Rubyvale Qld 25 July 2019
Today we join the ranks of the fossickers and miners, all chasing that elusive bit of colour. We decided to go on a tag-along tour, mostly because they know where to go and what to do, and they have all the equipment. We went with Fascinations Tours, organised through the Fascination Gems shop in Rubyvale. So at 830am we met the tour guide and the rest of the hopefuls at Anakie, back out on the highway.
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Meeting fellow fossickers, Anakie Qld
Note Treasure map behind! |
Maybe half-a-dozen vehicles followed Keith out and onto the Capricorn Highway for 20 km, then down a side road for 11 kilometres to The Willows Fossicking Grounds
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Road down to The Willows Gemfields, Qld |
And then another turn down the side of a side road to the 'diggins'.
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Track into the actual diggings. Willows, Qld |
Once on-site Kieth gave us a very thorough run-through of the basics: dig, tumble, wash, examine. Repeat till exhausted. The theory is that we are standing on the site of a 'flow' of gemstone from a prehistoric outpouring of some long dead volcano. The stuff is supposed to have gushed out and flowed down the countryside where it cooled and crystals formed. A zillion years later, this flow has been covered by anything from nothing to an unknown depth of dirt and rock as at the surface of our planet changed. I'm thinking 'ancient mountains whittled down', I guess the rock and dirt had to go somewhere. Anyhow, this area is kept especially for surface pickers like us, as the 'wash', as that thin layer of gravel like stuff is called, is 'close' to the surface.
OK, so here's what the ground looks like:
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The Willows Gemfields Qld |
Well that's what it looks like after its been dug over by the passing parade of pickers, but still, you take your pick and shovel and bucket and go and find a spot, as if you know what you are looking for. Then you dig dig dig like Judy, and shovel the detritus into the buckets like Brian. (my back suggests that it may have been the other way around!)
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Can she dig it? Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Yes she can! Willows Gemfields Qld |
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And maybe a bit from here. Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Sixteen tonnes and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt.
Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Scrape, scoop, shovel. Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Willows Gemfields Qld |
You then clamber over the spoils left behind by everyone else to the Trammel, which is a device used to seperate the dirt from the rock, the big rocks from the fines. Your pour your bucket of wash into the Shute on one end, turn the handle on the other, and watch as the smaller stuff comes away and is collected in another bucket. But, keep an eye on those big ones fall out the end, you just never know when a giant crystal will fall out.
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A trammel, or cylindrical sieve. Willows Gemfields Qld |
One then takes one's bucket of fines to the wet sieves, or Willoughbys, as they are known. You stack the two sieves on top of un upturned bucket, fine one on the bottom, and pour in some of your dirt. You place the sieves in the Willoughby and jiggle it up and down for a minute or so, with the sieves under the water. This, in theory, washes away the last of the dirt and allows the smaller stones to fall into the bottom sieve. Anything that goes right through is rubbish. You take the top, course, sieve to the hessian bag 'table and up end it. In theory (there's lots of them out here) the gems will have fallen to the centre and be on the bottom of the sieve, which is now your pile of stones. ready to be picked up.
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Judy washing her wash. Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Into the Whilloughby they go! Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Pump it up and down, give it a good wash. Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Onto the tables for inspection. Willows Gemfields Qld |
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Picking through the course stuff, you never know what you might find. Willows Gemfields Qld |
When you're done with the course sieves and your bucket is empty, you repeat the process with the fine sieve, and if you are lucky, you will find some colour!
And back you go tomorrow for more! Well, maybe next time, I need to get a lot fitter first, all that digging and sieving and stuff is hard work.
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