Blueadventures Posted December 31, 2024 Posted December 31, 2024 Happy New Year for 2025 to all members and enjoy plenty of nice safe flights. 9 1
440032 Posted December 31, 2024 Posted December 31, 2024 Thank you! I was going for an early new year flight myself, but alas, low cloud blowing thru here. 1 1
spacesailor Posted January 1 Posted January 1 Wishing All ! . A prosperous new year 2025 . spaesailor 2
Moneybox Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago On 01/01/2025 at 10:43 AM, facthunter said: No. Being poor is character building. Nev Yeah Nev, I know what you mean. I'm told there are annual fees to park a plane at the local airstrip so I'm looking for another option. Home Airstrip.mp4 My plane is still sitting in the back yard. It seems ever since covid struck everything takes twice as long to be supplied from just about anywhere.
BrendAn Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago 1 hour ago, Moneybox said: Yeah Nev, I know what you mean. I'm told there are annual fees to park a plane at the local airstrip so I'm looking for another option. Home Airstrip.mp4 11.01 MB · 0 downloads My plane is still sitting in the back yard. It seems ever since covid struck everything takes twice as long to be supplied from just about anywhere. Run the dirt you dig up and you might get lucky. I remember a mate saying his mum dug up a big nugget in her garden at sandstone. 2
Moneybox Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 39 minutes ago, BrendAn said: Run the dirt you dig up and you might get lucky. I remember a mate saying his mum dug up a big nugget in her garden at sandstone. Mrs M wants me to run the detector over it all. I'd be there for weeks but I might check out a few really good looking spots. Most of this ground has/had gold. It's a gold mining lease with another nine years to run. I have no doubt the dryblower would pay well but I've sold that and I haven't got the wet plant up and running yet. There's always the risk of some idiot digging holes in the airstrip. 1 1 1
BrendAn Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Moneybox said: Mrs M wants me to run the detector over it all. I'd be there for weeks but I might check out a few really good looking spots. Most of this ground has/had gold. It's a gold mining lease with another nine years to run. I have no doubt the dryblower would pay well but I've sold that and I haven't got the wet plant up and running yet. There's always the risk of some idiot digging holes in the airstrip. having a mining lease would be a dream for me. maybe one day. do you know the story about reedys gold mine out of cue. some drillers i worked with had sample bags too heavy for to lift one nightshift , there was that much gold in them. the digger operator in the same pit was complaining the digger was slow. they had hit almost pure gold. Edited 13 hours ago by BrendAn 1
onetrack Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago When I was gold mining in the Kalgoorlie region in the early 1970's, I was in the Kalgoorlie State Battery one day, when a prospector wheeled in a wheelbarrow full of specimen stone, mostly quartz. There was highly visible gold in every piece of stone you looked at. The stone was too rich to put through the stamps and over the table in the battery, so they just put it through the big Berdan pan, until it was well ground. I recall that he recovered something like 280 ozs of gold, from just that one wheelbarrow full! I got 600 ozs of gold out my small open pit mine at Higginsville, but it took 8 years of Norseman State Battery crushing, and the hauling of 13,000 tonnes of ore 60 kms to Norseman for treatment, to get it! The ore haulage was mostly done with a '68 Perkins-powered, tandem-drive "Butterbox" International ACCO, DF-1840 tipper! - an ex-council truck! The East-West truckies used to curse me, holding them up on the hills, while the old 120HP Perkins ground her way over them loaded, in 2nd or 3rd gear!! The Norseman State Battery manager, "Dick" Della (a top bloke) used to tell me stories of when he worked at the Lake Darlot State Battery as a young bloke - and there were 3 mines in the area that brought in their ore to be crushed, and Dick told me you could see visible gold in every shovelful he picked up. Those 3 mines regularly produced multiple ounces of gold, to the ton of ore. In those early days, there was no hopper at the stamper, the ore was dropped onto a big flat plate alongside the stamps, and the employees picked up the ore with shovels, and shovelled it straight into the stamper boxes! A Kalgoorlie woman, Moya Sharp, has an excellent website (link below) covering the early Goldfields towns and families histories. Darlot - ghost town - Outback Family History WWW.OUTBACKFAMILYHISTORYBLOG.COM Mr L A Wells, a member of the ‘Elder Exploring Expedition of 1891’ discovered Lake Darlot on the 6th March 1892. The Lake was named after Leonard Hawthorn Darlot, pastoralist, one of the three sons of H... 2 1
BrendAn Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 4 minutes ago, onetrack said: When I was gold mining in the Kalgoorlie region in the early 1970's, I was in the Kalgoorlie State Battery one day, when a prospector wheeled in a wheelbarrow full of specimen stone, mostly quartz. There was highly visible gold in every piece of stone you looked at. The stone was too rich to put through the stamps and over the table in the battery, so they just put it through the big Berdan pan, until it was well ground. I recall that he recovered something like 280 ozs of gold, from just that one wheelbarrow full! I got 600 ozs of gold out my small open pit mine at Higginsville, but it took 8 years of Norseman State Battery crushing, and the hauling of 13,000 tonnes of ore 60 kms to Norseman for treatment, to get it! The ore haulage was mostly done with a '68 Perkins-powered, tandem-drive "Butterbox" International ACCO, DF-1840 tipper! - an ex-council truck! The East-West truckies used to curse me, holding them up on the hills, while the old 120HP Perkins ground her way over them loaded, in 2nd or 3rd gear!! The Norseman State Battery manager, "Dick" Della (a top bloke) used to tell me stories of when he worked at the Lake Darlot State Battery as a young bloke - and there were 3 mines in the area that brought in their ore to be crushed, and Dick told me you could see visible gold in every shovelful he picked up. Those 3 mines regularly produced multiple ounces of gold, to the ton of ore. In those early days, there was no hopper at the stamper, the ore was dropped onto a big flat plate alongside the stamps, and the employees picked up the ore with shovels, and shovelled it straight into the stamper boxes! A Kalgoorlie woman, Moya Sharp, has an excellent website (link below) covering the early Goldfields towns and families histories. Darlot - ghost town - Outback Family History WWW.OUTBACKFAMILYHISTORYBLOG.COM Mr L A Wells, a member of the ‘Elder Exploring Expedition of 1891’ discovered Lake Darlot on the 6th March 1892. The Lake was named after Leonard Hawthorn Darlot, pastoralist, one of the three sons of H... Would have been a real adventure for you back then. And a lot of hard work. I drove a road train at chalice gold mine between Norseman and higginsville for a while. 60 km haul road. All onsite with a railway and highway crossing. That mine cost 55 million to set up and not long after it started they dug out one spot so rich that the mine was paid for in 2 days. One thing that got me was how every site I ever worked on had been mined by the old timers 100 years before. 2 1
Moneybox Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago I'm retired so gold prospecting is just a hobby. Mrs M would like me to be a bit more serious about it but there comes a time in life when you realise doing the things you love are much more important than the cost or payment in monetary value. This is Mrs M with our haul from a few months out and about. Right now I'm more interested in getting the plane in the air but with gold at over $4000 an ounce it's tempting to put a bit more energy into it. 3 1
Red Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 7 hours ago, Moneybox said: Yeah Nev, I know what you mean. I'm told there are annual fees to park a plane at the local airstrip so I'm looking for another option. Eh?, were you expecting it to be free? 1
BrendAn Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 4 hours ago, Red said: Eh?, were you expecting it to be free? It is at all 3 airports around here.
spacesailor Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) The only " gold " miner . To get rich was Murphy. The water supplier . spacesailor Edited 3 hours ago by spacesailor Lost a letter 2
Moneybox Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, spacesailor said: The only " gold " miner . To get rich was Murphy. The water supplier . spacesailor Yeah "Murphy's Law" tends to kick in. 1
facthunter Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Nah Suppling the needs of miners is the surer way to find gold. Nev 1 1
Moneybox Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 11 hours ago, BrendAn said: having a mining lease would be a dream for me. maybe one day. do you know the story about reedys gold mine out of cue. some drillers i worked with had sample bags too heavy for to lift one nightshift , there was that much gold in them. the digger operator in the same pit was complaining the digger was slow. they had hit almost pure gold. I've got these couple of Pending leases at Reedy. Just fighting Native Title and Aboriginal Heritage at present. But it was that airstrip that go me interested. Pop up there in the morning, dig a few nuggets and fly home (as long as I'm not over weight) 😉 1 1
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