[Rockhounds] St. Maries, ID
Tim
nospam at orerockon.com
Sun Jul 19 13:27:11 PDT 2009
It's going to move from 281 Gulch in the near future (if it hasn't already)
to Garnet Gulch, so 281, No Name, and Pee Wee Gulch will be reclaimed and
never mined again. From what I have been told Emerald never had the quantity
of big quality six ray stars we used to dig in 281 when we lived in Moscow.
Remember they open at 9 AM and they have a 170 person limit, if you are the
171st you won't get in for the day (no they don't wait for people to leave).
The permit is $10 pp. Our fossil club is heading for the snowmobile
racetrack in August so I might just surprise you and show up! Is your guest
bedroom in the outhouse?
You might want to print this out :
http://www.fs.fed.us/ipnf/rec/activities/garnets/garnet_area_brochure.pdf
Tim Fisher
Ore-ROCK-On!
Email address at http://OreRockOn.com
-----Original Message-----
From: rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com
[mailto:rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com] On Behalf Of Lanny R
Sent: Sunday, July 19, 2009 9:19 AM
To: Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem collectors
Subject: Re: [Rockhounds] St. Maries, ID
Hi Jim,
As John wrote, the Emerald Creek star garnet location is well run by
FS and a fun place to spend the day. There is information on the FS
web site that should answer most of your questions:
http://www.fs.fed.us/ipnf/rec/activities/garnets/
The location is open from Friday through Tuesday, so plan your travel
time accordingly. The site is in the woods, but as John suggested,
bring plenty of water, the work area is in a clearing out in the sun,
and today it is going to be 96 degrees here in Coeur d'Alene, so
expect temperatures from 85 to low 90s anytime up there in July and
August (or it might be in the 60 or 70s and with some rain).
The location is easily accessible on a gravel road, there is a nice
campground in the forest nearby. All tools are furnished, but that
frame with legs to hold the screen suggested by John could be a big
help. Some people do find that shaking the coarse material through the
hand-held screen is back breaking work. The method is as follows: The
garnet-bearing gravels are dug out of one area of one of the creeks
(might be the one the site is presently on or might not be) and
trucked to and dumped at the work site. You shovel this into a bucket
and carry it to a spot where you can stand or sit (on a block of wood)
and screen the coarse material out of the dirt and dump the fines in
another bucket.
After you screen out the coarse material, you take your bucket of
fines to one of two troughs of flowing water and wash and screen out
the silt and clay. Then you sort through the material in the screen
and pick out the garnets.
It's a popular activity, and last year when I took my grandson, about
70 people were there.
If this and the FS web site doesn't answer your questions, ask on this
list, others might want to know the answers, or ask John or I with a
pm if you have a question you don't want to air in public.
Definitely put this in your plans.
Regards,
Lanny
On Jul 19, 2009, at 5:31 AM, Jim Daly wrote:
>
> We're currently driving from Indiana to Spokane, WA. I noticed that
> the route takes us near the locality for garnets at St. Maries.
> Does anyone have any details on this locality?
> Jim Daly
>
>
>
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