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Moderator
 United States
190135 Posts |
Quote: Becomes a non-sport quickly once a few bucks have been expended.  Is this the commoner's equivalent of lighting cigars with hundred dollar bills? 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1316 Posts |
As in trying to skip a half dollar across the surface of the stream or up in the air as a test of accuracy to keep it straight? Trying to skip an Ike like it was a flat rock kinda sounds fun!
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Moderator
 United States
190135 Posts |
Quote: Trying to skip an Ike like it was a flat rock kinda sounds fun! 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10048 Posts |
Quote: As in trying to skip a half dollar across the surface of the stream or up in the air as a test of accuracy to keep it straight? Trying to skip an Ike like it was a flat rock kinda sounds fun! Before I got that far down in the thread I was thinking to myself that jbuck had to be thinking how glad he was that the coins were halves and not Ikes! 
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash? Download and read: Grading the graders Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halveshttps://ln5.sync.com/dl/7ca91bdd0/w...i3b-rbj9fir2
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1316 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
901 Posts |
Probably somehow tied to the myth of Washington throwing a coin across the Potomac
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Moderator
 United States
190135 Posts |
Every Ike you lose in the creek makes mine more valuable. 
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
19263 Posts |
Maybe I'll dig through my small pile of common British crowns, find the worst one, and try skipping it across a pond.
I wonder if a silver coin sounds different when skipping vs clad.
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Moderator
 Australia
16873 Posts |
I'm reminded of the story of the "lost token hoard" that did the rounds of the numismatic fraternity here in Australia some years ago.
The story goes that some time in the early 20th century, a woman in rural Victoria found a box full of old tokens during a cleanup. On discovering that they were just tokens and therefore "not real money" and that the bank refused to take them, she gave them to her kids to play with. The kids took the box down to the Murray River and spent a lazy afternoon skipping them across the water, trying but failing to reach the opposite bank of the river, until the box was empty.
The tokens in question were, of course, Australian tradesman tokens from the 1850s - the local equivalent of hard times tokens or civil war tokens. They're highly popular collectors items these days, worth several hundred dollars to several thousand dollars - each. Even back when the incident occurred, people collected them and they'd have been worth well above their nominal face value.
Even water-damaged examples might still be valuable, if they are scarce varieties or types. People asked the kids, as adults, where this took place, but they couldn't remember precisely enough for a search to be conducted. The river has of course flooded several times in the intervening years, so the river banks may not even be in the same place any more. Metal detectorists have reportedly searched the area but never found any tokens.
I can't even confirm that this is a true story, or an urban myth.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
19263 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
The Chicago police mentioned to us that the River is polluted enough so stop with the coins.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
94367 Posts |
Edited by Coinfrog 03/18/2022 09:40 am
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Moderator
 United States
54284 Posts |
Some day way in the future and archaeologist is going to find them, and be very happy but wonder why were the coins there.
Show your financial support of the Coin Community Family (click here)See my topic on Mexican Numismatic Medals (click here)
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Rest in Peace
United States
18456 Posts |
A little off the main subject but when I was about 6 years old I did throw a penny across a large mud puddle . 
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Pillar of the Community
4628 Posts |
Tried it with worn and corroded pennies.
For you Americans bear in mind our pennies were 1.2 inches in size and weighed 9.45 grams and were very thin.
I have heard of people skimming them 100 feet or more, but my unco hands ensured they never went more than 8 feet or far enough for me to retrieve them.
An old British, Australian or Kiwi Penny though makes a good skimming stone.
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Replies: 18 / Views: 2,373 |
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