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I've never used a underwater viewer......are you successful with them? Would you suggest using them anytime your on the water? Do you have any finds to share that were found using a viewer?Benny / Western Highland Rim / Tennessee
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Just purchase the one linked. Attached camera to a broomstick. The next two days I’m hunting. I will let you know
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If you are talking a more traditional viewer then yes, I’ve had luck. All but two of my finds have been made using a 5-gallon bucket fitted with a plexiglass bottom. Clear creek it is the perfect tool until water gets around two feet and light can become issue. I have attached a flashlight to the bucket for this trip—a waterproof one.
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I’ve seen guys using a piece of 4” pvc about 4-5’ long, depending on person’s height...with a lexan lens silicone’d to One end and a diving mask seal attached to the other. They were using it to find gold nuggets in a creek, but I would imagine the theory is the same.
id be interested to see how your camera works out.👍👍Wandering wherever I can, mostly in Eastern Arkansas, always looking down.
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I thought about that. The creeks I walk flow pretty quickly. I currently use a 5-gallon bucket with plexiglass. Back-breaking. The water resistance and the light in deeper water are the hurdles. This camera has the diameter of a 50 cent piece and a light. Assuming I don't fall and get the display wet (a very real concern--some real slick areas around bedrock), I should be able to see some things very clearly for the first time. One creek tomorrow and I will post if I have time.
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One time I found a big igloo cooler and cut the bottom off and put plexiglass on it. One of my friends called it the glass bottom boat cause it floats. It was 3 ft long. I tied a rope to the handle and the to my kayak. Worked great but sure was heavy to carry. I ended up throwing it away a bucket is much lighter. Hope you’re camera worksNW Georgia,
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These are from previous trips. Most from underwater bucket viewer. Speaking of turtles earlier, check out my petrified turtle4 Photos
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Fail. It scans too small an area and if you did see something you’d have to have someone right at your side to scoop for you. Difficult to perceive size of objects on creek floor. I had camera against Thecreek bottom an thought I was looking at quarter sized gravel and it was pea-sized. I went back and got my bucket. Worst of all: two of us walked 5 hours and got skunked
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That was what I was toying with when I got the camera idea. Does it have light? Any ideas how to attach light? I Velcrod a scuba flashlight to my bucket but it didn’t seem to help much. Maybe an angle issue. The two creeks I walk are pretty clear but there is some sand moving and visibility drops as you get two feet or so down.
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Different topic: how often do you search your sites? I only have two sites, both spring-fed creeks—clear with a combination of sand and gravel bottoms. One has been walked for years. The old-timers used to find a dozen points a day. The other has been rarely walked. Only one other person walks the stretch I have access to. The stretch just upstream has burial mounds and that owner doesn’t let anyone on. The oft-walked creek has yielded two broken heads, three scrapers (including my best piece—the light-colored blade), and about 15 pieces of flint knappings in the four walks this year. The other has produced the brown knife, one scraper, the turtle and three flakes. I was really expecting more from both. Nebraska had a huge flood this spring and I expected there would be a lot stirred up. Both sites are 3.5 hours from my house so it is a commitment to make the trip. The streams are a half hour apart and close to my parents’ house so that helps. But how often should I hit them? My nephew and I walked 8.5 hours and were skunked. I know they are solid sites. They are all I have at this time. Should I just hit them in spring and fall?
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