We Hit The Magnet Mother Load, Police Flabbergasted
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- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- We Hit The Magnet Mother Load, Police Flabbergasted
#cops #magnetfishing #bomb
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Well of COURSE there are bedsprings. You threw your magnet on the river BED. du'oh!
Oh Lawdy!
🤨
That was baaaaaad. 😁
Bless your heart. You have made me snot my after work wine through my nose 3days in a row ...river bed....
I laughed so much, thanks
That wasn't a bomb or a mortor, that was a 20mm shell.
Thats exactly what i thought and id bet the ammo box and 20mm rounds ended up there together originating from same place
Cracked me up when they were going on calling those rounds 30 mil.
Bomb squad is going to spend $1000 of dollars trying to detonate that dead shell
@@twillison8824 they just make shit up as they go and these guys are shockingly wrong about the things they find.
I think those were not "Magazines", but actual "Clips" of maybe .3006 for an M1 Garand, or a BAR.
.30 caliber not 30mm. those are M14 mags and .308 Winchester ammo. If they are govt. issue they probably still work as the military rounds are sealed against moisture. The 5 round clips are 7.62 x 51mm and the 10 round clips are 5.56 x 45 mm (M16 or AR15 lots of other NATO weapons) The blanks are mounted in M-60 GPMG (General Purpose Machine Gun) links. The little container you called a drier, is generally used to hold ear plugs but originally comes filled with weapons grease (as opposed to weapons oil.)
It appeared in the first magazines taken out of the ammo can were what appeared to be either a couple double stack pistol or carbine magazines and at least one single stack 45acp magazine
You know your shit, bro!! Good call. I was pretty clear on the 7.62 rounds, but the rest were outside my experience. Do you really think they'll fire? They were pretty soaked.
Yes on the ear plugs. I was a jet engine mech in the Air Force 50 years ago. Worked on the J57 in the F105. I still have the container with the original GI issued ear plugs.
I'm thinking 7.62x 54 I just sold some Russian made
@@clancypool3160 7.62 x 54 has a rim. no rim on this ammo.
The "harpoon" was the tip of a cant hook used by loggers. Great find!
Magnetic rocks can be meteorites and worth a lot of money. Always get them checked. Michigan troopers are the best. Great job boys. I live there too.
I wonder if some of that mud in the safe was waterlogged, decayed money. When Escobar buried pallets of money wrapped only in plastic, most of it turned to slop by the time he went looking for it.
Reminded me of that safe scene in Titanic.
That tool in the toolbox looked like a tool we use in telecommunications on phone jacks. Like a crimp down tool. I could be wrong, but that’s what it appeared to be.
I was thinking it is a wire stripper
Looked like an rj45 network crimper to me.
@@FarmsVilla Yeah. Crimping tool for RJ45s.
for a person in the IT field that a rj45 and rj11 crimper striper /cut
looked like a combo phone and ethernet cutter/crimper
you know the rocks that stick to magnets could be meteorites. they are worth big bucks.
That is true 👍 brotha
Lol, try a hematite rock. 🤣 😂
A lot of rocks have some iron content and will stick to a magnet
It's a rock with iron in it lol
Thats why the person said COULD be.
3:19. That big magnetic rock is probably a meteorite. Those things are valuable.
$40 an oz.
@@JohnDoe-vn8zk It could contain fossilized bacteria from Mars for Christ sake!
I thought that too.
15:26 the light on top of the cop car is unreal, looks like something out of a video game.
I felt like I was taking crazy pills seeing that, does nobody else think that was some serious cartoon cop car status?
Me. My bus stop views the back side of TPD and Always an escort.
Those are the new LED lights.
That thing that you thought was a hole punch was a crimping tool for cable
or a stripper
Actually a cable plug tool, both a stripper and an end crimper.
@@newsnowriversidesgtrock Looks like a crimp tool for RJ45 connectors on data cable.
The ammunition in that box with the magazines looked in fairly good condition. the box had protected it for quite a while, though the contents look like modern cartridges.
Actually for telephone ends and cat5 terminals
@@richarddimsdale6232 Absolutely right on the button real right on you got it Hey I got four (4) if I could ever find them (now you know why I got four).
the cops are like ' stop fishing shit outta that creek.'
Simply amazing… I’m lost for words that they haven’t gotten someone to drive there and retrieve anymore bombs that are still down there..great video!
It’s because they aren’t live...: they’ve been dead for a while...
they were not "bombs". They were old 1940s military ammo. From WWII. The larger ones were either 20 or 40 millimeter anti aircraft rounds, which after a long time in the river were dead as a doornail. Even if one had the cannon that shot them they would not fire.
Nah, if one happened to go off it'd be like a loud wet fart
Great Work Guys! Not only are you finding some great stuff...you are also cleaning the waterways!
The clear plastic thing with the yellow stuff inside, it's an earplug holder. Inside should be two plugs. You roll them between your fingers and stuff em' in! We used to hang them on our flight suits. The chain is just like the old lamp pulls, you simply feed it through a zipper tab anywhere on your flight suit so you always have a good dry set of earplugs handy! Cool finds.
They weren't too good at doing their job then, considering the one they found was full of water 😂
That was fun! Ya'll are going to have the cops magnet fishing before long!
The " harpoon" looked like an old peavey for rolling logs. A nice bit of history for that area.
I thought he was accidentally drinking his pee bottle at 7:55. Too bad because I would've pissed myself with laughter 😂
Awesome! Magnet fishing. I've never heard of it. But even if all you find is junk, there's still the thrill of the hunt and the satisfaction of leaving behind a cleaner river.
Great video! You guys have so much fun together and you are cleaning our waterways at the same time. Thanks for helping save our planet while having adventures with your friends!
They look really concerned. They even put their short sleeve bomb shirt on.
The lights and signs on that State Trooper Charger are HILIARIOUS looking 🤣🤣
30mm rounds are huge and are used in like auto cannons and such. Those look like .30 cal rounds, appear to be .308/7.62x51 in m14 magazines.
The wooden-handled "railroad spike" you found looks like a tip for a cant hook for logging. Or a peavey. They have a hook that you stick into a log, and a flip-over curved hook that goes over and to the other side of the log so you can roll it over or flip it up onto the cant or peavey for cutting.
Hey guys, the "harpoon" piece is actually the tip of a Peevee for rolling logs !!!!!!
Could be. I was thinking it was a ferry pole.
Good call, the logging industry was huge in Michigan back in the 1800's......
@@rabidcougar6465 yep, Lumberman's Minument up on the Au Sable River by the dune in Oscoda has some great info on it. Stairs are killer lol. Great kayaking that way too. Beautiful area to live in and explore.
That ammo box is most 30.06 for an M1 Garande or 308 for a M14, the blanks were used to fire off a grenade launcher, and parts for cleaning kit for them.
That bone looked like a human rib bone.
So happy you guys are willing to get out there and clean up the rivers.
Those magazines all looked salvageable. Might have made a buck or two. Also, the ammo was trashed but the brass and projectiles could be salvaged, too.
Military ammo is sealed. I would bet real money that they would still fire. I am a former US Marine and was at one time detailed to marksmanship instructor, my billet was called PMI, same as ARMY BMI (USMC Preliminary Marksmanship Instructor, ARMY Basic Marksmanship Instructor)
correct but you have to realize these guys aren't that bright. In fact they are quite ignorant. Ya have to realize they don't know the difference between a WWII 20 mm anti aircraft round from one of the guns on a ship and an actual bomb. I have a dummy training round of 20mm A/A from WWII. I do believe that is what they found. Or it might be 40mm rd. hard to tell with nothing to judge it's size in video.
@@fireball1322 I love how he referred to the ammo as "30 mil" lol
Semper fi oorah marine no such thing as former marine once a marine always a marine die a marine
@@liammcdermott4112 Former refers to active duty status only. Once, Always! Simper Fi Jarhead!!
Who ever threw that horse shoe out there I don't want them on my team ever.
They threw it from China though! The short way too. Straight down.
Want 'em on your team now?
These guys are knowledgable about all sorts of things.
Police: sigh* I really wish these guys would stop calling us every time they pull some trash out of the water...
That's what i would be saying.
I would like to believe that serious officers would take each of those calls seriously. Who knows.what case they put to rest in those findings. Yes, there is a danger of crying Wolf. But so far it seems the fishers are acting responsible.
First thing I thought when he found rock was...oh! A meteorite!
I hope you guys keep ongoing to this spot. So many cool finds each time you've gone. Totally awesome!
The tool looks a lot like a cabling tool for network cables that strips the wires and terminates the jacks.
When he said “is that a hole puncher” it had me laughing
0:18 Gotta love when the bomb squad asks you to just keep poking around - volunteer bomb detector is definitely a cheap way to do it.
FYI, it's .30 CALIBER, not millimeter. A 30mm round would be a helluva lot larger than that. Looked like the mags were for BARs and M1 carbines. That "mortar round" looked more an ACTUAL 30mm autocannon round, possibly for an M230 chain gun. As several people have pointed out, it's the autocannon on the AH-64 Apache. Also used in various mounts on other light ground vehicles and patrol boats as well some other helicopter gunships.
Cops didn't seem very flabbergasted to me but awesome finds
1:59 That tool is a Crimper. There's small metal rings with little tabs on the top that are used to fit pipe together. You slide the ring over the pipe, stick the tab in the crimper and it tightens the ring sealing the pipe. I've seen my dad use them in plumbing
It is a crimper but not a plumbing one it is an Networking crimper used to put the RJ45 plugs on the end of ethernet cables
That tool from the toolbox is a crimping tool with wire stripper for RJ45/RJ11 Ethernet LAN etc.. It's used for adding the ends on computer LAN and telephone cables.
That was a insane day. All the crazy finds. Thanks for letting us hang out with you always so much fun. Still can't believe we found all that stuff
0:34 if u look closely you can see the elusive forest chair hiding right off the trail lol
bomb squad has to love you guys gives them an excuse to blow stuff up.
This is why you dont dispose of your murder weapon in a river....some dork with a magnet will come and find it LOL
Very cool stuff. My buddies do this. They've found evidence that helped solved a kids murder and a ton of other stuff like that. Stay safe out there!!
How long ago was the video that they help solve the kids murder case I have to watch it
@@jacobschroeder3293 try Adventures with purpose on UA-cam. they have a bunch of videos like that
Good job fellas - calling the Cops was the right thing to do.
Looks like you pulled up a stash of Korean/WW2 era souvenirs. A .50 cal BMG round, magazines for what looks like a 1911, an M1 carbine, maybe a Browning M1918, and the linked blanks would go through a M1919A series.
The light on the state troopers car is hilarious. Reminds me of a cartoon or something.
All marked Michigan state police have the bubble light.
We call them Barney Bubbles in honor of the greatest American law enforcement officer ever ... Barney Fife!
@@1989Falkor Terry, I have noticed that the MSP is slowly moving away from it on the newer squads. I think it sucks because it makes it harder to spot them when speeding.😁
@@benc.enlots This is a good point.
That was heartbreaking looking at all that water soaked ammo. What a waste. 😞 The mortar looked like a 20 mm round not a mortar.
Honestly there’s a reasonable chance it’ll still work. Looked to be in pretty good shape.
@@HamburgerTime209 If it was sealed mil-spec ammo. Maybe? You never know.
That small black tube is the small pieces to a gun cleaning kit. My grandpa has one just like it
Awesome Dani. Keep up the great work. Always entertaining and great for the environment too.
That ammo box removed, Is probably some prepper hidden emergency stash...
And you just pulled it up...lol
If everyone with a boat or kayak did this, waterways would be safer and cleaner.
Meanwhile on the Donets - "Oleg, I found another T-72 turret!"
you guys have great quality and the finds are simply amazing. historical research will only help your finds
Big magnetic rocks are almost always meteorites.
That one ammo box was in pretty good condition, most of those rounds are probably still usable, pretty badass
And potentially very dangerous cause unstable load. Caution.
*YES THEY WILL NOT ..GET WATER INSIDE ..AND WILL WORK ....*
@@marcryvon *NO NOTHING WRONG WITH AMO*
@@marcryvon
Not really very likely. They kept saying 30 mm but that's actually a 30 caliber. Pretty common rifle cartridge in the US. Most rifle cartridges like that are sealed so that water could never get inside as long as the casing was not rusted through it's very probable that it would shoot perfectly fine. I've purchased some Russian 762x54r that was manufactured in the 1970s it's the built the same way there's a red ceiling ring of enamel painted at the junction between the projectile and the brass case and then also over the primer cartridge. They could sit for a hundred years and be perfectly stable. Gunpowder like original black powder or Dynamite does become significantly unstable with time and especially moisture. But smokeless powder like used in modern ammunition doesn't behave that way.
I think you guys are over the top with your finds. Save that excitement for the exciting stuff 😁!
you kidding me? i would have been way more excited to pull up a box full of clean ammo like that. hell of a find
That magnetic rock was probably an old cannonball or possibly a meteorite both worth thousands of dollars. I could identify a lot of the things you pulled up like the plastic wire strippers or it was a connector crimper. But that's funny you threw a cannonball away.
I do a lot of fishing, not with a magnet, but I’ve never caught anything like that!
Great videos! Thank you for fishing more than talking, unlike some other magnet fishers!
Did not see anything worth calling the police over.
I think the giant red light on the state police car is comical!
The tool in the top looked like an RJ-45 tipper. Aka Cat 5/ethernet cable
Yep, I took a look at mine, it's basically identical
I love the plate on the officers SUV, "BSO4."
I believe that first round you found (Which isn't a bomb) is a 30 x 113mm used in the Apache Gunship helicopter’s 30mm cannon and could of been a Dummy Round...
Dummy rounds say Dummy on them but that is misleading as the rounds still fire at normal velocity they just do not explode. It is a solid projectile round rather than what we normally think of as a "Dummy."
@@newsnowriversidesgtrock Incorrect Dummy rounds are used in a display like at airshows so they are not live. You are thinking of the practice rounds which are live without the explosive head, practice rounds also have a {if I remember right} a blue head where the dummy rounds do not also explosive heads have either yellow, red or both markings on the head.
@@farmsimaussie1992 Do your home work . Dummy just means non-explosive projectile. Real easy to look up. An inert round is what you are looking at in displays. The inert round has no explosives at all, and obviously, will not fire. Also, inert rounds will have two very small holes drilled in the side of the base if they are original military display rounds. Yes military "Dummy" rounds do have a blue projectile that will fire used for gun sighting and practice. Wikipedia has a good list and a very good picture of the round we are talking about.
@@newsnowriversidesgtrock If you had done your research you would off known what a Dummy round is.. This copied from your so called Wikipedia "A dummy round or drill round is a round that is completely inert, i.e., contains no primer, propellant, or explosive charge.[1] It is used to check weapon function, and for crew training.[2] Dummy ammunition is distinct from "practice" ammunition, which may contain smaller than normal amounts of propellant and/or explosive.[3] For example, the M69 practice hand grenade[4] emits a loud pop and a puff of white smoke. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dummy_round
Ive held a 30mm round, that is smaller, more like maybe a 20mm round.
HAHA, new division of the bomb squad! "the Department of Magnetics".
That wasn't a bomb guy's. That was a Anti Aircraft round.
I agree , 30 mm?
That magnetic rock is likely a meteorite. Worth big bucks! 💵
Amazing finds today Dani. That is scary finding that explosive, then all those rounds. That amo box and amo can be brought to any military unit and put it in the amnesty box, unless you keep it.
I would have kept it 100%..I always did in Russia:we refurbished and fired all the ammo that we either found during metaldetecting or magnet fishing.So whenever I went to the forest or some river with my friends-I always brought at least two guns: one in 7.62×54R-usually either sniper SVT-40 or sniper Mosin rifle in my case and the other in 7.92×57 Mauser-usually either my, unsurprisingly,sniper Kar-98 or my semi-auto conversion of MG-42 (which if you legally have in Russia-you can also keep all the original parts outside of it and they aren't regulated!Plus if you get caught for the first time with them installed-you get a fine which is equivalent to 600$ and don't even lose your gun!I just never got caught though 😂)..And at some places I knew that the condition of the stuff in the ground is so good and the stuff is so multiple that not only I brought my MG-42 itself along with the original parts kit but also a carrier tube with two spare barrels! And believe it or not but on many occasions I didn't even bring any ammo for it-just a couple of mags for SVT-40 just in case and a dozen of empty 50 round belts for MG-42 but guess what?At the end of the day still had a nice fire show with at least one or more instances of barrel change-when one of the barrels literally was glowing dull red after 350-400 rounds in under a minute! Meanwhile as for explosive ordnance that we found-the procedure was much more trivial and actually much safer than you think and it never involved calling the bomb sqad(by the way I used to work in a bomb sqad myself for 3 years so if I would have called them-or us, the dispatcher would have either told me not to be a lazy ass or a little b*tch and deal with it myself or would have freaked out if I would have said that something was too dangerous even for a crazy yet experienced dude like they knew me!)!So what we did with all that c-rap?We just piled it into a small pit at the open ground with at least 100 meters of clear view from any other point around and when we were eventually leaving the spot and either moving to another one or going home-I just selected the piece of ordnance that was large enough and most importantly had been an unexploded but fired HE shell and placed it so that it's fuse was visible from a distance,and when we packed everything up already-I just shot it from 100 meters or more with an accurate shot with API round..So the shell just detonated upon being hit and set off the entire pile! Both very cool, nice and spectacular stuff to see and also a good riddance: those shells,bombs,mines and other dangerous c-rap could bring a tonne of harm even if someone who would have found it wouldn't have had any malicious intentions and if someone would-they could make a really nasty disaster while even if the officials would have had to deal with all the stuff that we disposed of over the years-they would most likely have lost a number of their specialists and field workers due to a bunch of stupid regulations and procedures that they/we had to follow!I'm not even sure how many dozen casualties would have occurred during transportation of all that stuff from the site to the EOD range for disposal!Just for a point of reference:the biggest such blast that I personally set off in this manor had been calculated to contain a whopping 7 metric tons of TNT which we unearthed in countless shells in one of our expeditions! And that was not the combined weight of the shells with their metal parts included:that was exactly 7 metric tons of TNT inside them while their overall weight was in excess of 20 metric tons!Even from between 350 and 400 meters when I set it off-we just saw a white wall of condensation approaching at the speed of sound and almost completely lifting me off the ground and throwing me like a ragdoll! Besides if you want to have a better idea of what exactly the blast of 7 metric tons of TNT would have looked like and how destructive it would be-just watch the Tianjin explosions on video! You will see that there were two of them:the first one was smaller and was followed by a much bigger one just 30 seconds later!So the first one had been 3 tons of TNT in equivalent and the second had been about 20.So this one would have been right in the middle between them!
In this case, it was dumped in the amnesty river.
“Artillery shells” 😂😂😂
14:36 That is not a harpoon head. That's a peavey point. (logging tool). BTW, harpoon heads are shaped like arrowheads, non-retractable.
I thought a Peavey also had a hook. Could have broke/rusted off.
I thought a Peavey also had a hook. Could have broke/rusted off.
Still a really cool find. Imagine how old that is... could be 100+ years old. Back in the day when they logged the waterways and floated the logs out.
It’s like the UA-camrs are the true investigators and the police are the regular citizens lol
I'm getting addicted to your magnet fishing videos, they're great. But what do you do with all the useless stuff, like the rusty tool box? Also, what do you do with all the old fishing line you get?
We scrap anything that we dont keep and clean up. The ammo and can was kept, everything else was scrapped besides what dani and jeff kept
Our local magnet guy just pulled a hand grenade out of the Flint River. About a dozen guns.
i don't think that is a mortar i think it is a 30 mm round. I am not suggesting that you do this but i would have taken home pulled the bullet washed out the power struck the primer wearing gloves and eye protection and polished the brass and the bullet then reassembled and put it on your shelf Im sure a gun smith could do this for you. Are you close to an army base ?
Hi, agree with you, BUT I think it may have been a 25mm bush master round. Definitely NOT a mortar round.
Dude, ive never in my life ever thought of "magnet fishing"!! Thats the friggin coolest idea!! Thats AWESOME you guys!! Keep up the good work!!
You never know what you'll find with a magnet, it started with people using like speaker magnets and such
@@TheMagnetizer yeah, those are really powerful!! My grandfather always had alot of those around! I could barely pull them off of his file cabinets!! There are some in crt monitors and tvs too! Im just surprised ive never heard of it before! It just makes so much sense, i cant believe people havent been doing this since weve had these stronger magnets!? Maybe they have? Who knows?! Its a killer idea no matter what! Thanks for the idea and videos guys!! Good luck to all of you!!
@@sircliffordmalcolmjac5870 I use 2200 pound pull "All around" magnet, and my dad uses 3800 "All around magnet". They are insane. All around magnets or 360 magnets are the strongest type of magnet
@@TheMagnetizer id love to try that!! I doubt id find like police evidence or anything like that😁 but theres bound to be lots of other stuff!? Who knows?
Just lmk if you are looking for a magnet and I can recommend a few places. If you got Facebook, dm me(UA-cam user same as Facebook)
Did you check the magnetic rock to see if it is a meteorite?
I've been thinking of a kayak activity for winter. This looks like fun!
Wow. Someone stole the ammo box and it was no interest to them. 30-06 and magazine for a BAR perhaps (Unless it is 308 and M14 mags). The smaller mags are 45ACP for a 1911. Your "mortor" looks like a 30mm canon or similar. All harmless unless the big one has high explosive warhead. EVvn then you probably could not make it go off in a bon fire.
You nailed it. Thinking the something.
The contents in the ammo box included:
200 rounds of .223
50 rounds of .308
3 1911 magazines(45 ACP)
2 M14 Magazines(7.62mm)
1 AR10 Magazine(.308)
Fast loader
M1 Garand multitool
Ear plugs with case
Ammo box
I'm going to have Tetanus Lock Jaw nightmares tonight...thanks! lol
Amazing day we had 🔥🔥🔥
Looks like it!
When I was 14 I found in the river a lot of 155mm artillery shell! I was fishing and sitting on bank of river and hook it I did call my dad & uncle because works at Sheriff Department I told what I found there was 200 of 155mm artillery shell sitting in the river was dump there long time ago but had no firer pins and gunpowder in it!
the top tool in there I believe is a crimper. It's used for electrical work to join wires.
You guys make me miss home! I mostly miss water without fences around it...
It's amazing how much stuff people toss over a bridge.
That is not a mortar it is a 30mm cannon (actually it is more probably a 20mm) shell. So you actually did get a 30mm. It could still be hot. You guys would sound so much more intelligent if you just went on line and reviewed what ammunition looks like. A mortar actually looks like a little bomb. Kind of like an old time rendition of a rocket ship. just google it. Now a civil war or earlier era mortar looks more like a cannon ball.
It is a 30mm NATO ordinance from everything I've found
@@TheMagnetizer Yes, very little shoulder if any, so not 20mm.
I was there when he pulled it up. I have a 20mm German oerlikon ordinance and it is smaller than the one Dani found. They didn't look like explosive rounds, looked like solid rounds. They were in an "ammo box" when they were thrown in if you saw the first video at this spot.
@@TheMagnetizer While I appreciate all inputs, it seems we are talking about different items. I was talking about the very large shell transferred to the mag fishers on the bridge by it self not in a can. I re-read the post and your are correct.
I am talking about the ordinance, not the ammo can found in this video. Dani and Jeff found an old ammo can full of those 30mm ordinances a few videos back. I'm talking about the projectile that was found on the kayak, not the box full of ammo my dad found lol
I love it when police are stymied, but flabbergasted works too!
Your "Big magnetic rock" might be a meteor....could be worth a bunch of $$$ (Rocks don't get picked up by a magnet.)
that "hole puncher" is a wire stripper, lol
I hope you all keep your tetanus shots up to date! 🙂
Wise thinking !
The tool in tool box was a phone tool. It is to crimp a "modular plug" to a telephone wire.
how cool is this. i live in sacramento california. and the confluence of the sacramento rever and the american river is right down town . the history that resides at the bottom of this gate way to the deep water channel one can only imagine what lies beneath that merging point. this is where the pony express eended this far west . it is where the railroad turns back to head east . it is where allthings and p-eople that came to trade and ship everything gold rush was doing business with the rest of the world. sutters fort is a few block away. this would be a great place to magnet fish . when a boat dies on this stretch of this river they sink it. there are two bridges one is a railroad and automobile bridge that turns to let big tall ships through and the other , the pioneer bridge raises its deck to let tall ships through. that bridge is the signatature icon and always photo graphed . artist can regu;larly be seenpainting it . and it leads directly to the west steps of our state capitol. we also have the delta . the notion of magnet fishing in these rivers that have the atrifacts from such a rich and historical world wide history . this video just exploded imagination . i am an old broad now and all my friends are gone little family left and i havent been inspired or excited about anything for the last few years. that river on the bike trail is 10 minutes from my home. i gat a harbor frieght up the road where i scould get the magnet , rope and gloves , it is on the way to the music store where i get my guitar strings . thank you thank youthank you . if your ever out this way come toss your magnet in the river then when you tie up for the day. you can go to the watering holes where you can share your stories with visitors from everypart of the globe .....in old sacramento where it has remained as it was once gold was first discovered just a few blocks up the road. peace
I'm from Placerville and can't get enough of our western/ gold rush history.
@@PNWhashmits thats so cool! Have you seen any of the videos from the channel I bought ghost town? Its about Cerro Gordo?
Y'all keeping the bomb squad busy!
Not everything is a damn mortar. That is a 20mm round. Motars have fins. Not a rim at the rear. Sound stupid calling any ammo a mortar.
The tool box: first item is a "cat 5" tool for installing cat 5 ends on ethernet cable for computers etc.
The cops seem a bit annoyed . they know they have to investigate guns , live ammo etc but don't really want to be bothered . You guys help clean up the waterways and eliminate potentially dangerous items and still the authorities could care less . pathetic . keep up the great service you are performing . 👍
actually it looks more like they are just being rather professional about it rather then annoyed, this is not the first time they have been called for this and if anything it just looks like these dudes just want to do their job and go rather then anything else which isn't really a bad thing
it's because of all the cameras in their face lmao, they don't want to be on youtube they're at work. what if they want to shoot someone?
Well, that 30 mm round you found doesn't need a bomb squad. It's basically a large cartridge. That's why they were a little annoyed. The other rounds in the ammo box are 30 caliber rounds for rifles. Nice finds!
As soon as I saw the ridiculous large red light in the center of the police car, I knew you were in Michigan
That large round looks like a 20 Millimeter round. It could have an explosive tip.
The plastic container with screw-on top in the ammo can was an earplug holder.
Must be close to grayling, good stuff guys thank you