The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cult following for recreation­al metal detectors makes comeback.

- Alexandra Marvar |

eople have been metal detecting since 1881, when Alexander Graham Bell invented a device to find the bullet lodged in President James Garfield. But it took several more decades for recreation­al metal detectors — devices that resemble “sort of a skillet on the end of a pole,” as one newspaper put it in 1927 — to develop a serious cult following.

Now, that cult following is growing. Detector makers are reporting record sales. According to an annual report from one brand, Minelab, in 2020 the company sold 30% more detectors than the previous year, which had climbed 18% the year before that.

And we are in a bit of a detectoris­t media moment. New York magazine is making listicles of the best metal detector models. Drew Barrymore is giving them away on her show. Teenage sketch comedian Parker James is wielding one before his 6 million Tiktok followers. In England, Carey Mulligan is making it mainstream; on Nantucket, millennial­s are making it fashion; and in the gaming industry, a romantic thriller-meets-metal detecting video game will be released this summer.

While some longtime detectoris­ts relish the hobby’s solitary nature, others have been hungry for more attention. For the past eight years, Michael Bennett, known as “Nugget Noggin,” a 27-yearold gold-prospectin­g enthusiast in Charlotte, North Carolina, has been posting YouTube videos of his finds, which include Mercury dimes, Morgan dollars and Civil War-era musket balls and belt buckles.

At first, no one paid much attention. Today, detectoris­t content creation is his full-time job. “It was kind of tough when I first started,” Bennett said. “When people thought of metal detecting they thought of the old guy on the beach. Now, it’s not just men — women are doing it too, and a lot of people my age.”

Detectoris­t Youtubers and television shows in recent years have helped draw a new audience to the pastime. But more recently, a propelling force of its rising popularity is — you

guessed it — the pandemic. In Saundersto­wn, Rhode Island, this past fall, 150 enthusiast­s paid $125 each to hunt on a local farm that was seeded by the event organizers with 1,500 antique coins valued at some $6,000. It didn’t matter that the coins were planted; social distancing was built in.

Detecting offers a relatively safe and entertaini­ng way to explore backyards from East Hampton to Uruguay. In Britain, amateur treasure hunters have found so many artifacts this year, the British government agency in charge of protecting national archaeolog­ical heritage is being forced to expand its definition of “treasure.”

For treasure or pleasure

A metal detector offers many possibilit­ies — reconnecti­ng with memories of childhood or an escape from the din of our devices, among them — but the biggest draw is the chance of stumbling upon untold wealth.

The hobby’s most significan­t victories are not only unpredicta­ble but, at a glance, relatively indiscrimi­nate. Take the British driver who, this past October, located an “outstandin­gly rare” Celtic chieftain’s chariot brooch in a neighbor’s field, which he then sold for 55,000 pounds; or the 10-year-old in Ireland who found a centuries-old sword hilt on his first-ever detecting outing, just down the street from his home.

Perhaps these detectoris­ts were inspired by those who came before them: the 59-year-old beachcombe­r who, in 1959, found $1 million worth of buried Spanish gold near his home in Sebastian, Florida, or the pair of Vermonters who in 1957 hit it rich when they detected the country’s richest deposit of vital tungsten ore.

But while success may appear random, there is skill involved, as Chris Turner, the former pro soccer player and current Hollywood stand-in and detectoris­t, knows well. Turner, 61, relies on nearly 50 years of experience to help people find precious items that have gone missing.

In 2009, with the support of an anonymous angel investor in Illinois, Turner turned his one-man service in Vancouver, British Columbia, into a 23-country internatio­nal directory of hundreds of metal detectoris­ts: Theringfin­ders.com.

Prospectiv­e Ring Finders undergo an applicatio­n process, and are vetted by Turner about everything from their detecting experience and their familiarit­y with local laws, to their ethics, intentions and client management skills.

Most members of the directory operate on a rewardsonl­y basis, as does Turner. “That could be a loaf of homemade banana bread to $2,500,” he said. “But there is no reward greater than uniting someone with their lost heirloom.”

According to Turner, the Ring Finders network located 50% more lost rings over the past year than in any other year since the website was created in 2009.

Coil to the soil

One detectoris­t-for-hire in the Ring Finders network is Woodrow Engle, 37, a video game designer who took up detecting two years ago as a way to spend more time outdoors. He covers his home region of Sonoma and Marin counties in California.

Engle said he’s been on 20 or so recovery missions and recovered missing items about half the time. For one recent job, he accepted a half-dozen freshly laid eggs as a reward; for another, $500 in cash.

While metal detecting fits neatly into the category of “those ‘old people’ hobbies that you’re supposed to pick up once you’re retired,” Engle said, he has noticed a wave of relative newcomers, many of whom are of a certain age: “They’re all this sub-generation they call the Oregon Trail generation that had a analog childhood but a digital adulthood, so they’re really interested in cool, older stuff — maybe they had a coin collection when they were kids — but they’re not afraid to adopt new technology, and they can figure out how to use advanced machines, like these new detectors that are coming out.”

Ryson Zettlemoye­r, a 36-year-old gem cutter, handyman and detectoris­t operating near Eureka, California, agrees that the pastime is growing in popularity and it’s no wonder, he said. According to Zettlemoye­r, there are thousands of documented buried “major treasures” in the United States yet to be found, just from the 1800s alone. His Ring Finder profile notes that he charges a commission on “caches and hoards” of gold treasure.

In the 1930s, thousands of banks closed their doors, while at the same time, the federal government passed an act to seize citizens’ gold. “A lot of people who had gold buried it — and a lot of that stuff is still out there,” Zettlemoye­r said.

For one recent commission, he searched for two days and located a Mason jar buried a foot deep containing several gold bullions, and two 1-ounce gold bars.

“That’s a family’s inheritanc­e,” he said. “So they call people like me to come out and find it.”

Detectors can range from a couple hundred dollars to upward of $5,000. A popular pick for experts is the Frenchmade XP Deus ($949), and for kids, the Nokta Makro Mini Hoard ($120).

Detectoris­ts may also carry headphones, a metal detecting shovel, hand tools such as a hori-hori (a serrated, steel hand shovel), a “finds pouch,” and a hand-held precision detector called a pinpointer.

More expensive equipment tends to be lighter weight and more precise. That means the pricier the detector, the better chance you’ll have of distinguis­hing tinfoil or canslaw (the detectoris­t term for soda can metal that has been shredded by lawn mowers) from gold bullions.

Attire may include a tool belt, gloves (“You’d be amazed how much glass there is in the ground,” one

detectoris­t warned) and the occasional themed T-shirt (“I’m a Swinger”; “Can I Metal Detect Your Yard?”; or “Coil to the Soil”).

Digging up trouble?

Especially in less-traveled spots, it’s not unusual for a detectoris­t to dig up trouble: This spring, a local bomb squad was called to respond when a 17-year-old uncovered a World War II land mine in his British village.

In Virginia, sheriff ’s deputies were called to the scene when a group of children detected their way to a 150-year-old Union Army cannonball that could have contained explosive black powder. And this past summer, Bennett said he found a “live grenade” in a river. (I have a video on that,” he said. “It’s called ‘You Won’t BELIEVE What I Found in the River.’”)

And, as these activities draw more participan­ts, more historical objects are being found, which can lead to trouble of another kind.

In France, where metal detecting is illegal, authoritie­s recently seized thousands of Roman coins and other artifacts from a detectoris­t who had claimed he found the booty in Belgium. Welsh police are currently searching for people who illegally dug up the grounds of a medieval castle. On the outskirts of London, more than 100 holes “typical of metal detecting behavior” have suddenly appeared near the Magna Carta memorial site.

In Britain, digging, scraping or detecting without a permit is forbidden by law. (Happily, this doesn’t impede mudlarking: a surface-only treasure-hunting practice especially popular on the banks of the Thames.)

In the United States, federal parks and monuments forbid metal detectors; at state parks, detectoris­ts may require special permission. Otherwise, metal detectoris­ts are bound largely by etiquette. As the hobby grows, seasoned veterans plead with newcomers to leave historic sites undisturbe­d.

Navigating the laws, environmen­tal impacts and archaeolog­ical concerns means that being a detectoris­t comes with a complex ethical responsibi­lity, said Nikoline Bohr, 32, an artist in Nantucket, Massachuse­tts.“when an item is removed from the ground, it loses all context and also its historic value,” she said. If artifacts “are cataloged and made available for research, they can still contribute to our understand­ing of the past.”

 ?? MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Artifacts, including a large 1822 cent piece and a lead toy sheep, were recovered May 17 by Nikoline Bohr in Nantucket. Members of the Ring Finders network are volunteers who can be called upon to find lost items, often on a rewards-only basis.
MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Artifacts, including a large 1822 cent piece and a lead toy sheep, were recovered May 17 by Nikoline Bohr in Nantucket. Members of the Ring Finders network are volunteers who can be called upon to find lost items, often on a rewards-only basis.
 ?? MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nikoline Bohr, 32, a member of the Ring Finders network, uses her metal detector on a beach near the Brant Point Lighthouse in Nantucket, Mass. As an old hobby draws new followers, metal detectors are sweeping the country.
MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Nikoline Bohr, 32, a member of the Ring Finders network, uses her metal detector on a beach near the Brant Point Lighthouse in Nantucket, Mass. As an old hobby draws new followers, metal detectors are sweeping the country.
 ?? MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Nikoline Bohr, an artist and member of the Ring Finders network, uses her metal detector on a beach in Nantucket, Mass., on May 17.
MADDIE MALHOTRA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Nikoline Bohr, an artist and member of the Ring Finders network, uses her metal detector on a beach in Nantucket, Mass., on May 17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States