I used a bounty hunter to detect the story of a small coin

I work four days a week on weekdays, and on the remaining three days I go to several beaches in the southeast Florida. From the South Gate of a park in Deerfield Beach, it is heading south, which is the entrance to Fort Lauderdale Beach.

Beginning in April, my wife and I got up early. I took my bounty hunter and my wife and headed to the beach until darkness came home. We sit on benches and enjoy coffee while watching the sunset.

I took out my bounty hunter and opened the camera to the beach. One morning I spent all my time looking for metal materials. At 9:30 the tide went up, and I decided to go to the edge of the wet beach. I found a small, tiny quarter of a dime. I listened to the sound as I scanned and scanned the seaweed. I moved the algae aside and then scanned the ground again, then removed my feet and I put my shovel on the ground. My exploration disk, no, the metal detector was working properly. I moved the detector back and forth to scan the seagrass. The detector sounded. I picked up the seagrass and wondered if it was a coin. Seaweed is a tennis-sized object, coins may be stuck inside, and the detector beeps. I took a hard look and found that there was nothing inside, but the detector still kept ringing. Then I found out that I had a 1956 coin stuck in the middle. Even more shocking is that this is a penny.

It took me a whole day to spend that penny, but for me this day is more meaningful than any other day.

My current job is working 4 days a week. One of the 3 days off I try and hit up one of several beaches here in Southeast Florida. From South Inlet Park in Deerfield Beach all the way down to South Ft. Lauderdale beach by the port Entry.

In the beginning of April the wife and I got up before sunrise and I grabbed my Bounty Hunter Tracker IV and the wife and headed for the beach. We got there it was still dark so we sat on a bench and drank our coffee and watched the Sunrise.

I snatched up my Tracker IV and my Garrett pinpointer pro and headed off down the beach. Pretty much most of the morning was spent finding modern clad, but I was up around $8.00 so not too bad. Tide was low around 9:30 so I Decided to walk the tide line. I was finding the usual dimes and quarters... then as was scanning exceeding some seaweed I got a solid penny tone. I moved the seaweed aside and rescanned the ground and my tone was gone. Hmmmmm. I am looking up the seaweed expecting to see a coin under it and nothing. The seaweed was a Clump about the size of a tennis ball so held it to the coil. “BEEP”. Hmmm .. I felt through the clump and felt nothing. Whipped out the pinponter Pro and beep. Somewhere in the middle of that ball was a 1956D Wheat. Penny. I was astounded. Even more astounding was the condition of the penny. (See photo)

That penny made my whole day. Worth more to me than all the other clad I had that day.

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