Sometimes you feel so sad without a cop that you are ready to go wander around any area and rejoice at every colored response from your metal detector. This is how it was with one digger in August – he missed the cop. Therefore, one sunny day, having telephoned his comrades, he left the city and they began to walk along the first field. They chose this place because it was close, they harvested it and plowed it. True, nothing was marked there on the old maps, but we just went out to do our favorite hobby.
The field turned out to be not boring — it gave the diggers not only wire and nuts, but also Soviet coins, royal buttons and bullets.
Having descended into a small ravine in the middle of the field, a black signal went out like a solid carpet, among which the digger raised his badge. It was a super find for a day that I really didn’t want to spend at home.
The most popular Garrett ACE 250 with a homemade coil distinguished itself, as usual.
Already at home, the digger determined that he had found a soldier’s badge of the Life Guards of the Moscow Regiment, which, as it turned out, was far from common.
And so, 100 years later, in 1911, the officers of the Life Guards of the Moscow Regiment took care of creating a regimental badge for its centenary. A blue St. Andrew’s cross with a gold rim, and on it the letters “S.A.R.P.”, which read as “Sanctus Andreas Russiae Patronus” (St. Andrew, patron saint of Russia). Superimposed on the cross is a silver embossed coat of arms of Moscow, this is St. George on horseback slaying the dragon. Here is one of these soldiers’ anniversary breastplates of the Life Guards of the Moscow Regiment and was picked up by a digger in a random place.
An unfamiliar place and such a find – if it were like this every time, then there would be no need to study old maps and read thematic literature.
Love to dig for antiquities? Coins, signs, awards, personal items and jewelry? We have collected some useful life hacks and tips that really help in digging, take a look here!