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Main Page –› Home & Garden –› Spare-Time Activity
 

Treasure Hunting Begins Inside

 

If you are like me, you never get enough of the hunt, whether on the search for rocks and gems, fossils, or treasure. Now that the cold, wet weather is putting a damper on outside searches for those in the north, it is prime time for indoor searches. After all, while you can, every once in a while, stumble upon a great place to hunt for treasure while just hoofing around in the wilderness, most productive treasure searches start inside.

The first task in treasure hunting is to figure out where exactly it is that you want to hunt. It's best to be realistic. You may have a dream to hunt in the South Sea Islands, but if you have no means to get there you have much better ways to spend hours and hours of research. Productive searching close to home may just help you fund some of your dream searches. So to start, keep it close -- somewhere you will actually be able to spend some time searching. Once you have your target area pinpointed, it's time to hit the history books and old newspapers.

The information you are seeking is about old boom towns, mining areas, battle areas or routes, ghost towns (whether structures still stand or not), town areas leveled by natural disasters and never rebuilt, pilgrim migration routes, and anything else that can lead you to spots that were once inhabited or attacked, and are now deserted. If you are on shorelines, you might also be interested in information about pirate localities, sea battles, landing areas, old settelments, and anything else that might point you to buried artifacts along a coastline, or even in the water if you are into underwater search.

Once you pinpoint the areas that look good to search you want to find out what is on public land, and what is privately owned. The last thing anyone needs is people roaming around private land without permission. Not only can this cause trouble for you personally, but it can hinder all who want to search as mass trespassing can lead to complaints that in turn lead to laws limiting searching for everyone. City halls or a local branch of USGS will be able to provide you the information about public and private lands, and will be likely to appreciate your efforts to be respectful about searching. Chatting with people who have been employed for long periods in these places can sometimes get you some bonus leads, too, especially in less populated areas where people are more likely to know in depth histories and legends from their areas.

When you find information of interest, you will want to dig up any old pictures you can find so you can get an idea of what was located where. Some landmarks may still exist even if the town itself doesn't. County offices sometimes have records of town layouts that will actually give you coordinants of old buildings and other useful information. Now that you have all the hard information resources you can dig up on battle routes, massacre areas, stage coach robberies, settler camps, towns leveled in natural disasters, and so on, it's time to start using your imagination.

This exercise just goes like this:

Hmmm. They never located the relatives when the old guy that lived there died - I wonder what he may have hid or lost around his place.

Hmmm. There was a saloon located right there - I wonder where the outhouse was. (A place where a lot of drunk men were taking their pants off might turn up some quantity of nice pocket artifacts - especially old coins.)

Hmmm. Look at that rock right behind that train wreck in this picture - I know where that rock is.

Hmmm. The Northern armies passed right through here in the civil war. I wonder how many people buried money and valuables to hide them. I wonder which of them never made it back to them.

Now you get to draw yourself a few of your own maps to take with you when the nice weather comes back around. These maps can be valuable all on their own.

When your hunting season is over, you can add your stories about what you found in the areas you have mapped and searched. By compiling these maps and stories, you have created an archive which may be sold to other hunters, or saved for future generations.

Author: Sally Taylor
 
Author Bio:
Sally Taylor is a eminent columnist. Sally likes to write articles about this subject.
 
 
 

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