I frequently get asked what happens if I get my magnet stuck and can’t pull it out - well this is what I did after I plus 3 passers by couldn’t pull it out.
I ended up driving my car down the harbour wall and attached my rope to the towhook. A conveniently placed mooring post made it so I could wrap it round and pull the magnet pretty much perpendicular to the harbour wall.
I had an interesting find that I definitely wasn’t expecting; a fossilised tooth from what I think was a prehistoric marine reptile, not magnetic but fell off when I was removing chunks of metal from the magnet:
And here is the pile of scrap metal I ended up with:
This was a very good location, every single cast brought up multiple bits of metal, and I never moved from the first spot I stopped at along the harbour wall. I suspect I could go back thousands of times and still pull loads out.
Looks a very cool hobby. Would you mind sharing how a noob should start and basic equipment set up? Thanks
I first bought a kit from Magnetar that came with everything I needed to get started, but that came with some things that I didn’t strictly need. Really you could start with just a magnet, rope and some safety gloves.
There’s a few types of magnets out there: single sided, double sided and 360° magnets. Single sided being magnetic on one side, double sided both, and 360° are magnetic all the way around. Personally I wouldn’t consider getting a single sided one because when you drag it in the magnetic face probably won’t be facing down. I bought a 360° one because it seemed like the “best” type, but double sided would have been a perfectly good option too. For reference I have the Magnetar Hardcore which is very good but fairly pricey as a magnet to start with, but I was fairly certain I’d enjoy it so I was happy to spend that much.
Really the important thing is to buy from a reputable online seller like Magnetar or Online Magnets. There are a lot of kits on Amazon that just straight up lie about the strength of the magnet or are of poor quality and lose magnetism pretty quickly.
Other useful items are a bucket, which you can use to carry gear, finds or use to wash away mud that you can end up getting all over the ground; a grappling hook which I find useful for bikes and shopping trolleys which are both large and often not particularly magnetic; and recently I ordered a cheap manual winch in case I get the magnet stuck again where I can’t use my car to pull it out. I also have a folding cart which you can see to the left of my car in the image, which I bought after my first trip out when I realised that carrying a load of metal down the towpath was a lot of work.
Another important thing to mention is that you should dispose of whatever you pull out and don’t want to keep. There are scrappers that will happily come and collect stuff if you leave it in a neat pile in an accessible place and give them a call, but I take everything home in my car intending to weigh it in for scrap later.
And here I thought you’d pulled up a Skoda and I was going to ask if you threw it back. 😜
I had an interesting find that I definitely wasn’t expecting; a fossilised tooth from what I think was a prehistoric marine reptile,
That’s fascinating - got other photos of it from different angles? It doesn’t look that tooth like to me. However, I do have a few fossil teeth and they vary wildly based on function so I can’t be sure (I also didn’t continue Paleontology into the vertebrates).
The only thing I threw back in was a crab that tried to fight me while I was trying to return it to its home 😆 I did think that the picture might raise some questions without the explanation.
My partner thinks that the ridges down one side are denticles. Google lens does return some similar looking teeth, but neither of us know much about fossils beyond what we learned in the fossil museum in Lyme Regis.