Panning Gold: Where the Heck is "Where You Find It" Located?
Sure gold is "where you find it". Anyone even thinking about
taking up prospecting has heard that one. It's probably the most
frustrating answer any beginning prospector ever hears when
asking where to look for gold. Where the heck exactly is "where
you find it" located and why do people keep telling you that?
While that answer is a bit frustrating for the beginner there is
a lot of truth in it. Gold can turn up in some pretty unusual
places. Sometimes it has been sprinkled through areas by ancient
glaciers or waterways. There are stories of people finding gold
and thinking they had found a place to stake a claim, to
discover later that they had only found the remnants of some
unfortunate prospector's lost cache. Trains and carts being
wrecked while hauling gold to smelters have spilled loads of ore
which might be found later in the streams downhill.
While you might run into bits of gold scattered by such events,
you might also appreciate a word of where you might be more
statistically inclined to make an actual strike of some good
concentrations of "color". It's really not as mysterious as it
has been made to sound.
When you get to a gold bearing region you must choose a spot to
hunt. Your main concern is that you are not hunting on someone
else's property or claim. There are places you can still be shot
for this, and some places where the claim owners take this right
very seriously, so always make sure you know you are not "claim
jumping" before you dig in.
The best place for the beginner to start is where you know that
there are mines or claims uphill and upstream from your chosen
location. Gold will wash downhill into a stream over time. If
you can find a spot where a stream flowing downhill from known
gold localities converges with the stream you are going to hunt,
this is a terrific place to start.
Gold is heavy. It can be carried by a rapid current, but when
the current slows down, the gold will drop to the creek bed.
Start by hunting down stream from a converging creek or area of
color uphill from you. Look for spots in the creek where fast
moving water is impeded or slows down. The base of a small
waterfall is always worth checking as are areas where the
current is diverted by large rocks. Bends of the creek where
water rushes in the middle but slows along the shore of the bend
are another good area. Don't be afraid to be creative. I know a
man that swept a year's living expense worth of gold from an old
corrugated pipe that ran under a road where a creek passed
through. The grooves of the pipe had served as a sluice to catch
the grains and nuggets.
When panning, you will want to dig a bit rather than just scoop
from the top dirt. You might find some traces of color just
scooping the top of the creek bed, but because of its weight,
gold will work it's way down until it eventually hits something
that prevents it from going any further. The smaller the grain
or the more recently it has been dropped, the closer to the
surface you might find it. The deeper you dig, the more you will
find if you are searching a good area. Cracks and crevices in
rock are also a great place to find grains of gold, but you may
need special suction equipment to get it out. There are items
you can buy very inexpensively that will help you do that.
Just as there are the right places to look for gold, there are
also the right times of year. You will want to wait until late
summer or early autumn which is when the streams are at their
lowest and slowest. A good plan is to go look the creek over
during it's high season and take notes of the currents when the
water is high. Returning later during the low season, you will
already have an idea of good places to look for gold that has
been spilled by the full spring currents.
Through practice you will soon become able to size up good spots
on a creek to pan. When you take your cache and proudly show it
off, if someone asks you where you got it, you can just smile
and say "it was right where I found it".