I do not usually respond in this way to content, however this i have to say! The keyboard warriors are always gonna try to shoot those down that offer great educational content! You set the bar pretty high Chris. You keep it real young fella and demonstrate positivity, tenacity, and pride in oneself! Thanks!
"I have to walk 62 paces between digging and sluice", those Klondike rushers had nothing on you for hard times. The trick with sand is you have to run it slowly to lower losses in any sort of sluice. It takes time for the sand to clear out of the capture zones so the gold has a place to go. A big lump at once just means the sand fills the captures and lets the gold ride right out on top. We are in a glacial area here as well but much removed from the lode deposits the gold originated from. The hills here are glacial moraines and largely unconsolidated till. The difficulty here is that once the water moves the gold away from the moraines any distance the bottomlands are loess which is just a bottomless mire with bedrock up to 100's of feet below. Even in areas with exposed bedrock unless the gold came out of the moraine directly on top of it, there is a lower area above it where the gold sinks completely beyond reach.
Don't let the naysayers get you down mate. I've been following you now for about 4 years or so and love the work you are doing and the ethics behind it. Sure you COULD lace your pans with gold or seed the areas you are going to metal detect but that would be lying and that's just not our way. Stick to being true to yourself mate and stay strong. P.S. love the bits of bush wisdom you toss in - folks just don't know how tough the Aussie bush is!
Hey there Chris another enjoyable video and a good laugh at your comment on having to walk 61 steps. I saw how you got your gift on your back pack very nice mate and in easy reach.
I actually enjoyed this video as it portrays reality. Not every day is a winner. I have watched a few other video creators finding one nugget after another. Or at least yellow painted rocks. Which I suspect had been planted.
Chris, I’ve been enjoying your videos for a good while now, the improvements you’ve made as a man and as an influencer is inspirational. You’ve been able to raise yourself above some daunting issues and I’m proud of you. You helped me Chris, thank you.
Chris please do more building the equipment I learned so much when you built the rocker box and then the Miller table my God I learned so much from just those 2 episodes
Nice! I too sometimes go for the sand. I cover my drop riffle highbanker with either felt or cotton, and it really bites the tiny fly poop size specs of gold. Makes for a nice easy day digging, and the cleanup is quite easy too.
Thanks for sharing your experience and adventures. I've found 3 tiny flakes in a Michigan creek behind my daughter's house and I've been dreaming about prospecting ever since. I can't wait until I retire and can have my own adventures with the Grandkids. Good healthy fun.
I've just spent a few days away with my 5 year old using the exact same sluice. I watched this vid the night before I left and after not being happy with what I was capturing I checked the tailings like you did. I was disappointed to find between 1/3 and 1/2 of all gold that went through was lost to the tailings. Like you I was on relatively fine gold but also some larger flakes were lost. I stole my son's dream mat explorer sluice and did a real dodgy setup running with that at the bottom of the thermoform and at cleanup both cleanups showed a similar amount of gold. The tailings were a lot better after this as well. I'm only new to this but having watched a lot of your videos I felt how I was setup wasn't that bad. So now some no.8 wire thinking to modify the top end of the thermoform in an attempt to catch the finer stuff. Thanks for the great content. I always enjoy watching.
Maybe letting the tailings run over a Bunnings floor mat might catch the fine bits. They only cost about $8 and works well for the tailings from our Rota-pan
Thank you so much Chris! This was a great day on the creek. I'm just so sorry that a lot of gold disappeared because you were sluicing and not panning. I was shocked when you shoveled some tailling sands and looked! All that work down the drain (well, creek). However, a valuable lesson was learned about the whole ordeal. Thank you for sharing the real outcomes in your videos, good and bad. Blessings from Alabama ❤️
Great content again, I always learn something every time. 1 thing I have learnt with my homemade mini high banker and bucket trommel is to have multiple capture zones ( 4 in main sluice) 3 in the longtom River sluice attached at the end. It adds up to 2 metres of sluice. I do clean up the lower sluice separately to the rest and on good ground , I'm lucky to have very little in it. Thanks for the continued education. ❤it 😊
Can't speak for Reedy Creek, but my favorite all around matting is the medium cell sized dream mat... does a great job exchanging the chunky black sands out and holding on to the gold. Now i don't have that horrible tin stuff you've got, but it works great over a wide range of gold/sand types
Love it. Wish we had even that little bit of gold here it's hard to find more then micro flakes of flood gold here in Jefferson County Washington in quilcene.
There is a place in the north of the Puget sound where there was a minor rush. The town starts with a B, but I don't remember the name. There's always Mt. Baker and MT. Saint Helens.
I've heard there is some private claims with gold on mount angeles I think up by port angeles but I've never had the opportunity or option to go there with someone that actually knows what there doing and whare they are going.
In Snohomish County where I'm located there is the Monte Cristo/Silverton area and also Gold Bar but I believe all the productive areas have claims. With a name like Gold Bar you'd think there would be gold everywhere, but..... There is gold in Skagit and Whatcom counties too, but I couldn't say where*. *gold is where you find it
Love your content Chris - and just like Metal Detecting (my main hobby) its absolutely not about getting out there to find masses of treasure - it's about getting out there, exercising and maybe a little bit of treasure.
I appreciate what you do. I don't even live in a gold producing region and have never prospected and still find you, Gadzee, and many others entertaining and informative. Keep doing you bro.
I have found that the Dream mat rubber instead of the pressed plastic, seems to catch more. Perhaps because of the sharpness on the edge that the rubber mat has.
Have been watching your show for some time and have enjoyed every moment, having lived in Benalla years ago I use to have a bit of fun in panning at Eldorado .In one episode you were asking about some bullets you found around an old mine in Beechworth area, they look like early .303 before they were changed to the spitzer design in the early 1900 hundreds.
Hiya Chris, awesome video mate, and the music was awesome. I know I've personally been watching your channel for a long time, ever since the Old Moldy Hat, you had long hair and long beard. And you were always trying too help people....find gold. Maybe if they would have been Listening better, maybe they could really learn something, because you have tin to worry about and not just black sand. I know I have learned a lot over the years. Thanks for all you do. And I want too wish you have a awesome blessed day mate. Cheers! Cya! 😺🐟 out!
Great vid Chris 👍. Have you ever considered doing a vid locating black sands on the coast for potential fine gold deposits? Would be interesting to see 👍.
When you go home, make sure to take some wood for a rocket stove to dry the gold out with you. Every aspect of expenditure must be addressed and refined for efficiency. With fuel prices as high as they are, i even cook on wood stoves these days to save the coal and money expenditure . As a race we must ALL tighten out belts AMAWC to provide a more stable future for all.
Seems like the same reason the gold is in the sand is the same reason why we have such a hard time getting it out. The size of gold seems to mesh with that size sand really well. And just travels with its sandy friend out our systems eh 🙈
Nice I have been considering trying one of those little sluice boxes,I got handfuls of black sand per 10-15 colors on a real good spot,and usually old blue shale that's broken down to a slimy clay ,it is heavy material and the gold is tiny to invisible sluices load up fast with black sands it takes a good bit to pan it down,tricky to run bulk with good capture for sure
Thank you for another amazing video Chris, it’s the perfect thing to watch while doing work to get back into the swing of school. Hope the new year is treating you well!
Hey mate you should come to Ballarat and check out some of the spots down by the Yarrowee. Happy to take you on a tour. Have a work mate who has 10s of thousands in his collection, mainly with the detector and heaps panned also.
A Gem seller in Oregon a few years ago got some beautiful Adamooka opal at the Quartzsite Gem show in Arizona. At the time he gave me a deal 1 dollar per gram so I bought a 55gram stone . Showed it to my other Gem person and he said 10 dollars a gram easy wish , I would have got a grand worth. Adamooka is a type of sinter opal 😅
Maybe you can get a wagon to bring buckets down to the river instead of dragging over to the river. Might be a lot easier and then maybe you could bring about 8 to 10 buckets at a time
Chris mate you have helped my families passion exploring and hunting a bit of treasure LOADS glad for the info and inspiration really helped a Dad out 👍
I use a 6x24 mini mat sluice for my area at a 1/4 classification and get about a 95% recovery and i also use an RPE drop riffle box at 1/2 classification and get about the same,i was thinking about trying the new thermoform dream mat sluice at 1/2 classification but now im not to sure,maybe i will daisy chain the rpe and it together and try it that way,either way u cant beat the weight and ease of use with both.
Could you cut out some v matting the same shape as the base of that sluice with a couple of clips at the top to hold in place to catch the fine stuff if your test pans show that sort of ground?
Too fast of feed for that small of a box, and that area is a lot like one we have here. My best luck was miner's moss and expanded metal. Still love the video, and you're content, thanks brother ✌️✌️✌️
After seeing such a loss from that thermoform sluice, it is still a good idea to buy any dream mat sluice? Or it is just because the sluice needed to be just a little longer ? The thermoform dont look like exactly like the rubber one, that can affect such fine gold? I’m still want to jump at it and leave the gold pan just at the cleanup part but want of course using proper sluices on a multipurpose use! Just sad to see you have to reprocess all the tailing from the stabby trail’s out of your pan!
As I said in the video, I've found grams of gold with that sluice. Reedy Creek gold is extremely difficult to catch. It's not the sluice, it's the ground.
Its looked like the material get liquefied quite fast through this sandy stuff, I have similar deposits up here standing on clayish sandstone, its superfine material, but not enough currents to run a sluice so i stick on production panning. I’m just surprised of the loss and try to figure why, for half a gram its really good it worth comeback and try different methods as comparisons maybe! 🤔 😊
Would it make sense to put your pan under the end of the sluice to catch the tailings and whatever gold the sluice misses? Just pan out whatever is in there when it starts to fill up.
I do not usually respond in this way to content, however this i have to say! The keyboard warriors are always gonna try to shoot those down that offer great educational content! You set the bar pretty high Chris. You keep it real young fella and demonstrate positivity, tenacity, and pride in oneself! Thanks!
Miners moss .
Agreed
@ 4:45 .... Sounds a lot like Arizona! Cheers Mate!
We have Bull thistles in America too. You should invest in a pair of loppers.🙄😁
"I have to walk 62 paces between digging and sluice", those Klondike rushers had nothing on you for hard times.
The trick with sand is you have to run it slowly to lower losses in any sort of sluice. It takes time for the sand to clear out of the capture zones so the gold has a place to go. A big lump at once just means the sand fills the captures and lets the gold ride right out on top.
We are in a glacial area here as well but much removed from the lode deposits the gold originated from. The hills here are glacial moraines and largely unconsolidated till. The difficulty here is that once the water moves the gold away from the moraines any distance the bottomlands are loess which is just a bottomless mire with bedrock up to 100's of feet below. Even in areas with exposed bedrock unless the gold came out of the moraine directly on top of it, there is a lower area above it where the gold sinks completely beyond reach.
I'm sorry, it must suck unless its just a fun hobby were any gold is a good day.
Don't sweat the people who are mad you find more gold than them. Enjoy the people who cheer you on.
No sweat off my back, I'm an educator, not a miner.
Great lessons as always. Over the years of watching you, my gold take panning has gone up in quantum leaps. Thanks Chris 👍😁
Don't let the naysayers get you down mate. I've been following you now for about 4 years or so and love the work you are doing and the ethics behind it. Sure you COULD lace your pans with gold or seed the areas you are going to metal detect but that would be lying and that's just not our way.
Stick to being true to yourself mate and stay strong. P.S. love the bits of bush wisdom you toss in - folks just don't know how tough the Aussie bush is!
4:55 it sounds like Texas
Hey there Chris another enjoyable video and a good laugh at your comment on having to walk 61 steps. I saw how you got your gift on your back pack very nice mate and in easy reach.
In NC I have had success with a drop riffle sluice classified to 1/4 inch. All flour gold. Like you mentioned no equipment has 100% recovery
"Fitting this whole creek into my sluice! " I have that hoodie. Thanks for sharing Chris. Awesome video. Cheers
I actually enjoyed this video as it portrays reality. Not every day is a winner. I have watched a few other video creators finding one nugget after another. Or at least yellow painted rocks. Which I suspect had been planted.
I broke my shovel, rip Dig Doug
Val dig dug
appreciate the new music interludes
Chris, I’ve been enjoying your videos for a good while now, the improvements you’ve made as a man and as an influencer is inspirational. You’ve been able to raise yourself above some daunting issues and I’m proud of you.
You helped me Chris, thank you.
Chris please do more building the equipment I learned so much when you built the rocker box and then the Miller table my God I learned so much from just those 2 episodes
It's on the agenda
@@VoGusProspecting Wait, did you make a rocker on film? I didn't see that one. If you didn't, you should.
Nice! I too sometimes go for the sand. I cover my drop riffle highbanker with either felt or cotton, and it really bites the tiny fly poop size specs of gold. Makes for a nice easy day digging, and the cleanup is quite easy too.
Great lesson on picking the right piece of equipment
I'm learning as you go brother! Godspeed , oh I need my shovel back...😅
Bunnings should hurry up with their sponsorship before you get scoliosis from carrying one bucket,regards George
Glad to hear that the plants and animals have your back Mr. Prospector.
The real treasure is the entertainment value of your videos. You're doing a great job!
I would love to try one of those cans of dirt. I love a good challenge have tried most of the Canadian and American Impossible pay dirts. Great video!
Thanks for sharing your experience and adventures. I've found 3 tiny flakes in a Michigan creek behind my daughter's house and I've been dreaming about prospecting ever since. I can't wait until I retire and can have my own adventures with the Grandkids. Good healthy fun.
Thanks Chris!
I've just spent a few days away with my 5 year old using the exact same sluice. I watched this vid the night before I left and after not being happy with what I was capturing I checked the tailings like you did. I was disappointed to find between 1/3 and 1/2 of all gold that went through was lost to the tailings. Like you I was on relatively fine gold but also some larger flakes were lost. I stole my son's dream mat explorer sluice and did a real dodgy setup running with that at the bottom of the thermoform and at cleanup both cleanups showed a similar amount of gold. The tailings were a lot better after this as well. I'm only new to this but having watched a lot of your videos I felt how I was setup wasn't that bad. So now some no.8 wire thinking to modify the top end of the thermoform in an attempt to catch the finer stuff.
Thanks for the great content. I always enjoy watching.
you weighted up gems with it not just gold
No. That was black sand. I took off more than it would weigh.
Maybe letting the tailings run over a Bunnings floor mat might catch the fine bits.
They only cost about $8 and works well for the tailings from our Rota-pan
Thank you so much Chris! This was a great day on the creek. I'm just so
sorry that a lot of gold disappeared because you were sluicing and not panning. I was shocked when you shoveled some tailling sands and looked! All that work down the drain (well, creek). However, a valuable lesson was learned about the whole ordeal. Thank you for sharing the real outcomes in your videos, good and bad. Blessings from Alabama ❤️
20:00 you can see the piece of gold float away as he brushes it
That bee is sat on my nations national flower but its covered in something unusual for my country that being sunlight 😂
Cant really blame it for emigrating, then, eh?
@@RICDirector expat flowers always have a way let us pale Scots know when they are enjoying the sun 😂
Great content again, I always learn something every time. 1 thing I have learnt with my homemade mini high banker and bucket trommel is to have multiple capture zones ( 4 in main sluice) 3 in the longtom River sluice attached at the end. It adds up to 2 metres of sluice. I do clean up the lower sluice separately to the rest and on good ground , I'm lucky to have very little in it. Thanks for the continued education. ❤it 😊
Can't speak for Reedy Creek, but my favorite all around matting is the medium cell sized dream mat... does a great job exchanging the chunky black sands out and holding on to the gold. Now i don't have that horrible tin stuff you've got, but it works great over a wide range of gold/sand types
I'd blame it on gadzees shovel Chris , great watch as always mate
Cusre that shovel
Love it. Wish we had even that little bit of gold here it's hard to find more then micro flakes of flood gold here in Jefferson County Washington in quilcene.
There is a place in the north of the Puget sound where there was a minor rush. The town starts with a B, but I don't remember the name. There's always Mt. Baker and MT. Saint Helens.
There's good gold on Vancouver Island, only a hundred miles away. You'd think there would be more in the Puget Sound area.
I've heard there is some private claims with gold on mount angeles I think up by port angeles but I've never had the opportunity or option to go there with someone that actually knows what there doing and whare they are going.
In Snohomish County where I'm located there is the Monte Cristo/Silverton area and also Gold Bar but I believe all the productive areas have claims. With a name like Gold Bar you'd think there would be gold everywhere, but.....
There is gold in Skagit and Whatcom counties too, but I couldn't say where*.
*gold is where you find it
@ronnelson7828 ain't that a fact. I still carry a pan or rwo and whenever I get a chance
Love your content Chris - and just like Metal Detecting (my main hobby) its absolutely not about getting out there to find masses of treasure - it's about getting out there, exercising and maybe a little bit of treasure.
I appreciate what you do. I don't even live in a gold producing region and have never prospected and still find you, Gadzee, and many others entertaining and informative. Keep doing you bro.
Really appreciate your style of teaching and sharing your knowledge!! There are far too many snobby snobs out there.
Paydirt! I love paydirt. Maybe we could do some swapping! Good education for the community, thanks Chris!
Thank you so much chris I always learn a lot on your videos I hope that you have a great 2024 out there 👍
The spikey plant with the bee is a Scottish thistle, therefore the Scottish plants in Australia are also trying to hurt you. Good luck!😉
So you're saying the Scots have invaded!?
Nice M8!
Wouldn’t you need a much longer sluice when processing sand, perhaps double the length?
Bloody awesome vid engaging as always thanks Chris
Glad you enjoyed it
I have found that the Dream mat rubber instead of the pressed plastic, seems to catch more. Perhaps because of the sharpness on the edge that the rubber mat has.
Have been watching your show for some time and have enjoyed every moment, having lived in Benalla years ago I use to have a bit of fun in panning at Eldorado .In one episode you were asking about some bullets you found around an old mine in Beechworth area, they look like early .303 before they were changed to the spitzer design in the early 1900 hundreds.
Love the education. Keep it coming teacher!! Excited for this season!!
A Prospectors dream sponsorship. 5 gallon bucket sponsor you betcha 😂 I'd take that any day 👍
He should try the actual bucket/plastic fabricators....buckets, scoops, snuffer bottles....
Hey Chris, how big are the leeches in Rainy Creek? Ah, that's the reason for sweatpants!! LOL😀👍✌
Not too big, they don't drink much
Hiya Chris, awesome video mate, and the music was awesome. I know I've personally been watching your channel for a long time, ever since the Old Moldy Hat, you had long hair and long beard. And you were always trying too help people....find gold. Maybe if they would have been Listening better, maybe they could really learn something, because you have tin to worry about and not just black sand. I know I have learned a lot over the years. Thanks for all you do. And I want too wish you have a awesome blessed day mate. Cheers! Cya!
😺🐟 out!
Great vid Chris 👍. Have you ever considered doing a vid locating black sands on the coast for potential fine gold deposits? Would be interesting to see 👍.
Take your bucket and with a few twist you can con at the bottom of the bucket. Toss top.
my OCD goes off the charts seeing all those black bits going onto the scale with the gold lol
4:18 Happy Gilmore reference. 😂👌🏻
A man of culture
Great job Chris. I have found amazing gold in the light sands here on the west coast of the US.
When you go home, make sure to take some wood for a rocket stove to dry the gold out with you. Every aspect of expenditure must be addressed and refined for efficiency. With fuel prices as high as they are, i even cook on wood stoves these days to save the coal and money expenditure . As a race we must ALL tighten out belts AMAWC to provide a more stable future for all.
Education is key! Thanks for the video.
Awesome video sir, good education as well.
a blackberry in the hand is worth 2 in the bush
And a hot, sun ripened blackberry in the mouth to savor is priceless....!
Seems like the same reason the gold is in the sand is the same reason why we have such a hard time getting it out. The size of gold seems to mesh with that size sand really well. And just travels with its sandy friend out our systems eh 🙈
Nice I have been considering trying one of those little sluice boxes,I got handfuls of black sand per 10-15 colors on a real good spot,and usually old blue shale that's broken down to a slimy clay ,it is heavy material and the gold is tiny to invisible sluices load up fast with black sands it takes a good bit to pan it down,tricky to run bulk with good capture for sure
Little gold, but big fun. You can’t put a price on enjoyment
nice gold thank you for sharing the adventure and information
Thank you for another amazing video Chris, it’s the perfect thing to watch while doing work to get back into the swing of school. Hope the new year is treating you well!
Hey mate you should come to Ballarat and check out some of the spots down by the Yarrowee. Happy to take you on a tour. Have a work mate who has 10s of thousands in his collection, mainly with the detector and heaps panned also.
Nice informative video mate, I think I need to get out and do a little more panning in a beautiful creek with a few cold ones🍻. Cheers Lee.
New to all this and super keen. I have spent hours going back through your vids mate, you’re an awesome teacher. Thanks. Look forward to more
A Gem seller in Oregon a few years ago got some beautiful Adamooka opal at the Quartzsite Gem show in Arizona. At the time he gave me a deal 1 dollar per gram so I bought a 55gram stone . Showed it to my other Gem person and he said 10 dollars a gram easy wish , I would have got a grand worth. Adamooka is a type of sinter opal 😅
What about below or behind the root at 18:18? On the other hand, thanks for all your work!
It would be interesting to put a pan at the bottom of the sluice so you can pan out the run off.
convert to miller table i recall some one saying a clean up sluice is all i need
Maybe you can get a wagon to bring buckets down to the river instead of dragging over to the river. Might be a lot easier and then maybe you could bring about 8 to 10 buckets at a time
I once tried that with not much success. The ground is so uneven and covered in stuff
Maybe build yourself a one bucket wide garden cart style...narrow solid wheels to avoid tangles, sides to avoid tipovers??
Love your videos!! Your videos and tips have helped me to find a little gold!
Chris mate you have helped my families passion exploring and hunting a bit of treasure LOADS glad for the info and inspiration really helped a Dad out 👍
For god's sake man, list a Bunnings Bucket on the Old Mouldy, and I'll buy it for you. No longer for this I will not stand!
I use a 6x24 mini mat sluice for my area at a 1/4 classification and get about a 95% recovery and i also use an RPE drop riffle box at 1/2 classification and get about the same,i was thinking about trying the new thermoform dream mat sluice at 1/2 classification but now im not to sure,maybe i will daisy chain the rpe and it together and try it that way,either way u cant beat the weight and ease of use with both.
Thanks for educating!! Looking from Sweden. 😃
yerp mat is the go. Even better, a recirculating highbanker? Awesome vid as usual pal.
Could you cut out some v matting the same shape as the base of that sluice with a couple of clips at the top to hold in place to catch the fine stuff if your test pans show that sort of ground?
That spiky plant that had the bee on it best pain reliever all you have to do is mush up the leaves and rubbing on bye-bye pain
A great video have a wonderful day!
I am currently testing different sluices on beach sand type material its been fun so far still testing
I think slower water would have helpeď that gold stay
But then the black sand would have clogged.
Yer works well on micro that little sluce
We need to all chip in for a bucket 🪣 for this man 🎉
Too fast of feed for that small of a box, and that area is a lot like one we have here. My best luck was miner's moss and expanded metal. Still love the video, and you're content, thanks brother ✌️✌️✌️
I have a tool that you need - a tracked, powered wheelbarrow ! The best dirt transport ever.
Man that would be sweet
After seeing such a loss from that thermoform sluice, it is still a good idea to buy any dream mat sluice? Or it is just because the sluice needed to be just a little longer ? The thermoform dont look like exactly like the rubber one, that can affect such fine gold? I’m still want to jump at it and leave the gold pan just at the cleanup part but want of course using proper sluices on a multipurpose use! Just sad to see you have to reprocess all the tailing from the stabby trail’s out of your pan!
As I said in the video, I've found grams of gold with that sluice. Reedy Creek gold is extremely difficult to catch. It's not the sluice, it's the ground.
Its looked like the material get liquefied quite fast through this sandy stuff, I have similar deposits up here standing on clayish sandstone, its superfine material, but not enough currents to run a sluice so i stick on production panning. I’m just surprised of the loss and try to figure why, for half a gram its really good it worth comeback and try different methods as comparisons maybe! 🤔 😊
Chris, the content you continually put together is exceptional and very entertaining. #Bunnings,
IHopeTheyGiveYouAsManyBucketsAsYouCanPossiblyCarry
Would it make sense to put your pan under the end of the sluice to catch the tailings and whatever gold the sluice misses? Just pan out whatever is in there when it starts to fill up.
How does GoldHog ur mat go .
Hi Chris, good job bud ,pay dirt would be fun to do, keep it up bad
Its hard dirt to pan!
You need to heap-leach that fine stuff.
Hey Chris, how hot was it during the recording? Looks nice in the shade! About -10c there in Nova Scotia, Canada!👌👍✌
It was around 35c and 70% humidity. Not the most enjoyable
Yeah, that puts things into perspective.
Love it!
🙏❤️🌲
You've found a lot of garnets, Chris!
id love to see what your thoughts on a gold wheel is
Looks like that is pretty neat to just sliuse a bunch of sand and you get a good amount of gold
How about dry washer