals. I absolutely love all your videos; am going through as many as time allows me. Thank you so much, Wendi and daughters in the UK.
The brass plate with the deflection figures is almost certainly from an Anti-aircraft gun form one of the World wars. Deflection is the allowance you have to make for the inclination of the weapon and the apparent speed of the target, generally called 'the lead' it is how far in front of the target you aim so that the target flies into the shell by the time they both get to that point. The lead disc is possibly from a cable made by Telcon who were at Greenwich since the 1840s ( Now Alcatel) they were the first to successfully make submarine telegraph cables that spanned the world for the British Empire.
Not sure about AA guns. I don't think you would have time to consult a brass plate in that application. The range of elevations they list makes me think more of traditional ground artillery. The deflection would be a correction for the influence of Coriolis force.
I have actually seen three-holed buttons like that on a Victorian-era decorative lady's collar which one would add onto a blouse; it was here in the U.S. in an antique shop, but the interesting thing is that it was attached with three little round beads, one at each hole-- the sewer would thread a needle up through the fabric and through a hole, run a bead onto the needle, and then go back down the hole and through the fabric and repeat in the other two holes. The little collar I saw had tiny blue beads on the buttons and they were very decorative.
I am disabled,You've inspired me to mudlark in my small yard...I was thrilled to find my first treasure, Asmall plastic dog sticking out of a mud hole..I'm So excited to go outside now.it makes my day...Thank you.. Cj Baker
Greetings from Seattle, wa state USA, I'm 74years old and sitting in my bedroom, I love to watch you, I love your accent and all the treasures you find, God Bless you
Hi Nicola, I would take everything to the police. It might be evidence related to a crime or some sort of missing person. Maybe on her own will but maybe not .... You have no idea what little things can help to solve a mistery. And thank you again for taking us with you on your adventures. Greetings from Germany, stay save and keep on mudlarking Sonja
Seems strange that whoever threw the bag into the river also threw in the passport especially since it is still valid. Could it be something a bit more sinister. Wouldn't it be sensible to inform the Police in case it's evidence of a crime?
Thanks Nicola for your great vids over the years 👍. Last year I decided to deglass some of the local river side as I have a dog .First time 5 poo bags of glass.Second time I took my plastic sink basin and FILLED IT 😲 I didn't find much on the local beach but this felt great helping to protect the dogs and any one using the river, Your a great inspiration.
If I found a bag with an empty wallet and a passport, that sounds like a robbery. The thief would likely not give a hoot about pocket change, and only take the folding money in the wallet. Even a lot of change is not worth it to most thieves.
Through you I can walk the Thames and find treasures. I’m old and my health not so well. Thanks for sharing and helping me too be young again. What a delight watching you and you’re a very kind person. So lets go on having great times together.
Nicola, I love that you walk along the foreshore chatting away amiably, just as if we were walking along with you. It feels so inclusive. Would that we all experienced your lovely sense of wonder at some simple things, but often remarkable ones!
Hi my friends - quite a few people have asked what the opening song is. It is Cody Francis - Hey Honey take my hand. You can find it here - ua-cam.com/video/_ZapRwUMfPA/v-deo.html
The Blue Badge was made by Fattorini Ltd in Birmingham. It being enamel suggest it was made in the 1960s-1970s according to their site. They were founded in the 1820s and still is in business. Yours would probably had to do with the charity badges or an organization that I can’t find with those initials at the moment.
The backpack may have been snatched and dumped by the thief to save himself from being caught with it. I would turn the backpack with everything in it along with all those modern coins (not the very old ones your found earlier) to the Police. Lost false teeth; my grandfather lost his false teeth when he opened his mouth to tell me what I was seeing in the water under the bridge. I was about 5 years old. He would not let me go after them. However, he did pay one of the older Phillips boys to get them for him. There is a big difference between a creek and a river. We could see his false teeth laying on the bottom (not together) under the deep clear water of the creek.
So Nicola has her own bottles ,who else would warrant such exclusivity but our Nicola.A fascinating collection of "Smalls" you never fail us Nicola .I'd agree with the consensus regarding the bag and passport,so glad you've handed it to the police. I love the juxtaposition of the claw pipe bowl and the squawking crow clinging to its rock perch.I love your contrasts of the clattering Chinook complete with tailgate sitter and the graceful diving and swirling sea birds and the swans making graceful controlled crashes on the river. Only you Nicola can interpret the Thames landscape mud included in such an enthralling fashion ,thank you so much.Cheers from chilly Canada -15c overnight.
I've lived in London for 25 years and I've never been down on to the mudflats of the Thames. You've made me want to explore. So interesting. The three hole buttons are edwardian and would commonly be used on bags, wallets and small accessories. The more decorative ones would have been on well to do ladies objects but there were also bone, shell and undecorated one used for men's objects.
Why would there be a wallet & passport in that bag, if it wasn't stolen? Whoever threw in in the river, likely took the cash from the wallet and tossed the heavy coins & the other contents to get rid of evidence. That's my theory anyway.
Great shot in the intro of the guy (gal) with their legs hanging out the back of the Chinook. Loved the squirrel feeding at the end too. Thank you so much for continuing to share your passion with us all.
The riding in the " back seat " of a Chinook brings back some memories both good and bad . Calibrating deflection is required for construction of structures from steel beams including buildings , bridges and ships of course. Basically loading of beams etc., and would be useful to a site or ships engineer . The brass plate may have been attached to a box that carried a site level or theodolite or other optic and related to that particular instrument only , and nothing to do with military and targeting. Moorgate in London was once well known for such instruments and optics. The lead seal is possibly military and relates to a Great War Explosive Incendiary a long narrow bomb about 24" in length weighing 4 lb , the MK 1-3 having a red painted head . The E I MkII .
Have been missing you Nic... had such a challenging week - my 28 year old niece passed last Monday and I haven't been able to face anything since but an upload from you has lifted me enormously. What is the lovely song in the intro? Some very special finds - thank you for sharing. Have a lovely week ahead xx 💛
My sincere condolences. I’ve lost a son. So so sad. Helping Parents Heal, a wonderful organization. Find them in fb, UA-cam etc. over 20,000 families offering experience, guidance and love. Peace to your family.
yes, the pipe is incredible, I will never stop being delighted with them. i'm going to try and buy one or two. everything is so interesting. I love your channel!! xx
Plus, I would have TOTALLY taken the bag, if you don't someone else would and probably would have just kept the $ and left the rest. Very interesting and would love to know why it was there
Whenever I watch you (and Si, my other mudlarking fix each week), I feel such a range of things: a bit of envy, joy in the hunt, appreciation for the sharing you do, amazement at your ability to see so much. But today, when you were looking carefully in that one small spot and finding those tiny treasures, I was reminded of my son when he was much younger. Every day, from when he was about three until he was eight or so, I would make up a story for him, and sometimes we'd re-visit a place we'd been to before. One was a small cabin in an imaginary wood, with a back door that opened onto a different period in history -- or even a different world -- each time we went through it. We never knew when we'd be, or where. And we could never go back to just the same place/time again. Today, the foreshore spoke to me just like that cabin. Mud washed away, tide after tide, revealing who knows what? And then that time getting washed away, or covered again. A new story, every time you go, and everywhere you look!
@@chrisberry9017 Thanks! 😊 It was such a wonderful time in our lives. Bjorn, my son, has little specific memory of it now, but I think it had a positive influence on him. He is an imaginative, critical thinking young man who still loves diving down rabbit holes of inquiry.
Give the money to the RNLi ( sounds appropriate ) I think the bag belonged to a busker and someone mugged them ,kept the paper cash from the wallet and flung the rest xx
I’m glad you gave the bag to the police. Very strange find and probably part of a robbery and they tossed what they didn’t want in the river. Very sad but glad you found it. Always love watching your videos.
Squirrel is a lot safer in Nicola's garden than he would be in mine, where all the neighbourhood cats come to socialise. Even crows and magpies are not safe.
I would have taken the whole bag to the police for checking. You should give a cute name to your furry visitor, so pretty. The 3 hole buttons were used for military in WW1 here in Germany, not easy to find anything more. Congratulations to the winner of that green fish! Have a wonderful week Nicola!
I read a response to just this question on a site and a bespoke tailor stated that was just a story and not necessarily true. They can be sewn by machine, but I got the definite impression they tend to be found either on hand-tailored men’s shirts or high-end ready-to-wear shirts.
Just finished watching Si and Cuffs find your anchor and bottle, Nicola. My morning will be complete after watching yours! I always especially enjoy the soundtracks you have selected. Be well from Washington state USA ❤
Every time I see these tiny things, they always reminds me of The Borrowers books by Mary Norton, and the Arietty film. Could be a fun project if you ever made one of those book nooks with some of your tiny things, perhaps decorated like a small borrower home 😃 Think the adoption thing is a great idea. Nice way to recycle/upcycle things. ❤️ Also, you look very nice today 😃
Watching you explore for treasures is a wonderful treat which takes us away from the stresses of the day! I wonder if anyone else finds his/herself moving head & neck in every angle to see what is beneath the debris- knowing it won’t do any good because it is a video!! I think of all the pastimes out there- mudlarking along the water’s edge would really be a fun exploration…no matter how muddy!
I hope you did take those coins because it would serve no purpose in the river and at least if it goes to the charity bucks somebody benefits from it I always enjoy your videos keep up the good work Nicola. Lots of love from New York
I love digging for treasures on the river bank at low tide. Years ago when the refuse tips were unregulated my friends and I would go tip raking. I found some fantastic items. One day I found a human skull which I believe came from a hospital or doctor's practice. I took it home and emersed it in bleach, it came up a treat. I wanted to put it in my bedroom but my mother wasn't having it, so I put it in the outside toilet. The problem then was that when I had to use the toilet the skull seemed to watch me and this rather spooked me. The skull was quickly returned to the same tip and can now rest in peace. It didn't stop me tip racking and I found many fantastic finds. Sadly those days are gone as the councils are very strict now.
My granddaughter and I have recently found your mudlarking videos and love the adventure of it all and how excited you are you are when you find something even if you don't know what it is. When you mentioned the adoption program, she said, I'm a kid, and I'm watching. She is very much a collector herself and would love to adopt ❤️
Greetings! I’m a fan who lives in Oregon, US. I live in the Columbia River Gorge on the state line between Oregon and Washington state. I don’t mudlark the river here due to age and disability, but I love your postings and joining you along the Thames. The photography and music are very soothing and the compilation of seeing your finds and being able to see your studio is also interesting and entertaining! Keep larking about and be healthy! Regards, Mary P.
I grew up spending summers on the Gorge in Cascade Locks. I thought awhile ago that there would be arrowheads to be found along the Gorge’s shore equal to the pipes she finds.
Brilliant finding on that small coin, I wonder??? ..Family records indicated that one of my grandmothers from the England had a half farthing issued in her honor. Lady Harrington..
Wonderful to have you back. The tiny finds are spectacular. As for the bag I'd take the whole lot to the police. Thanks for the lovely info on the finds.
For me your most pleasing find was the toy canon barrel. Although I applaud your notion to collect modern coin finds to donate them to charity an alternative would be to leave them in the mud so that they could fascinate mudlarkers a century or two into the future.
I do leave some! I started the charity box at the behest of many viewers. Also unfortunately many of our coins just deteriorate. They're not good quality like the old coins
I absolutely LOVE your videos. Heard your interview on American Public Radio late 2021. One suggestion, get a soft toothbrush, put it on a string, use it to clean off your finds. Using your fingers just abrads the objects with sand. Peace!
Madam Mudlark. You Chanel was my fist experience into modern mudlarking. I now watch not only your Chanel but others across your great country. However, I must say you are more than entertaining you're educational this episode was like a field study class for us all. You wisdom and professionalism is unequaled. I can not help feel you hold back sometimes, giving us bits and pieces in order to challenge us to be involved digging into objects history. Thank you for your time and for sharing these videos. Your solo Mudlarking trips are s enjoyable to watch as any Timeteam digs.
Dear Nicola, I would like to know, why your spoken english is so good? Thank you so much for your Videos! In Germany we say, that the people with the best spoken german are from the region around Hannover. This is in a northern part of our country. Best wishes and stay healthy!💪🏽
😂that‘s true! Sorry for this misunderstanding, my english is unfortunately not so good. I wanted to explain, that she has no accent or dialect. Therefore I am able to understand her much more better than other UA-camrs!
So generous to donate your findings to the Thames Fund. I love seeing the old articles. As for that bag with the passport, don't you think that's a suicide or murder or (best case scenario) loss? If looking up the name gives you no joy, I'd contact the police. It's a passport, so people don't usually throw them away themselves even for weird rituals. Thanks for the videos 😊❤️💕🇺🇲
There's something so oddly satisfying and beautiful about all these small old objects, each with their own purpose, history, and for some a makers mark. And each was lost or discarded for one reason or another but now can take on new value as historical artifacts. The shelves and trays full of objects in your little studio are so cool, they remind me of the "I Spy" books I used to "read" as a kid. Cool Finds!!
I'd love for someone to take photos in Nicola's studio, then turn them into jigsaw puzzles. Maybe 2000 pieces. LOL Can you imagine how long that would take to put together?
Always delightful when you find something with words or numbers on it, I love the research you do on them, especially when it turns into an interesting story. Congratulations to Tina on winning the fish
'Callibrating Deflection',now i'm sure it would have been attached to some sort of machine,lots of old machinery has brass plaque's on them,the old machinery i work with does,i love all the older machines,they almost never break down :-) great idea on the adoptions too ;-)
Oh wow, I love the beginning of this video of the double blader helicopter which is my favorite since I was a little girl living in Charleston, SC USA & watching them fly over almost every day !!! I can't remember the name of those helicopters 🚁. You did find a lot of interesting tiny items. Love the green 💚 bottle & the two clay pipes especially the one with the eagle 🦅 claw holding the bowl !!! Also, you always have the most beautiful pictures of wildlife, ships going by, buildings in the background & in black & white too plus very pretty music 🎶 !!! I really love & enjoy watching you & you with your friends mudlarking !!! May you have many more successful mudlarking days & years to come !!! ❤️🙂🐿️🥜
Thank you for sharing these videos. I just came across them a few days ago, and I am enjoying your enthusiasm for the history and just the peaceful energy you and the nature around you exudes. I look forward to viewing more!
Hello Nicola, thank you for another fascinating rumage on the Thames foreshore. The calibrating deflection brass plaque you found belonged to a metal manufactured ship. This item belongs to a ships compass on the bridge.After all the construction is finnished the compass is way out because the vessel has its own magnetic field. If you look at a ships compass on a bridge it stands on a pillar.At the top where the disk is that spins showing the direction you will see two arms with balls on. These are magnets to counteract the ships magnetic field,so you will get the true reading to north. This is a job for experts and is done on all metal ships. The calibrating deflection plate informs everyone about the deflection for that vessel. You could not transfer that compass to another vessel and expect it to be true,it would have to be recalibrated. Even with modern technology ships still have the old fashion compass because they still work when all else fails. Yours sincerely. R C Painting.
Hi, Nicola -Susan from Shelburne, Ontario here. First, let me say that I always feel like I've won something when I see that you have posted a video on Sunday! Second, my very knowledgeable husband Paul uses deflection calibration all the time in the metal stamping business, but he says it's used whenever you need to find out the "give" (or movement) in any metal structure. His example is figuring out how much weight a suspension bridge can take before the deflection causes "waves" (or oscillation) - too much and the waves with snap the bridge. (Clear as mud, right?!) Finally, I did look up that enameled badge and couldn't find anything about the initials. However, I'm assuming that the writing on the back had it made by Fattorini of Birmingham. It may be possible to inquire directly from them as to the name behind the initials. My final comment is that I would have collected the money for the Thames Charity box, but would have taken the passport to the police, as the nature of its disposal makes me worried about the owner. Getting rid of something so important is a red flag. Perhaps the police could do a wellness check on them.
Thank you, Nicola, for this new post. Loved the intro song, all the tiny finds, your excitement and kindnesses. I hope very much that the Irish citizen has not met any unkindness. We win every time you post. I would be tempted to donate the money to the river clean-up group. I am so looking forward to the Channel Island video, it will way outpace the SuperBowl in my and many other American life. :)
Hi Nicola I used to work as a dressmaker and used those three holed buttons and sewed them on all sorts of things...babies clothes, under garments like suspenders ect and inside waistcoats and double breasted jackets. Usually they were put on under another more fancy button and used as a shank to hold it in place on the inside of the garment especially when the fabric was delicate. I don't think we use these tecnques any more though. Hope this helps...Susie.
Thank you for another great video! We would love to adopt a Thames orphan! My little boy is 20 months, and walks around our home hugging his plushies and patting them on the back. I assure you, your Thames orphan will receive lots of love here!
What a variety of weird and wonderful finds this week. James laughed at the set of gnashers you found and was happy to see squirrel is still happily munching on his snacks, lol! Xx
Thanks for another wonderful video Nicola, I never tire of finding the pipes, whole or broken, the excitement is the same. I would have taken the bag and handed it in as well. It has no place in the river. Impossible to guess its story really. I shouted out 'it's a toy canon'! 😃😃
To give from the heart ❤️ to a person or charity is a lovely kind person ! ❤❤❤ from 🌵ARIZONA USA 🇺🇸. 🙀👵🏻😱🖖🏼👽🐲👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼➡️ keep moving forwards!
Terrific video and wonderfully fascinating finds. So glad you shared a video this week. And I must say the cute squirrel makes me so happy. Thanks for bringing us along. I can hardly wait for the new video you’ve been working so hard on. The next video can’t come quickly enough. Happy hunting ♥️
I love the teeny tiny finds,as it is,if for no other reason,testimony to your keen eye for such things! I wrote one of my stories,it was lost,like a newly awoken dream,and the details are forgotten,but I know it involved that little crab,guiding you to the various tiny finds! Winnie the Pooh is a delight.finding some beady eyes and cleaning him up will be a jiffy. And the Thames orphan project,well,you know that touches my heart very much😉🥰😊
13:26 is a toy cannon ( field gun) from a very fine toy set. It's high end probable late Victorian. If so it may actually fire. Check to see if it is bored.
You asked how those chompers could have ended up in the Thames and it reminded me of my friend working on a fish boat and sneezing his brand new dentures into the river. One of the many ways it could happen I guess.
Update! I've handed the bag and contents in to the police. I'll let you know if I hear anything.
Yes that's what I would have done as there may be a negative reason that the bag was in the river.
Delighted to hear that, Nicola. The coinage was all in small denominations, but they could have been stolen property, some child's savings perhaps, or even the 'shrapnel' (small change) from a larger robbery. Really enjoyed your video. All the best from New Zealand.X
The bag and passport possibly belonged to a homeless person or beggar. All that small change would suggest a beggar.
Also I think I saw a coin under the white stone when you found the tiny coin 😁
@@MrMugilidae I see items all the time when she's filming and I wish I was there so I could show her.
@@MrMugilidae Maybe a beggar stole the stuff from another beggar who trespassed on their turf, tossed the swag in the river to teach a lesson?
The legs hanging out of the cargo door of the Chinook are priceless!
You caught that, too? Ya, it got me ! Our Vets ALWAYS get to me!
We get RAF jets flying on training missions here (I live by the shore of a Scottish loch), very low flying, and if we wave the pilot will almost always "wave" back by doing that left then right wing dipping movement! You'd think they would be moving too fast to see us, but no, we nearly always get a "wave" from the RAF, and it always makes me smile ❤😊😊.
I saw the bag’s contents as the leavings from a robbery. The wallets are completely empty, which could mean that the robber found cards and paper money, and decided not to deal with a hot passport. As for the coins, might s/he have left them in the bag to weigh it down when s/he threw it into the Thames? Would the police share with you what they learn from the passport?
I agree with you thoughts, except I believe the coins were left behind because they were too heavy and cumbersome to worry about and not much value.
I agree 100%.
@@lindak7499 Could be!
@@lindak7499 Yes, they wouldn't be bothered with the coins.
I agree it’s definitely something sinister.
Hi Nicola! Finding the false teeth reminded me of a story my elderly Aunts told me. Their father,, my grandfather got false teeth but they hurt him. So Grandpa took them out, put them in his pocket. He then walked up their country road to check on his cattle in the field. Well, some time later, my Aunts who were little girls at thia time, travelled the same gravel road home from school. They came upon the false teeth, lying in the middle of the road. They were too frightened to pick the teeth up, so they kicked the dentures all they way home along the gravel road. When they arrived at home, they ran into the house, triumphantly announcing they found their Dad's dentures on the road and brought them home. With shouts of relief, Grandpa asked where his dentures where only to find them kicked to the front porch, with every last tooth chipped or broken! Sending love from Canada🇨🇦❤🇨🇦❤
Having worked on an archaeological dig in the past (Jordan valley, Israel, 1977), I think that it would be neat for you to mark out a 2-meter x 2-meter square and limit yourself to just looking in that one square, only going as deep as the PLA allows, and then see all of your finds from that one, small, area of the foreshore -- I bet that you might find things spanning modern to medieval (maybe Roman!), and quite a variety -- from such a small spot!
I would love to see that in a video!
cool idea!
They'd have to be fast...when the Tide comes in...They'd be in trouble
Tide Team.
And only three hours to find out.
@@safarikitty9632 -- Maybe two fast and efficient mudlarks -- Nicola and Simon. Two is about all that can work in a 2x2 meter square at the same time.
The blue enameled NHCIF badge was produced by Thomas Fattorini, an old family-owned business of 195 years that produced emblems, ceremonial swords, badges and insignia for car companies such as Bentley, badges also for schools, conferences and awards for private individuals. I absolutely love all your videos; am going through as many as time allows me. Thank you so much, Wendi and daughters in the UK.
I couldn't find what the letters NHCIF stand for. Did you?
The brass plate with the deflection figures is almost certainly from an Anti-aircraft gun form one of the World wars. Deflection is the allowance you have to make for the inclination of the weapon and the apparent speed of the target, generally called 'the lead' it is how far in front of the target you aim so that the target flies into the shell by the time they both get to that point.
The lead disc is possibly from a cable made by Telcon who were at Greenwich since the 1840s ( Now Alcatel) they were the first to successfully make submarine telegraph cables that spanned the world for the British Empire.
Not sure about AA guns. I don't think you would have time to consult a brass plate in that application. The range of elevations they list makes me think more of traditional ground artillery. The deflection would be a correction for the influence of Coriolis force.
Absolutely agree
I was going to suggest it was for some sort of artillery.
Does any type of survey equipment use something like that?
Certainly looks like war department font.
I have actually seen three-holed buttons like that on a Victorian-era decorative lady's collar which one would add onto a blouse; it was here in the U.S. in an antique shop, but the interesting thing is that it was attached with three little round beads, one at each hole-- the sewer would thread a needle up through the fabric and through a hole, run a bead onto the needle, and then go back down the hole and through the fabric and repeat in the other two holes. The little collar I saw had tiny blue beads on the buttons and they were very decorative.
Thank you!
I think any suspicious find like that bag needs to go straight to the police station!
I am disabled,You've inspired me to mudlark in my small yard...I was thrilled to find my first treasure, Asmall plastic dog sticking out of a mud hole..I'm So excited to go outside now.it makes my day...Thank you.. Cj Baker
Take the bag and turn it in with the passport. See if the police want the contents and if they don't, the Thames coin box has alot to add to it.
Greetings from Seattle, wa state USA, I'm 74years old and sitting in my bedroom, I love to watch you, I love your accent and all the treasures you find, God Bless you
Hi Nicola, I would take everything to the police. It might be evidence related to a crime or some sort of missing person. Maybe on her own will but maybe not .... You have no idea what little things can help to solve a mistery. And thank you again for taking us with you on your adventures. Greetings from Germany, stay save and keep on mudlarking Sonja
I think some pickpocket got rid of evidence. report it to the police.
Here in America if I found a bag like that I would immediately assume some burglar tossed to get rid of the evidence
@@allenhonaker4107 I agree! Same thought I had. I'd definitely take all of it to the cops and report it, Nicola
I also immediatly thought that it was from a crime. And the thief did not want to carry all that coin and just emptied the wallet.
Exactly what I was thinking. What if someone did him in and are trying to destroy the evidence. Who knows? Give it to the police and they can sort it.
mudlarking videos are definitely better than the super bowl!!
Watching my grass grow is better than the Super Bowl.
Seems strange that whoever threw the bag into the river also threw in the passport especially since it is still valid. Could it be something a bit more sinister. Wouldn't it be sensible to inform the Police in case it's evidence of a crime?
Thanks Nicola for your great vids over the years 👍. Last year I decided to deglass some of the local river side as I have a dog .First time 5 poo bags of glass.Second time I took my plastic sink basin and FILLED IT 😲 I didn't find much on the local beach but this felt great helping to protect the dogs and any one using the river, Your a great inspiration.
If I found a bag with an empty wallet and a passport, that sounds like a robbery. The thief would likely not give a hoot about pocket change, and only take the folding money in the wallet. Even a lot of change is not worth it to most thieves.
Through you I can walk the Thames and find treasures. I’m old and my health not so well. Thanks for sharing and helping me too be young again. What a delight watching you and you’re a very kind person. So lets go on having great times together.
If is an offering, it is a criminal offering to the god of hiding evidence.
Nicola, I love that you walk along the foreshore chatting away amiably, just as if we were walking along with you. It feels so inclusive. Would that we all experienced your lovely sense of wonder at some simple things, but often remarkable ones!
Hi my friends - quite a few people have asked what the opening song is. It is Cody Francis - Hey Honey take my hand. You can find it here - ua-cam.com/video/_ZapRwUMfPA/v-deo.html
Thank you!!
@@jaapstroo5760 my pleasure Jaap x
Hi Nic, @28:45, those could be 18th C. sailors’ sleeve buttons.
@@SongOfSongsOneTwelve maybe! Thank you
The Blue Badge was made by Fattorini Ltd in Birmingham. It being enamel suggest it was made in the 1960s-1970s according to their site. They were founded in the 1820s and still is in business.
Yours would probably had to do with the charity badges or an organization that I can’t find with those initials at the moment.
The backpack may have been snatched and dumped by the thief to save himself from being caught with it. I would turn the backpack with everything in it along with all those modern coins (not the very old ones your found earlier) to the Police.
Lost false teeth; my grandfather lost his false teeth when he opened his mouth to tell me what I was seeing in the water under the bridge. I was about 5 years old. He would not let me go after them. However, he did pay one of the older Phillips boys to get them for him. There is a big difference between a creek and a river. We could see his false teeth laying on the bottom (not together) under the deep clear water of the creek.
So Nicola has her own bottles ,who else would warrant such exclusivity but our Nicola.A fascinating collection of "Smalls" you never fail us Nicola .I'd agree with the consensus regarding the bag and passport,so glad you've handed it to the police. I love the juxtaposition of the claw pipe bowl and the squawking crow clinging to its rock perch.I love your contrasts of the clattering Chinook complete with tailgate sitter and the graceful diving and swirling sea birds and the swans making graceful controlled crashes on the river. Only you Nicola can interpret the Thames landscape mud included in such an enthralling fashion ,thank you so much.Cheers from chilly Canada -15c overnight.
I spotted that tiny coin before you and was shouting at the screen at you to see it Nicola. And you did. 😂😂😂.Iain Leeds Yorkshire. 🏴🇬🇧
I've lived in London for 25 years and I've never been down on to the mudflats of the Thames. You've made me want to explore. So interesting. The three hole buttons are edwardian and would commonly be used on bags, wallets and small accessories. The more decorative ones would have been on well to do ladies objects but there were also bone, shell and undecorated one used for men's objects.
If the Buttons have only turned up on the Thames, this might indicate they were part of a uniform for thames lightermen or watermen ?
Why would there be a wallet & passport in that bag, if it wasn't stolen? Whoever threw in in the river, likely took the cash from the wallet and tossed the heavy coins & the other contents to get rid of evidence. That's my theory anyway.
You're very welcome Nic! Normally I ignore the foreshore pooh's, 💩but this time I made an exception x 👍🏻👣🧡
Great shot in the intro of the guy (gal) with their legs hanging out the back of the Chinook. Loved the squirrel feeding at the end too. Thank you so much for continuing to share your passion with us all.
The riding in the " back seat " of a Chinook brings back some memories both good and bad . Calibrating deflection is required for construction of structures from steel beams including buildings , bridges and ships of course. Basically loading of beams etc., and would be useful to a site or ships engineer . The brass plate may have been attached to a box that carried a site level or theodolite or other optic and related to that particular instrument only , and nothing to do with military and targeting. Moorgate in London was once well known for such instruments and optics.
The lead seal is possibly military and relates to a Great War Explosive Incendiary a long narrow bomb about 24" in length weighing 4 lb , the MK 1-3 having a red painted head . The E I MkII .
Have been missing you Nic... had such a challenging week - my 28 year old niece passed last Monday and I haven't been able to face anything since but an upload from you has lifted me enormously. What is the lovely song in the intro? Some very special finds - thank you for sharing. Have a lovely week ahead xx 💛
My sincere condolences. I’ve lost a son. So so sad. Helping Parents Heal, a wonderful organization. Find them in fb, UA-cam etc. over 20,000 families offering experience, guidance and love. Peace to your family.
God comfort you.
I lost my sister on the 1st.
💛🙏🏼✨
So sorry for your loss today marks 7 years my girl has been gone I can so feel your pain
@@marykunselman284 Thank you, dear.
yes, the pipe is incredible, I will never stop being delighted with them. i'm going to try and buy one or two. everything is so interesting. I love your channel!! xx
Thx Amanda x
Plus, I would have TOTALLY taken the bag, if you don't someone else would and probably would have just kept the $ and left the rest. Very interesting and would love to know why it was there
Squirrel is adorable, and lucky to have you as his human friend🐿❤
Never a dull day on the riverbank! As a retired denturist, I found the lower denture amusing. Thanks again.
How exciting finding small little treasures thank you for sharing Nicola 😊
Whenever I watch you (and Si, my other mudlarking fix each week), I feel such a range of things: a bit of envy, joy in the hunt, appreciation for the sharing you do, amazement at your ability to see so much. But today, when you were looking carefully in that one small spot and finding those tiny treasures, I was reminded of my son when he was much younger. Every day, from when he was about three until he was eight or so, I would make up a story for him, and sometimes we'd re-visit a place we'd been to before. One was a small cabin in an imaginary wood, with a back door that opened onto a different period in history -- or even a different world -- each time we went through it. We never knew when we'd be, or where. And we could never go back to just the same place/time again. Today, the foreshore spoke to me just like that cabin. Mud washed away, tide after tide, revealing who knows what? And then that time getting washed away, or covered again. A new story, every time you go, and everywhere you look!
I love this Paul. Thanks. x
What a wonderful imagination!
@@chrisberry9017 Thanks! 😊 It was such a wonderful time in our lives. Bjorn, my son, has little specific memory of it now, but I think it had a positive influence on him. He is an imaginative, critical thinking young man who still loves diving down rabbit holes of inquiry.
Give the money to the RNLi ( sounds appropriate ) I think the bag belonged to a busker and someone mugged them ,kept the paper cash from the wallet and flung the rest xx
You have GOT to be proud of the rich history right at your feet. Being the keeper of so many great things would make me so proud!!
I’m glad you gave the bag to the police. Very strange find and probably part of a robbery and they tossed what they didn’t want in the river. Very sad but glad you found it. Always love watching your videos.
I was worried Squirrel wouldn't visit at the end. Such a relief! 🐿
Looking forward to next week. Something different is always welcome too.
Thank you. Oh yes, he is there. I dont think he'll be leaving anytime soon! :)
Squirrel is a lot safer in Nicola's garden than he would be in mine, where all the neighbourhood cats come to socialise. Even crows and magpies are not safe.
This was awesome. I so enjoyed it. So many finds. I would rather watch your mudlarking show than the super bowl.
I would have taken the whole bag to the police for checking. You should give a cute name to your furry visitor, so pretty. The 3 hole buttons were used for military in WW1 here in Germany, not easy to find anything more. Congratulations to the winner of that green fish! Have a wonderful week Nicola!
Thank you Pirjo x
So relaxing watching you explore the Thames for treasure. I think you did the right thing taking the bag of junk and coins with you.
3 holed buttons are apparently used to denote a hand sewn shirt,as they cant be sewn on by machine.
I read a response to just this question on a site and a bespoke tailor stated that was just a story and not necessarily true. They can be sewn by machine, but I got the definite impression they tend to be found either on hand-tailored men’s shirts or high-end ready-to-wear shirts.
You are just simply one of a kind, we are so lucky to be able to share the experiences and finds with you. Thank you for being.
Thank you ❤️
This is exactly what I see myself doing if I can get to London again and purchase a mudlarking permit! Sit in one place and grub for tiny things!
I know Wanda Pease. Me,too. I would love to be grubbing there right now.
I find your comment extremely amusing as between you and I Tiny is my nickname hee hee I kid you 😉 not.
I love your shiny silver earrings. I also really enjoy your videos; your voice is so soothing yet enthusiastic. Just what I need,
Just finished watching Si and Cuffs find your anchor and bottle, Nicola. My morning will be complete after watching yours! I always especially enjoy the soundtracks you have selected. Be well from Washington state USA ❤
Every time I see these tiny things, they always reminds me of The Borrowers books by Mary Norton, and the Arietty film. Could be a fun project if you ever made one of those book nooks with some of your tiny things, perhaps decorated like a small borrower home 😃
Think the adoption thing is a great idea. Nice way to recycle/upcycle things. ❤️
Also, you look very nice today 😃
Do you think maybe the bag was thrown in after a robbery?
Watching you explore for treasures is a wonderful treat which takes us away from the stresses of the day! I wonder if anyone else finds his/herself moving head & neck in every angle to see what is beneath the debris- knowing it won’t do any good because it is a video!! I think of all the pastimes out there- mudlarking along the water’s edge would really be a fun exploration…no matter how muddy!
I hope you did take those coins because it would serve no purpose in the river and at least if it goes to the charity bucks somebody benefits from it I always enjoy your videos keep up the good work Nicola. Lots of love from New York
I love digging for treasures on the river bank at low tide. Years ago when the refuse tips were unregulated my friends and I would go tip raking. I found some fantastic items. One day I found a human skull which I believe came from a hospital or doctor's practice. I took it home and emersed it in bleach, it came up a treat. I wanted to put it in my bedroom but my mother wasn't having it, so I put it in the outside toilet. The problem then was that when I had to use the toilet the skull seemed to watch me and this rather spooked me. The skull was quickly returned to the same tip and can now rest in peace. It didn't stop me tip racking and I found many fantastic finds. Sadly those days are gone as the councils are very strict now.
I would take the bag to the police. This was an outstanding video. Thanks for sharing. It's so nice to have you back mudlarking.
Thanks Lisa x
My granddaughter and I have recently found your mudlarking videos and love the adventure of it all and how excited you are you are when you find something even if you don't know what it is. When you mentioned the adoption program, she said, I'm a kid, and I'm watching. She is very much a collector herself and would love to adopt ❤️
Greetings! I’m a fan who lives in Oregon, US. I live in the Columbia River Gorge on the state line between Oregon and Washington state. I don’t mudlark the river here due to age and disability, but I love your postings and joining you along the Thames. The photography and music are very soothing and the compilation of seeing your finds and being able to see your studio is also interesting and entertaining! Keep larking about and be healthy! Regards, Mary P.
Ive thought about mud larking the Columbia, along The Dalles area to see if there are any treasures, Astoria end of the Columbia as well.
I’m in E Oregon 😉
Nice to see a fellow Oregonian!
Only takes going across the pond to make Oregon connections! 😁
I grew up spending summers on the Gorge in Cascade Locks. I thought awhile ago that there would be arrowheads to be found along the Gorge’s shore equal to the pipes she finds.
Congratulations Tina for winning
I agree with several others here that bag needs to be taken to the police. I suspect it's some sort of theft.
Brilliant finding on that small coin, I wonder??? ..Family records indicated that one of my grandmothers from the England had a half farthing issued in her honor. Lady Harrington..
Wonderful to have you back. The tiny finds are spectacular. As for the bag I'd take the whole lot to the police. Thanks for the lovely info on the finds.
For me your most pleasing find was the toy canon barrel.
Although I applaud your notion to collect modern coin finds to donate them to charity an alternative would be to leave them in the mud so that they could fascinate mudlarkers a century or two into the future.
I do leave some! I started the charity box at the behest of many viewers. Also unfortunately many of our coins just deteriorate. They're not good quality like the old coins
What a blessing for Charity! You are a true Gem!!
I absolutely LOVE your videos. Heard your interview on American Public Radio late 2021. One suggestion, get a soft toothbrush, put it on a string, use it to clean off your finds. Using your fingers just abrads the objects with sand. Peace!
I so love your larks! ❤ Great intro this week!
Congrats to the winner of your beautiful Thames fish!
Madam Mudlark.
You Chanel was my fist experience into modern mudlarking. I now watch not only your Chanel but others across your great country.
However, I must say you are more than entertaining you're educational this episode was like a field study class for us all. You wisdom and professionalism is unequaled. I can not help feel you hold back sometimes, giving us bits and pieces in order to challenge us to be involved digging into objects history.
Thank you for your time and for sharing these videos. Your solo Mudlarking trips are s enjoyable to watch as any Timeteam digs.
Thank you ❤️ I greatly appreciate your comment
Dear Nicola, I would like to know, why your spoken english is so good? Thank you so much for your Videos! In Germany we say, that the people with the best spoken german are from the region around Hannover. This is in a northern part of our country. Best wishes and stay healthy!💪🏽
😂that‘s true! Sorry for this misunderstanding, my english is unfortunately not so good. I wanted to explain, that she has no accent or dialect. Therefore I am able to understand her much more better than other UA-camrs!
So generous to donate your findings to the Thames Fund. I love seeing the old articles.
As for that bag with the passport, don't you think that's a suicide or murder or (best case scenario) loss? If looking up the name gives you no joy, I'd contact the police. It's a passport, so people don't usually throw them away themselves even for weird rituals. Thanks for the videos 😊❤️💕🇺🇲
There's something so oddly satisfying and beautiful about all these small old objects, each with their own purpose, history, and for some a makers mark. And each was lost or discarded for one reason or another but now can take on new value as historical artifacts. The shelves and trays full of objects in your little studio are so cool, they remind me of the "I Spy" books I used to "read" as a kid. Cool Finds!!
I'd love for someone to take photos in Nicola's studio, then turn them into jigsaw puzzles. Maybe 2000 pieces. LOL Can you imagine how long that would take to put together?
Always delightful when you find something with words or numbers on it, I love the research you do on them, especially when it turns into an interesting story. Congratulations to Tina on winning the fish
The blue badge is a Barnardo Helpers badge.
Congratulations Tina Anderson
I think you were right on "blow torch". They gave a similar knob at the back that turns a needle valve controlling the fuel rate of flow.
The dentures made me laugh! ‘When you’re smiling’ …… lol
'Callibrating Deflection',now i'm sure it would have been attached to some sort of machine,lots of old machinery has brass plaque's on them,the old machinery i work with does,i love all the older machines,they almost never break down :-) great idea on the adoptions too ;-)
Oh wow, I love the beginning of this video of the double blader helicopter which is my favorite since I was a little girl living in Charleston, SC USA & watching them fly over almost every day !!! I can't remember the name of those helicopters 🚁. You did find a lot of interesting tiny items. Love the green 💚 bottle & the two clay pipes especially the one with the eagle 🦅 claw holding the bowl !!! Also, you always have the most beautiful pictures of wildlife, ships going by, buildings in the background & in black & white too plus very pretty music 🎶 !!! I really love & enjoy watching you & you with your friends mudlarking !!! May you have many more successful mudlarking days & years to come !!! ❤️🙂🐿️🥜
@deborahbryant7530
Looks like a Chinook 47, did you notice the service man sitting in the open door at the rear?
So happy to see you today, Nicola! I've missed seeing you the last couple of weeks. Love your finds!
Thank you for sharing these videos. I just came across them a few days ago, and I am enjoying your enthusiasm for the history and just the peaceful energy you and the nature around you exudes. I look forward to viewing more!
Hello Nicola, thank you for another fascinating rumage on the Thames foreshore. The calibrating deflection brass plaque you found belonged to a metal manufactured ship. This item belongs to a ships compass on the bridge.After all the construction is finnished the compass is way out because the vessel has its own magnetic field. If you look at a ships compass on a bridge it stands on a pillar.At the top where the disk is that spins showing the direction you will see two arms with balls on. These are magnets to counteract the ships magnetic field,so you will get the true reading to north. This is a job for experts and is done on all metal ships. The calibrating deflection plate informs everyone about the deflection for that vessel. You could not transfer that compass to another vessel and expect it to be true,it would have to be recalibrated. Even with modern technology ships still have the old fashion compass because they still work when all else fails.
Yours sincerely.
R C Painting.
the blingy bit you found looked like a Lambretta - reminded me of your find ' I am Bret' lol
Hi, Nicola -Susan from Shelburne, Ontario here. First, let me say that I always feel like I've won something when I see that you have posted a video on Sunday! Second, my very knowledgeable husband Paul uses deflection calibration all the time in the metal stamping business, but he says it's used whenever you need to find out the "give" (or movement) in any metal structure. His example is figuring out how much weight a suspension bridge can take before the deflection causes "waves" (or oscillation) - too much and the waves with snap the bridge. (Clear as mud, right?!) Finally, I did look up that enameled badge and couldn't find anything about the initials. However, I'm assuming that the writing on the back had it made by Fattorini of Birmingham. It may be possible to inquire directly from them as to the name behind the initials. My final comment is that I would have collected the money for the Thames Charity box, but would have taken the passport to the police, as the nature of its disposal makes me worried about the owner. Getting rid of something so important is a red flag. Perhaps the police could do a wellness check on them.
I would completely watch your post over the Stupor Bowl!
M
Yes, Fattorini made enamel badges for schools, conferences, etc. There is a web site for the company.
Thank you, Nicola, for this new post. Loved the intro song, all the tiny finds, your excitement and kindnesses. I hope very much that the Irish citizen has not met any unkindness. We win every time you post. I would be tempted to donate the money to the river clean-up group.
I am so looking forward to the Channel Island video, it will way outpace the SuperBowl in my and many other American life. :)
It's amazing how you can still find unique items after so many years of Mudlarking!
Hi Nicola I used to work as a dressmaker and used those three holed buttons and sewed them on all sorts of things...babies clothes, under garments like suspenders ect and inside waistcoats and double breasted jackets. Usually they were put on under another more fancy button and used as a shank to hold it in place on the inside of the garment especially when the fabric was delicate. I don't think we use these tecnques any more though. Hope this helps...Susie.
Thank you!
re: the bag of coins and the passport...I would donate the cash to charity and turn in the passport, just as your instinct suggests.
Thank you for another great video! We would love to adopt a Thames orphan! My little boy is 20 months, and walks around our home hugging his plushies and patting them on the back. I assure you, your Thames orphan will receive lots of love here!
Excellent! I'm looking forward to getting it set up 😀
What a variety of weird and wonderful finds this week. James laughed at the set of gnashers you found and was happy to see squirrel is still happily munching on his snacks, lol!
Xx
Thanks for another wonderful video Nicola, I never tire of finding the pipes, whole or broken, the excitement is the same. I would have taken the bag and handed it in as well. It has no place in the river. Impossible to guess its story really. I shouted out 'it's a toy canon'! 😃😃
Great finds, Nicola!!😍 Congratulations Tina Anderson....enjoy the exquisite Thames fish! 💚🐟💚
To give from the heart ❤️ to a person or charity is a lovely kind person ! ❤❤❤ from 🌵ARIZONA USA 🇺🇸. 🙀👵🏻😱🖖🏼👽🐲👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼👉🏼➡️ keep moving forwards!
Terrific video and wonderfully fascinating finds. So glad you shared a video this week. And I must say the cute squirrel makes me so happy. Thanks for bringing us along. I can hardly wait for the new video you’ve been working so hard on. The next video can’t come quickly enough. Happy hunting ♥️
thanks Christopher x
Hola Nicola,que interesante todo lo que encontró y que belleza de artesanía que usted hace …maravilloso 👏👏🥰🥰🥰
Hi Nicola missed you last week , glad you are back. I love the pipe bowl, I hope the passport holder is ok and nothing sinister happened
I love the teeny tiny finds,as it is,if for no other reason,testimony to your keen eye for such things!
I wrote one of my stories,it was lost,like a newly awoken dream,and the details are forgotten,but I know it involved that little crab,guiding you to the various tiny finds!
Winnie the Pooh is a delight.finding some beady eyes and cleaning him up will be a jiffy.
And the Thames orphan project,well,you know that touches my heart very much😉🥰😊
Love this site! Thanks so much for sharing your adventures 😊
i love those old pipes,the fish you make remained me of what my grandma used to make .
13:26 is a toy cannon ( field gun) from a very fine toy set. It's high end probable late Victorian. If so it may actually fire. Check to see if it is bored.
I imagine it was very bored, laying in the mud with nothing to do. Sorry; I couldn’t resist…
I was thinking the same thing.... also have a look and see if it has a touch hole to ignite it.
Hi there I'm absolutely fascinated with your channel, you take me on a lovely journey through time. Thank you very much and keep doing this x
23:00 That bag looks to me like some one stole it and threw it in the Thames 🤔
You asked how those chompers could have ended up in the Thames and it reminded me of my friend working on a fish boat and sneezing his brand new dentures into the river. One of the many ways it could happen I guess.