What's new
  • ICMag with help from Landrace Warden and The Vault is running a NEW contest in November! You can check it here. Prizes are seeds & forum premium access. Come join in!

~Star~Crash~ All & Everything

Loriented

Well-known member
Are most of your shots especially at night sans tripod?
umm, no but a few i used like a cut off gatorade container or a cup big enough to hold the phone sort of like a tripod. or sometimes lay it on a chair to point straight up. but a bunch, like the moon rise with the tree, i just zoomed in and held it still
 

Loriented

Well-known member
And i walked out, and there it was again
1000014594.jpg
 

Lester Beans

Frequent Flyer
Veteran
In the Spring after the frost as kids we used to go out and pick arrowheads out of the fields. The frost would push them up. We would find buckets of them and take them to peddle at the swap meet. I have a bucket of them around here somewhere.

My friend finds very old glass beads in his field once in awhile. Those are really cool. Usually white glass with red or blue stripes. Native American.

We also have a collection of 1000 year old arrowheads and artifacts from the Vikings I acquired from a metal detectorist/collector in Ukraine.

I love metal detecting, antiques and artifacts. It gives us a peak into the last.

It's a blamy 39 degrees today with the Sun working off the frost. Going to be sunny and near 60 today. Then a week of rain.

Morning y'all!
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
they have a law here in TN against collecting native american artifacts on public land, such as national forest or TVA property around all of our reservoirs here in east TN...used to find points while fishing around Cherokee Lake. no longer...a few morons gave the state the excuse they needed by digging pits out on lake bed during draw-downs, and then others drove into them. :rolleyes:
 

laszlokovacs

Well-known member
Looks about right .…..how do you dry it?
Just on parchment on top of shallow cardboard boxes. I had to go out of town till thursday so I'll check on them then. Temp wont go above 54 so I guess it should be pretty similar to just drying in the fridge.

My shoestring budget doesn't let me do things proper this year. I still need a chest freezer and water set up to do fresh frozen properly. Im sure freeze drying is the way to go I just doubt I can buy one anytime soon, I need a job lol.

Anyway for the time being still learning how to make bubble hash this was run #4 or #5 in my lifetime. I still need to collect from the 25 bag but it wont drain properly and may not be worth it. 160>73>45 seemed to work well for me if anything is usable from the 25 bag thats just bonus to me. I only have dried cured material to run now but that shouldnt really matter as its still pretty fresh.

Ill calculate final weight, yield, etc in a couple days. Last year I didnt have enough to run and I've been complacent with flower rosin which is honestly much easier to make. Speaking of I just broke 30% yield on some flower from this year. 1.3g rosin from 4.1g 90u. Reminds of crumble from back in the day.

What micron bags are you pressing the bubble with btw? It looks fantastic
IMG_1022.JPG
 

oldmaninbc

Well-known member
420club
Be kind of cool to actually find an artifact from the past
I use to like taking my young son out and looking through old gold mining camps, it was great fun.
The old timers liked to sit in the outhouse and throw their alcohol bottles in the hole.
They didn't waste things like todays world, garbage dumps were small. But even then there was a class system, management would have finer eating plates etc.

When I lived on the beef ranch they were tilling up their garden and found a beautiful peach colored spear head. The indigenous people would travel up from the US and northerly indigenous people travelled south and met at the area where I lived. They would camp out at the creek and trade items and goods.

If you know where to look and how to look, you find items but they might be broke.

The wife and I went to a historical coal mining area. Where each nationality of people created their own little communities. There had been a flood in the area, the Mrs and I went to investigate. When we got there we found all these old wine bottles floating around that had been buried for a100-150 years. It was kind of neat to see.
 

Latest posts

Latest posts

Top