Kentucky Fluorite, Agate, and Geodes in September

A few months back, some of my rockhound friends from all over the country, suggested to me that we should make a run to south central Kentucky for some geodes, so I began looking at my calendar and seeing when I could fit a trip in for a week, and came up with a plan to start out with a public dig at the Eureka Mine in western Kentucky at Marion, then drive over to the Danville area and hunt for agate and geodes in the same area. I decided on September since I seem to be the only one that takes vacations in the fall where I work at and made the suggestion to the others.
They were all bent on going to the Keokuk Geodefest until I did some research and found a couple of farms in the Eubank area that had lots of geodes in all sizes to pick from. I was also able to arrange an agate hunt with a state renowned agate master in the area with several years of experience of successful hunts for nice looking Kentucky agate. After announcing those plans, they all decided to drop their plans to attend the Geodefest and concentrate instead on agate and geodes in Kentucky.
I posted our intentions on the McRocks board and had a few extra people express an interest in joining us. Brian Danzer is a research biologist in the Chicago area and he decided to drive down and join me at the Eureka Mine in Marion on Saturday morning, September 24th. He started his drive at midnight, while Missy and I got up at 3 am and headed toward Marion…we were met with a nice sunrise just west of Eddyville….
1 Sunrise Approaching Eddyville
…we made a quick pit stop at Ms Neda`s Donut Shop there and then headed on to the museum to get registered and meet up with the other diggers. As it was, I arrived at the museum just ahead of Brian and we were able to chat a few minutes before several others started arriving.  A few minutes later, two guys from Pennsylvania showed up, Nick and Pete, having made  a sixteen hour drive down to dig for beautiful purple fluorite cubes…cant say as I blame them. Soon after, Bill Frazer showed up and opened the doors and we all went inside to register and tour the museum. I never get tired of looking at the fantastic collection of crystals and cubes in the museum, a lifetime of collection by Mr. Clement and passed on to his son Ed, who allows all of us to enjoy and admire the beautiful specimens as well. It also inspires and motivates one to go out and look for something similar in the mine as well.
Soon enough we were driving out to the Eureka Mine after Bill gave a talk on safety and what to look for, as well as the hazards of mud and falls…and we began to dig in the thick oozy mud, resulting from three prior days of rainfall there. I decided to dig down next to a deep hole, now filled with that oozy mud, and see if I could locate the vein and hunt from there…Brian decided to dig a couple feet from me, and Nick and Pete were a few feet away as well, Pete around the corner from us and after letting Nick know he was standing on top of a saddle lined with pockets, he wasted no time in digging down to it and hunting for cubes.  I didnt take my camera down there with me, due to the very muddy and slick conditions, but I do have photos of what I found and will post them later in here. We started out digging in a light rain which after a few hours, gave way to sunny skies that warmed up quickly. Within minutes of digging down in the sloppy mud, I was able to find the vein about ten inches down and carved out a nice sized hole to start in soon after.  Brian started finding little clusters and cubes in his hole right away, and eventually as he dug deeper, he started finding medium and then larger clusters and cubes as well. I was pulling out a lot of clear chunks, and a few small clusters, and it continued that way all morning til I struck the bottom plate of the vein…Nick was finding pockets of cubes similar to those that Bruce S had encountered when he dug into the saddle earlier this year. I`m pretty sure Nick went home a very happy guy. I never did see what Pete found around the other side but he seemed pretty happy when we parted ways later that afternoon.
I wound up trying to pry my bottomplate out but it wouldnt budge, attached way too firmly to the base of the pocket and solid rock, so I wound up chipping out two football sized chunks instead. I could see the outline of cubes on both pieces and was confident I had some nice stuff.
One of the Vein Chunks
After five hours, Brian and I decided to call it a day as we still had to drive three hours east to Danville. We cleaned up and bid goodbyes to everyone and headed south to Princeton to gas up, and then east on the Parkway to Danville.  I was a bit amazed at the price of gasoline down there…when I filled up at St Louis County that morning, it was 2.93 a gallon and when I stopped in Princeton, it was still 3.49 a gallon. Yikes !! 
I did have a pretty good load of rocks with me when I left Missouri though, bringing some nice poker chip and druse combos to Debra and Denise from Indy, and gave some to Brian as well…I also donated some nice Arkansas quartz plates and druse quartz to the museum, to help them further their cause and continue to provide rockhounds a great place to dig and hunt at. I`m sure that is what was eating up my gas mileage this trip, as I normally get about 25 mpg with my Tonka truck. 🙂
As Brian and I approached the turnoff south to Harrodsburg from the Parkway, I looked back in my rearview mirror and saw a nice sunset…since I couldn`t find a nice place to shoot in front of it, I decided to try for a mirror shot instead…
2 Brian Follows Me to Danville
….but then as it was, soon after turning south on Hwy 127, it turned out the sunset just hung up in the sky and I was able to shoot a horse farm in front of the setting sun….
3 Sunsets Near Harrodsburg
…we arrived a few minutes later in Danville and Brian decided he was too tired after drinking six redbulls, to go eat and just wanted to find his hotel and get some good rest…so I drove over to Cracker Barrel and met a couple of friends there and had a good dinner.  I was tired, but I was hungry too…gotta take care of your priorities. 🙂
After dinner Missy and I followed my good friend John to his home in Stanford, where I crashed shortly after for the night.  I slept soundly and got up about 7 am,  and drove over to McDonalds Restaurant to meet up with Brian…we then drove to Irvine, passing through Lancaster, where I shot this pretty sunrise….
4 Sunrise Sunday at Lancaster
6 Sunrises S of Lancaster
We arrived at the Hardees Restaurant in West Irvine about 8:15 am, scheduled to meet everyone there at 9 am and then carpool to the Agate Hunt locations.  Debra and Denise were already there when we arrived and we soon joined them inside as they were getting something to eat.  We talked about our adventures at the Eureka Mine the day before as we waited for the others to join us…Josh from Richmond, Kentucky, Peggy from South Carolina, and met up with our guide for the agate hunt, Lamon Flynn, from Irvine, Kentucky, the heart of Estill County and Agate Country.
Mr Flynn came in after the others arrived and introduced us to a couple from Michigan who drove down to join us, and his wife, Rebecca,  as well. I had talked with her several times by phone in setting the agate hunt up and it was nice to finally meet her as well. We had some breakfast and then drove over to the Fairgrounds parking lot and narrowed down to three vehicles from several. Mr. Flynn stated the road we were going to was narrow and parking would be at a premium…I opted to take my truck since I had Missy with me, and Brian rode with me, Josh took his truck, and several piled in with Peggy in her Suburban.
We drove south on Hwy 89 to a valley and turned off the highway and drove down a country road, down through the valley, crossing the creek several times….
13 Drive Out Thru Creekbed
….now this was my idea of fun driving on country roads….and finally arrived at our destination…a logging operation with a lot of dirt clearing around it, next to the creek….we parked, removed our buckets, bags and tools…then Mr. Flynn showed us what to look for….and how to chip the corner of them to reveal the inside colors….
9 Mr Flynn Tells Us What To Look For
10 Peggy Attempts To Chip
…..we fanned out to search all around, some going up the road, some going to the creek, some of us to the dirt around the logs, looking for the elusive Kentucky agate….
7 Looking For Agates Near Irvine
….Debra, Denise, Brian, and I wandered around the logs and up into a clearing above the logs….
8 Searching Clearing For Agates
….I found the first one, a half geode of green and blue banded agate, and naturally had to let everyone know with a loud ” EUREKA ” …. and as it turned out, the area we were hunting in was right where Mr. Flynn started finding the black and red banded agates the previous year….and some of the pretty orange and black banded agates too.

 

 

Blue and Green Agate I Found

…we looked all morning there, finding a few small odds and ends, but nothing big and obvious…so packed up and relocated downstream to another location after a few more creek crossings that looked like this much of the time….
14 Drive Out Bumpy
Brian spotted a red geode as we were driving out, so I pulled over and he got down in the creek to pick it up….
12 Brian Spots One in Creek
…we parked in a field at the top of the hill, above the creek, and then walked down through a field to get to the creek…private land that Mr. Flynn has access to…he explained to us that we were really there at a bad time of year, due to the leaves being down and making it hard to see good agate rocks. He stated it was better to come hunt in March or April…easier to find things then…specially in the creeks…the drive in and out was fun, specially that one spot where we drove a quarter mile down the creekbed alone. 🙂
Here Denise looks happy in the creek with one of her finds….
16 Denise Inspects Potential Agate
17 Denise Happy With Find in Creek
..as Mr. Flynn and Josh walk along behind her coming back the other way….we walked as far as we could…
19 Searching Creek Bed
coming upon a beaver dam that was as wide as the creek and prevented us from going any further….
18 Wide Beaver Dam
so at that point, we decided to drive over to Mr. Flynn`s home and take a look at his vast collection of Kentucky Agate and his jewelry with agate as well….little did we know we were in for a REAL TREAT !!!  
here he is showing us some of his beautiful agates….
30 Mr Flynn With Some of HIs Agates
32 Mr Flynn With a Orange and Blk Agate
33 Agates Mr Flynn Has Found
….and some of his beautiful horses as well….
34 Mr Flynns Horses
44 New Colt With Mare
..and here Denise shows one of the agates she likes….
35 Denise Displays Another Agate
….and Josh shows off a red and black banded agate…..
36 Josh Displays An Agate
….and here Debra shows off one in the sunlight….
38 Debra Displays Red & Blk Agate
…and here she is going through the discard pile…Mr. Flynn allowed us to go through this pile and take anything we liked the looks of….I found a couple of nice agates in there…
39 Debra Goes Thru Selection Garden
Mr. Flynn then showed us some of his prized agates, the black and red banded agates and the orange and black banded agates….
40 One of His Prized Agates
….and here are some photos of his jewelry as well….again with Kentucky agates….
46 Debra Displays An Agate Pendant
….an agate pendant, and here is the other side of it….
47 Other Side of Pendant
….and an agate ring…..
48 An Agate Ring
….and a  Case Knife Handle…..one side shown….
49 Agate Handle Case Knife
….and here is the other side shown….
50 Other Side Knife Handle
….and belt buckles golore…..
51 Belt Buckle
52 Belt Buckle
54 Belt Buckle
55 Dragon Belt Buckle
….the one above the dragons head buckle…..
56 Belt Buckle
Needless to say, we enjoyed our day with Mr. Flynn hunting for agate and enjoying his collection of agate and jewelry as well….
We drove back to the Fairgrounds Parking Lot to retrieve our vehicles, some had to head home and some were returning to the creek to look for more agates. I had brought some Missouri druse and poker chips with me, as well as some Eureka Fluorite, so gave that to anyone who wanted some, and gave Debra and Denise some nice clusters from one of the Amazing Pockets Docia and I had discovered earlier this year.  Mr. Flynn collected a few pieces for his nephew who  also collects rocks and minerals, and gave me a few more agates that he had found recently on some hunting trips.  Debra and Denise headed home to Indy while Brian and I headed back to Danville for a nice dinner and rest. We made plans to meet Peggy at Stanford the next morning at 9 am to go geode hunting in Eubank.
Peggy was running a little late the next morning, we had decided to sleep in a bit…I was sleeping so well that I dozed right through a tornado siren located just a block from John`s house about 6 am…Brian heard the tornado sirens in Danville though…and Peggy spotted a wall cloud as she drove to Stanford from Berea….it was raining steady when she arrived at McDonalds there and we headed south on Hwy 27 to Eubank shortly afterward.  I called Sharon at the farm to see how the weather was there and let her know we were on the way, and her husband, Richard,  said it was sprinkling but hoped it would clear soon. We arrived about twenty minutes later and saw geodes in the driveway as we drove up the hill into the farm, parking by the corrals on the right side of the drive. He met us as we got out of our vehicles and pointed out a pile of dirt and manure in front of us and told us there were several geodes in it if we wanted to check them out first. So we pulled a few out and took them up to one of the covered corrals and cracked them open…a couple were beach ball sized and were full of narrow pockets of pinkish/orange colored quartz crystals…the weight of them was a fooler though…we thought they were solids and turned out they were not, quite a surprise.  After cracking a few of them open, we decided to get our rain gear on and head up to the fields, after he and Sharon moved the mares to another field for us….
57 Kaleidoscope Farm near Eubank
….it was still raining, from light showers to heavy downpours at times…and muddy as could be in some places…but there were definitely geodes all over the place and full of pretty crystals too. A little rain never hurt no one, certainly not a rockhound.
In the photo above, there are three fields between the road and the barn up on the hill…the field where that barn is located is a much larger field, a few hundred acres, and we didnt get that far that morning. We did search the three smaller fields and found and cracked open and took home, many geodes from those three fields…many with smokey quartz crystals inside them…some with lavendar or amethyst colored crystals, some with large cacite crystals inside them…..here is a photo of Brian with one he cracked open….
59 Brian Holds Geode Halves
….and the two halves up closer…..
60 Geodes Brian is Holding

…the rain, rain, go away chant didnt work at all that day….but soon after we returned to Stanford, the skies did clear off and the sun came out to stay….Brian headed south from there and drove to Asheville, North Carolina, to meet up the next day with a South Carolina friend of his and they went to the Diamond Hill Quartz Mine near Anderson, South Carolina…Peggy returned to Berea to do some shopping, and then home the next day….I returned to Stanford to photograph some horses for a friend….and a good steak dinner at Applebees that evening with local friends.

The next day, John and I drove south to Lake Cumberland…he had a nice painting of an old grist mill hanging in his house, turned out to be a restored mill down on the south shores of Lake Cumberland…I have always been fascinated by old water mills and so we drove down there so I could photograph it…Mill Springs Mill, which dates back to 1834 and is a two story grist mill that was completely restored and still grinds flour and corn today on the weekends from Memorial Day to Labor Day…

63 Mill Springs Mill

..it sits down in a beautiful hollow surrounded by lush vegetation and flowers on one side, and spring fed waterfalls on the up hill side….

 

65 Waterfall At Mill Spring Mill

 

66 Waterfalls At Mill Spring Mill

…located near the back of the mill, which is even more interesting looking than the front side to me…nice stone steps and stone columns supporting the heavy timber construction, are more visible…….

 

67 Back Side of Mill With Wheel

…along with the heavy steel forty foot high water wheel that powers the grinding stones inside the structure of the mill….

 

68 Large Metal Wheel

We headed back toward Stanford and John took me through Halls Gap, which has changed alot since I was down there the last time…the road is better for one thing, but its still a narrow gap, made even narrower by the rock walls and amount of vegetation that seems to close in on you from both sides…he also took me up to the old road, old Hwy 27, that travels up Halls Gap in a windy manner to a neat overlook near the top, where one can see for fifteen miles……

 

 

61 View From Halls Gap Overlook

…to the north and northeast….high points in Danville can be seen from here and the red water towers in the upper right hand corner of the photos are in the town of Lancaster, which is 12 miles northeast of Stanford and 15 miles northeast of this overlook….

62 15 Mile View From Halls Gap Overlook

 

 

From here, we drove east into the countryside and John took me by a few tobacco farms, which was being harvested this time of year by the farmers…..

 

69 Harvesting Tobacco

..and took me over to a neat Amish farm where the folks there grow all sorts of veggies and pumpkins and flowers in a couple of big greenhouses…however they have no electricity in their modern looking homes, nor do they have a phone in the home…its in a phone shed halfway down the driveway….I suppose their home is much quieter because of it, but in case of an emergency, that is a long ways to run to get to a phone….

72B  Amish Farm Phone House

 

 

…and they have corn shocks standing alongside the road as well….

 

 

73 Amish Corn Shocks

…we drove on over to the house where the greenhouses were located, no electric there either, and saw a mass of pumpkins and gourds sitting outside that were recently harvested….

 

 

74 Amish Grown Pumpkins

The next day, we drove back down to Lake Cumberland to meet up with a buddy of mine, who also enjoys old mills and we visited Mill Springs Mill again…on the way down, as we approached Halls Gap on New Hwy 27, we were passed by several police cars and a rescue truck, there was a bad motor vehicle accident on the hill up Halls Gap, so we again took Old Hwy 27 and went around it to continue south….

 

 

75 Bad MVA Halls Gap Hill

Later that evening, I captured some nice sunbeams in Stanford before heading to dinner with friends again….

 

 

76 Sunbeams Outside Johns House

 

 

77 Sunbeams on Johns Street

…we enjoyed a nice Angus steakburger at Eddie Montgomery`s log built restaurant in Harrodsburg….

 

 

78 Dinner Wed Nite Eddie Montgomerys

I should say a massive log structure, two stories high, with a beautiful interior containing a restaurant on the right side where all the glass windows can be seen, a stage in the middle, and a bar on the far side, with a large foyer entrance under those huge columns you see on the left…apparently he is a country western singer from the local area and he built a restaurant there last year…great place to eat with delicious food and we happened to be there on Kareoke night, so had some entertainment as well.

The next morning, Missy and I bid farewell to John and headed home…passing by some pretty horse farms north of Danville….

 

79 Horse Farm near Harrodsburg

We had to detour through Jeffersontown on the way home to cross the Ohio River, as the bridges over I-64 are shut down for safety reasons, a major crack discovered in a load bearing beam last month, so traffic is now re-routed across I-65 and then you take I-265 back over to I-64 north of New Albany to continue westbound. I decided to stop and check out a beautiful old railroad bridge along the way, it has a great stonework support structure under it and waterfalls in the Ohio River underneath it….

80 Falls of the Ohio Bridge

 

 

Its called the Falls of the Ohio Bridge, this view taken looking south to the Kentucky side from the Indiana side…

82 Falls of the Ohio Bridge West Side

 

 

and this one from the west side looking across to the city of Louisville….there are also fossil beds located down by the river and the falls….

 

83 Good Advice

 

…with some good advice posted near the bridge for those that want to walk down and admire the fossils…heed the advice and dont become a fossil yourself….

 

 

85 Falls of the Ohio Bridge Support

this is the support structure on the north side of the bridge, looks like a little castle type building…

 

 

86 Bridge Support North Side

with some neat doorways and windows in it….

 

 

87 Bridge Support High Window

and as I was leaving, to head west and home, I was lucky enough to spot a CSX train motoring south across the bridge….

89 CSX Train Crosses Bridge

 

 

I drove on down the river to find Spring Street to make my way back to I-65 and came upon these murals painted on the floodwall….

90 Flood Wall Mural

 

 

 

91 Flood Wall Mural

and took one last look at Louisville`s skyline before heading home…

 

 

92 Skyline of Louisville and Ohio River

..the next bridge I photographed was four hours later as I crossed the Mississippi River into St Louis….the historic Eads Bridge….

 

 

93 Eads Bridge and Mississippi River

The following photos are some of the geodes I collected at the Kaleidoscope Farm in Eubank….Sharon welcomes anyone to come down and take home as many as you want…they get a new bumper crop each year…just give them a call and make the arrangements with them, and they welcome groups as well.

 

 

Geodes Dont Always Crack Like You Want Them to

 

Litter of Geodes Found

 

Smokey Quartz Crystals

 

Some of My Finds Eubank Farm

 

and….

Some of My Finds

 

 

and that wraps up my Kentucky trip this fall…hope you enjoyed it as much as I did. 🙂

 

 

Clement Museum Group Dig April 2010

I came back from a dig two weeks ago and on the way home, I began to feel like I was coming down with something… something that felt like a sore throat,  so I stopped at a truck stop on my way home and picked up a bottle of Robitussin cough syrup…thats usually the only non prescription stuff that seems to work on me. Once I arrived home it felt like cold and sinus pressure coming on, so I got the hydrogen peroxide out and put a few drops in my ears, that usually takes care of things for me if I can catch it soon enough…well this time I didnt catch it soon enough and it blossomed into a full blown cold within a day or two…so bad at work that others said I sounded rough on the radio and Tuesday night I actually wound up going home about midnight…….in all honesty, I felt pretty good when I started that night but felt myself deteriorating and my supervisor told me to go home and get better, so I did…went home that is…the get better part took longer to accomplish….in this day of better technology and medicines, one would think that there would be something out there that one can take and get over a cold much faster, like in one day at the very most….not….we are just spoiled these days I guess.

By Thursday, I had firmly started on some allergy/cold medicine and decided to drive back down to Kentucky and help the newcomers find some great fluorite, so I took off mid morning and by 10 am when I stopped to gas up in Festus, the sinus pressure was so bad I felt like I was driving under the influence…had to hold on to the side of my truck for balance… and prayed that if I got pulled over, the police officer would have a clue what sinus pressure was like and how it made one feel…..I had drank some black tea for the caffeine to keep me alert for the five hour drive down there, but in this case, prob mixing with the cough syrup, it gave me even more pressure and one terrible headache as well.

After filling up the gas tank on a great price, 2.49 a gallon, I started south on 55 and began drinking copious amounts of bottled water and a couple of tylenols for my headache. Within twenty minutes I felt the pressure start to subside and the headache dissipating as well. By the time I drove thru Cape two hours later I was feeling much better and continued south, hoping the pressure was gone for good.

I arrived at the museum about 2:30 and visited with Tina for about thirty minutes and then headed over to check in at the Relax Inn in Kuttawa next to Interstate 24.

The next morning I headed over to the museum to meet up with everyone with the McRocks Group and the Memphis MAGS Club that were joining us on the group dig this weekend,  and get signed up… and my sinus pressure had returned immensely, so I knew then and there it was going to be an interesting day for me. I let everyone know that I was like Janitor in a Drum and would be with them in spirit but wasnt sure about the physical part of things, but would do what I could to help them find some nice material no matter what. I was confident that we had left enough material behind the week before that everyone would leave happy, but its always a huge plus if you can dig something up on your own as well. It just makes the trip that much more worthwhile.

After a short safety talk we drove out to the mine and found Mike Royal from Ohio out there already and getting things ready to dig. Mike had been there a day before and was a newcomer to the McRocks group. After pointing out the piles and the material left behind, everyone began circulating around and checking things out on their own.

Mike and Mike and Opal got down into the pit and started working things over to see if anything could be found. Opal wasted no time getting into the pit water and checking things out to her own satisfaction. Opal enjoys chasing after sticks thrown into the water or rocks that simply fall into the water, she loves the water and the mud equally. 🙂

Miners Spread Out All Over

Opal Doing What Opal Does Best

Mike and Mike Peruse the End Stretch

Chrissy and Bill Fraser Talking

Bill was a great host, as were all of the museum folks and he came back frequently during the day to check on us and help newcomers find some great material and point out areas to look for and find material as well. I remember one day last year when the weather wasnt so great, storms were around us and Bill drove up to the top of the hill above us as we dug and kept watch on the area south of us to warn us of any storms that might approach us…I dont know of too many people that would go above and beyond to watch out for rockhounds like this…luckily this year we had great weather and didnt have to worry about such things.

Pretty soon everyone dug in and found some spots to work and began finding goodies….

Bebe Checks One Out

and rolling boulders around to see what was on the bottom side and attached…

Checking Out a Big Boulder

and even the little tykes had fun looking around for goodies, we created an area with goodies for them especially….

Little Tykes Rockhounding Too

Robert Duncan decided he wanted to get dirty and find some nice big goodies, so he got down into the pit with Mike and Mike and began helping Mike Royal move some big boulders around in order to find some pockets. Within a hour or two, pockets were found and some nice specimens were found….

Mike and Robert and Mike Look One Over

Mike Helps Pound A Few Goodies Free

Robert Washes One Goodie Off

and then Robert found a really big and heavy one…and Mike graciously decided to muscle it out of the pit for him…

Mike Muscled This Chunk Out

Mike Muscled This Chunk Up the Bank

Mike Muscled This Chunk

….that thing was heavy, prob chockfull of galena lead…later on Robert went to his truck and retrieved his dolly for it, but Mike just picked it up and carried it up to Robert`s truck instead…no wonder he was a little tired that day…

As the day wore on, some nice goodies were found all over the mine area…I didnt get any pics of it, but Bebe found a nice palm sized cluster of cubes in one of the dirt tailing piles and shortly afterward, a large chunk with deep purple fluorite cubes all over the top of it as well. She was one happy camper after that. She had to get a little muddy finding it, digging it out of some deep dark gray clay mud about two feet down into the pile….I walked around the first few hours trying to help folks find some nice stuff as did Chrissy…who did alot better hands on while I just walked around in a daze and tried to keep my balance most of the time…although I did manage to find a couple of smaller clusters in the parking area.

Mike Royal found a nice pocket down in the pit where he and Robert and Mike Streeter were working, we heard at least one yell of ” Eureka ” from him at some point during the day and I took my camera over to record the moment for him.

Mike Royal Finds a Pocket

EUREKA !!!!

Mike Royal With a Very Nice Cluster Find

Shortly after Mike started finding some nice goodies with cubes, alot of people decided to get down in the pit to see what could be found and it got crowded quickly.

Even though we had the pit widened with the track hoe the weekend before, it wasnt wide enough to accomodate everyone that wanted to get down there at the same time and so we had to exercise some crowd control procedures. We dug another hour or two and then stopped for the day. After cleaning up, several of us met at the Oasis Bar and Grill for supper and enjoyed some nice steak dinners. It began to rain around midnight but cleared off by 9 am which is about the time we arrived at the mine again the next morning.

As I was driving to the museum for the 8 am meet, I spotted a few wild turkeys running into the woods near the road and stopped to photograph them in the ending rain showers…

Day Two Wild Turkeys on Way to Museum

 

Robert had driven over to southern Illinois to meet up with the Marlers and visit with a mineral collector over there and so didn`t return to the mine til about noon, but once he did, he promptly joined those of us in the pit who were digging out several goodies from the banks above the vein. I even felt so much better that I decided to put on my hip wader firemans boots and get muddy myself. Steve Gibbs teamed up with Mike Royal and they proceeded to dig into the bank a bit, finding a few nice cubes before returning once again to the boulders at the end of the pit.

I began digging into the bank where Chrissy had started digging the day before and I began finding a few small cube clusters…and while digging, I didn`t take any pics either….I was soon joined on my left by Bebe, and on my right by April, and April was joined later by Robert when he arrived, and boy did we find some nice material in the banks we had been standing on the day before…I`m going to add some pics of my cleaned up goodies to give you an idea of what we pulled out of there and here are some pics of some pretty happy rockhounds before we left for the day….

April Suns On the Dirt Piles

Steve Helps Out With the Water Hose

Cleaned Up Deep Purple Cubes

Cleaned Up Deep Purple Cubes Piece

Small Deep Purple Cubes

On the way home, I spotted an unusual cloud about 7 pm, it was positioned a little east of the setting sun and appeared that the west end of the cloud was on fire…I snapped a quick photo of it as I was driving and sent it to one of the local weathermen in St Louis the other day to inquire about it. I talk to Mike Roberts, of Channel Five News alot for my work in St Louis, and he told me that what I saw and photographed was ” the cirrus blow-off from the anvil of a thunderstorm….the cloud is made entirely of ice crystals so you are getting in impressive halo.”  It was quite impressive to me, have never seen anything like it….

Cloud On Fire On Way Home

 

Another great trip and looking forward to returning there in June for the annual show.

 

 

 

 

 

Eureka Mine Fluorite Scouting Trip 2010

Drove down to Marion,  Kentucky last weekend for a couple of days to join some rockhound friends from Michigan, North Carolina, and Georgia, and we dug into the Eureka Mine for our second exploratory dig in as many years. We always like to do this before a group dig so we have a better idea of what can be found by the group before we get there. This year we were lucky enough to schedule this dig one week ahead of the group dig, and fortunate to get some pretty good weather as well.

We arrived at the mine Saturday morning and found the pit pretty much the way we remembered leaving it the spring season before…and as soon as Wayne arrived and readied his equipment, he began to dig the pit wider for us again…..this guy really knows what he is doing.  We were his second group to work closely with, and before working with us last year, he had never worked with a group before…it looked like we had worked together as a well oiled machine for years, it was that smooth last year and again this year.

This year we decided to place certain buckets of dirt and material into a specific located pile or two so that future rockhounds would know where to go to look for great material and then had Wayne place the overburden and waste into the old pit area and form a small intervening dam as well between the two pits.

And then we found the vein again….

Top of Vein Exposed

and within a few minutes it started looking even more promising…

More Purple and Calcite

We then had Wayne set to widen out the area and discovered the vein moving over to the right and widening out on us, had no idea it went that wide, but turned out about twenty feet wide. We then extended the new pit to about thirty feet long and that gave us a good area to search out specimens, especially knowing we had a large group coming in the following weekend.

After about four hours of digging, we turned Wayne loose for the weekend and we set about digging with hand tools at both ends and along the sides of the vein to see how much purple we could find.

We found both large sizes and smaller cubes along the top of the vein and within pockets of the vein…

Big and Small Cubes from Saturday

Some Plates of Cubes from Saturday

Smaller Clusters from Saturday

Bill and Jeff even found a pocket lined with calcite druse on the fluorite cubes.

Bill and Jeff Found Cubes and Calcite Druse

We found some palm sized pieces and medium sized pieces of fluorite cubes with some unusual green and yellow balls of what was figured to be greenockite on them…we have never found or seen anything like that come out of the Eureka Mine before, nor heard of it either.

Green and Yellow Balls with Cubes

Saturday Find Greenockite on FluoriteSaturday Find Greenockite Closeup

 

We dug down to about twelve to fifteen feet in most cases, the water table is pretty high at this mine, you`ll hit it about those depths and a pump is crucial to keep digging without any problems. Luckily the Clement Museum folks have a nice pump available to rent for just such digs, and this makes it much easier to keep on digging by hand. In years prior, we had to have one guy devoted to bailing water with a five gallon bucket to stay ahead of things.

We hand carried the finds to the top of the pit to Phil….

Everett Hands Off a Big One to Phil

and he hands them off to Ernie,  another rockhound, who brought a clean water pump and generator, enabling us to pump from Hurricane Creek next to the pit, and use a spray nozzle to clean off mud from the specimens we recovered from the vein.

Ernie Brought a Pump and Generator

Ernie Washes off Fluorite

Then the cleaned specimens are placed on newspaper or a tarp, to dry off in the sun, for choosing later on.

At the end of the day, once everyone wears down and out and tires of digging, we select straws and choose what specimens we want to take home with us. This year we had some nice specimens to choose from and after everyone had made their selections, we placed several up in the three piles for others to find and take home if they wanted. We spent our first day in nice warm sunshine, the temps about 75 degrees and then on Sunday, it rained most of the day, a light rain this year, and we stopped early afternoon.

All in all though, it was another good exploratory dig and some nice stuff was found and placed in the tailing piles we created new this year as well. Ernie was walking by one of the piles Sunday and spotted a chunk sticking out of the mud with some nice two inch cubes all over the top of it, further evidence that there were some nice pieces in the piles dug up from the pit. I`ll leave you with a few more pics of what we found this year.

Nice Cluster from Saturday

Pretty When Wet

Saturday Find Cleaned Up

Saturday Find Medium Cluster

Saturday Find Palm Sized Cluster

Saturday Find Small Cluster