Iam new to artifact hunting and I have been watching a lot guys hunting for artifacts on utube I’ve learned quite a bit about hunting and where to look for them and what to look for but I have found out that there are some people that seem to find points in perfect condition just lying in a creek bed lam not sure I believe some of them!
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With known point yielding sites and conditions being just right, I probably spent 40 hours to get that perfect point ( no breaks, good outline, but not necessarily a high quality and two years for a G-9 roughly..(figured in averages)....There’s another weird unexplained factor I’ve known about for years, two guys hunting same fields one finds junkers the other perfect ones, time after time, it doesn’t matter what fields, or how they work em over the years...I hope you’re the fella who finds more quality points.Lol.P.S. ,It’s true.Floridaboy.
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I watched this video of a cache coming out one time and there was men and women in the video and they pulled out huge blade after blade white material. They weren’t being loud at all almost too quiet 🤫. Led me to believe that they were trespassing they acted like they pulled out 1000 before . The dirt was undug so it wasn’t planted they just probably shouldn’t have been there is my guess
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Hey b.rubble.....ive found some pretty decent points on creeks...it can be done.....those guys posting on YouTube.....some of them have hours upon hours of hunting before they can post a 10 or 15 min video posting their finds..it can appear that they find them all one day in a vid, but that vid could be a compilation of several weeks and or months...as others have stated....you can pull broke points all day long and get lucky to find a whole point.....however, i can be a little skeptic too and im sure some people may plant points to make a vid and get viewsBenny / Western Highland Rim / Tennessee
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Good discussion Tam. As we all know we find many many Artifacts to get just one or two good ones. If I had one good one for every hour I've hunted, I could start a museum better than most. It's just the way it is today, as I said before the hay day for surface hunting is over, unless you think outside the box. I don't dig anything, except as a professional or in an emergency to save Artifacts from the bulldozer. KimKnowledge is about how and where to find more Knowledge. Snyder County Pa.
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The more you look the more you build up your brain's catalog..so when you see it, it will register. When you look you are scanning unless you are on all fours and that is often done and recommended hahaha. People looking for a classic perfect point may not see what is right in front of you. Your mind looks at colors, textures, lusters. BITS of artifacts. Materials. More often = More finds. Keep looking down. Be an expert for your local sites. Someone from the beaches will not see what you see in a gravel bar and you wouldn't see shell stuff on a site loaded with shell. Same with walking sites loaded with material and rocks. With that said I've said to myself more than once, "Today I find a plummet" and I did LOLOL!
Professor Shellman
Tampa Bay
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Exactly TomC. I have learned from my years of hunting that there are many variable factors each time i go. You have to learn what to look for and when. Sometimes the rockbars are completely silted over and you can only look for shapes, or sometimes in river rocks its color you look for, i look for edge work, serrations, anything knapped i flip, knowing they smallest glimmer out flint exposed, flipped up whole points, i always try and keep the sun to my face so not searching in shadows, look from different angles, and one of my biggest rules is to ALWAYS hunt on the way back! Ive unknowingly walked over so many artifacts on my initial search and found them as i was headed back wondering how id missed that! Its usually due to a bad angle that you miss them, or just happen to look in a different direction for a split second. I always try and cover my search area methodically too. Covering it all ill sometimes draw lines in dirt or sand to grid off where i left off or have been. And the most productive way ive found, and that has produced some of my best artifacts…..i try and go where nobody else wants to! That most “lazy” hunters just walk around, dont want to bend down, or get on their knees, or move a heavy log, dig under roots, crawl thru the limbs of a fallen tree, ect. Alot of places i go are easily accessible to anybody but ive come to learn that most casual hunters are lazy and just walking down the river bank casually hoping to find “dummies”. And i do find those as well and often in or right beside human tracks! U cant find them all!!! Human tracks don’t discourage me one bit, they tell me alot. Where they looked but more importantly where they didnt. And some just dont have an eye for them and walk past them as if were never there. But ive found that if you put in a little extra effort, go the extra mile, do a little grunt work, fight off the snakes or gators, think about what youre doing, and use the weather, sun, temperature, rain, ect to your advantage youll be far more productive as well as find the “good stuff” that you deserve! One of my best hunts was during hurricane Gustav during a torrential flood that exposed many artifacts. Not advising you hunt during hurricanes or storms, or anything but i was much younger and braver then, JUST much wiser now! Hopefully this helps someone. We all started somewhere and have learned so much through the years and we continue to learn with each outing and thats what i enjoy about this hobby. You cant find them all and youll never know it all. But you will continue to find more and you will always get wiser. Just be mindful of where you are, your surroundings, laws, hazards, and continue to have fun, safe, memorable outings with pictures and stories to share with the rest of us. Good luck
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Mudstompers is a great channel, with two guys hunting the Ohio River in Kentucky and Indiana. They find what I call, the "everyday hunters finds". Crude, broken, honest pieces, but very once in a while they pull something neat out."The education of a man is never completed until he dies." Robert E. Lee
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