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| A hobby worth its weight in gold Robin 'Tinpan' Adair of Goldvein tosses out a rock as he runs dirt from the banks of Contrary Creek through a sluice to separate gold from sediment. The sluice is a metal channel that controls the flow of water, trapping heavier material while allowing lighter substances to pass through.
Richie 'Pirate' Farmer of Prince William County displays a 2-gram 'button' made up of all the gold he's found since he began the hobby six months ago.
No, they're not playing the latest version of a Pokemon card game. These people are the modern-day equivalent of gold prospectors. Pickers, snowflakes and thumbnails are terms they use to describe the size and quality of the gold they find.
The pans are now made of plastic instead of tin, and the sluices--artificial channels used to control the flow of water--are metal instead of wood. But both are still used in the same way to separate specks of gold from the rock and sediment of creek beds and riverbanks. Another difference is that today's prospectors tend to haul their own gear in backpacks or strapped to carts. During a recent trip that I took with a local prospector, I didn't see a single supply- and pickax-laden donkey. Robin "Tinpan" Adair of Goldvein is typical of the modern-day prospector. He thinks of panning as more of a hobby than a path to fame and fortune. "No one is going to get rich out here doing this," he says. "The thrill isn't so much in the finding and the keeping, it's in the hunt, but I'm not opposed to finding an 800-ounce pocket of gold, either."
Down at Contrary Creek, Adair enjoys getting the local kids from Mineral involved in panning, and often lets them use his gear. "I like to make sure that they find a little gold to take back
home," he says, smiling.
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