Competition to win a FREE Garrett Pro-Pointer

Good Morning! We are kicking off the weekend with a BRAND NEW competition on our Facebook Page. Enter a personal short detecting story and vote on your favourite for a chance to win a FREE Garrett Pro-Pointer. Good Luck!

Win a FREE Pro-Pointer

The winner of “Favourite Detecting Short Story” will receive a free Garrett Pro-Pointer! To say thank you to everyone who took the time to get out there, (wind, rain, snow or shine) discover that treasure and submit their favourite detecting story to our Regton Facebook page we are giving away a Garrett Pro-Pointer to one lucky winner. Happy hunting!

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Article found: 3 Tips For A Successful Metal Detecting Experience

3 Tips For A Successful Metal Detecting Experience

Author:

Rudi

Are you a beginner in metal detecting? Do you need some tips in order for you to start finding treasures? I am sure it is frustrating that you don’t know how to use your detector, or confused because you don’t know where to start. Hopefully these tips that I will share with you can help you.

It is good that you search around the internet to learn and enhance your skills and hopefully it will increase your chance to find a good find buried under the ground. So what do you really need in metal detecting? I will tell you what are the essential things that you need to prepare before you go out hunting.

First is your metal detector. You need to decide which detector will fits your goal. What are the things that you are looking for? If you choose a metal detector it should be fitted to your needs. Write a list of what do you like in your metal detector. Like for example, the treasure that you are aiming to find, whether you want to hunt for treasures underwater or on the sand. Search online what features you need from your metal detector. Your budget has to be considered as well. You should know that not all expensive metal detectors guarantee that you will find a treasure. It is always down to your skills in sweeping and your knowledge of your metal detector that will determine your success. So these are just a few factors you need considered and planned carefully before you go out buying a metal detector.

Second is, getting to know your detector. Please spend some time learning and knowing its features and how to use it. It is best to practice first at your backyard. Try to observe the sounds and signals that your metal detector is telling you; try swaying it at can, coins and other metal in your backyard. You might get lucky there are hidden treasures hidden underneath your own backyard. Just keep on practicing until you are confident enough to go out and search for valuables hidden underneath the ground.

Third is having a positive mind and be patience. Don’t expect that every time you’re out you will be lucky to find something valuable. There are days that you will only get rubbish. You might even find nothing after trying to dig a few area of land. Whenever you find something unusual even if its is a rubbish keep it and bring it home. Clean it up and examine, you never it might be something valuable. If you think that your metal detector is telling you that there is something buried under that area, try digging it even if it sounds like its rubbish down there. To be successful in metal detecting you need to be hardworking and also work smart.

It is really a matter of determination and using your skills at your very best when metal detecting. You will be lucky someday in finding a treasure one day.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/collecting-articles/3-tips-for-a-successful-metal-detecting-experience-5328053.html

About the Author

Adam Brown has been in metal detecting for more than 5 years now. He shares his experience throughout the year at his personal website. To know more tips on metal detecting and other helpful resources please check out his website: http://www.metaldetectingcentre.com.

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Where is a good place to go detecting? | Beginners Guide | Part Three

 

Gardens

 

 

An excellent place for you to start searching is your own back garden. This can be a great opportunity to understand how your detector works. There are a few factors you need to take into consideration for what you may find. If you live in a modern property, the land your house sits on was more than likely once a building site. Therefore you will most defiantly find lots of junk i.e. nails, ring-pulls, silver paper and scraps of metal. If you live in an older house or have permission to access an older house then you may find thing of greater worth. Other common items include lost rings or jewellery.

Parks

  

 

Once you have checked the local bye-laws that there are no restrictions, parks can offer a good opportunity for detecting. The age of the park can determine what you may expect to find. We would not advise detecting in well keep or manicured parks for obvious reasons, also keep off games pitches. Old trees can be a good search spots as they were once more than likely sat beneath or even picnicked under. Be careful to set your discrimination levels as there is bound to be lots of silver paper and pull-tabs to find!

Ploughed fields 


 

Ploughed fields are a stable favourite site to detect. This is due to them being continuously tuned over, bringing new finds to the surface. However, there is a risk that your finds will be damaged from the type of machinery used and long term exposure to agriculture chemicals.

Pasture fields

 

Pasture fields can often yield finds that are in better condition due to fewer disturbances. Providing there is no live-stock in the pasture you can detect pretty much any time of the year. However once a pasture has been detected thoroughly, unless farmers disturb the soil, it is unlikely that there will be further discoveries.

Woodland & footpaths


 

Detecting in woodland areas can quite often lead to the identification of ammunition from battles that once besieged the woodlands, including shotgun caps and bullets or game shooting. However, this doesn’t mean you won’t find jewellery, coins or other items that people have lost whilst walking through. Footpaths are great places to detect during the crop season (whilst ploughed fields are inaccessible). Particularly well used footpaths will undoubtedly yield coins and other lost objects. Unfortunately you will also find lots of rubbish… Just remember to take it with you or you will find it again on your return visit!

Rivers


 

Throughout history rivers have been the highways for transport and navigation. There are defiantly lots of treasures to be found from their thousands of years of use. Good places to detect are river banks that have eroded/deposited and adjacent open space such as fields. You may even stumble across a previously unknown settlement. Detecting on the River Thames requires a permit which has to be acquired from the Port of London Authority.

Beaches


 

 

Beaches are good locations to detect all year round and can be produce lots of finds. Jewellery and contemporary money is a common find as many holiday makers or beach goers lose their lose change and jewellery when they go swimming. The best time to detect is when the tide is out. You should start at the waters edge and then move inland as the tide returns.

 

Do not detect


SSSI’s – Sites of Special Scientific Interest

Scheduled sites


Site research books:


For more information on which books to buy, then visit our website: http://bit.ly/qhMqTH

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Beach Metal Detecting: 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hobby Metal Detectors:

 

 

 

 

 

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Recommended groups to be a member of

 

National Council For Metal Detecting

www.ncmd.co.uk

You will find information on clubs, membership, the Treasure Act and the National Council for Metal Detecting.
There are various grades of:
The current NCMD subscription for club membership is £6.00: per person per annum.
However NCMD Regions may charge club members an additional levy to cover the services they provide.

(a) Membership of a local club which is part of an NCMD Region which in turn elects four voting delegates to the regular meetings of the NCMD.

(b) Individual and Associate membership as a member of an NCMD Region which operates this facility. (Regions which operate this facility are, Midlands Region, Yorkshire Region. and Scottish Region)

(c) Individual and Associate member registered directly with the National Council.
For further details please visit their website.

Federation Of Independent Detectorists

www.detectorists.net

Benefits include :- Quarterly postal bulletins, keeping you up to date with all the news, your own personal identity card with your photo on it, if you live in the United Kingdom you also have free public liability insurance for £5,000,000. Once you have joined, you can obtain help and information on metal detecting via the Internet, telephone or post.

FID will accept any responsible detectorist (whether beginner or experienced) as a member, there is no waiting list, and we will answer snail mail by return of post. The joining fee is £5, plus an annual membership fee of £4.00, There is a discount for senior citizens and the unwaged of £2, simply send a photocopy of your pension or benefit book with your application.

 

Uk Metal Detecting Clubs A-Z

www.fid.newbury.net/clubs.html

An A to Z guide of metal detecting clubs around the U.K.

 

 

 

 

The Portable Antiquities Scheme

www.finds.org.uk

This website provides background information on the Portable Antiquities Scheme, news articles such as the Staffordshire hoard, events listings and access to our database of objects and images.

A list is also provided with contact details for 33 Finds Liaison Officers.

 

Metal Detecting Forum

www.rallyuk.org

This Forum has details of forthcoming events and rallies, discussion forums for finds, banter, swap shop and items for sale as well as information about news & history articles.

 


XP Forum

http://www.xpmetaldetectors.com/xpforum/

This forum is all about XP.

Essentially organised like a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) platform, to enable visitors to quickly find all the answers to their questions.

To ensure that the technical information is clear, only messages containing purely technical questions and non-redundant information will be published.

There is a search option to check whether the subject you are questioning has already been dealt with.

 

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Inland Detecting Tips – By Nigel Ingram

Most detectors are suitable for inland & dry sand detecting, the only exceptions would be Pulse Induction detectors, whilst quite happy working on this type of area they do not possess any form of discrimination to reject ferrous objects, making them very hard work indeed.
When you first get your new detector read the manufacturers instructions carefully also any supplementary instructions that have been supplied with your model (Regton supplies these with quite a few models).
Make sure your batteries are either charged or up to the correct power, we find that most operational problems are associated with batteries than anything else. The best place to try your machine first of all is inside your house with the machine on a table or chair with the search head overhanging the edge and away from the floor. You can now practice changing the various controls and becoming accustomed to the layout of your detector. At this point do not start experimenting with maximum depths and turning everything up to full, as in reality these settings will not be used in the field and you will make the machine unstable.
Your first outing will probably be your back garden, a good place to start and often you will be surprised what has been lost there. As you move further afield you will be looking for permission from farmers, landowners, friends, and family before venturing onto their property.
Fields fall into two categories, ploughed and pasture, the former is usually more productive as the older items of interest have been brought to the surface by the plough whereas the pasture tends to keep its secrets hidden, often out of reach of even the best detectors. On pasture it’s worth trying all metal mode to pick up everything, this is usually a slightly deeper mode to detect in, all be it a little slow sometimes.
This brings us onto the next subject, research, the dreaded homework, but this can be fun if you go about it the right way. First stop is the local library to find old maps and documents relating to the area you are detecting, when you compare these old maps with modern maps you will find many clues to abandoned buildings, forgotten villages and re-routed roads many of which have many lost or even discarded objects just waiting to be found.
There are many guides available now to help you understand how to obtain permission. Remember the person you are asking probably doesn’t understand that we are only finding objects from the first 12 inches or so and digging with a trowel, he may be thinking in feet and have visions of you using a huge spade. Take time to understand how farmers can be invaluable when you are the umpteenth ‘townie’ to ask permission this week. Being able to correctly recognise his winter wheat from his corn crop will make him feel he is talking to a like-minded person who appreciates the countryside and knows how to look after the land, after all it’s his livelihood you are asking to walk over.
If you are thinking of detecting along bridleways or public footpaths, as a mater of courtesy try and find the landowner to ask permission, this can often give you the perfect opportunity to ask about the area and may well lead to other interesting sites.

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