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Access and the future of prospecting
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<blockquote data-quote="Occasional_panner" data-source="post: 360969" data-attributes="member: 7956"><p>If you used a trommel at Beechworth with four blokes (working the creek, not the banks) you would never know anyone was ever there as it's a sandy sort of creek bed.</p><p>So it entirely depends on the terrain you are in. If you do some highbanking it's easy to level out your tailings pile, when I leave an area you really would not know I was there. Detector holes are usually a scrape and a small dig, but if you make no effort to cover them up it basically says you don't give two stuffs, so the greens get narky. Every form of prospecting can be rectified to make it look like you weren't there with a bit of effort, and it really is just the decent thing to do.</p><p>We're pretty lucky here in Vic that we can use bits of equipment banned in most states, so keeping under the radar by having little to no effect on the bush is the way to keep it that way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Occasional_panner, post: 360969, member: 7956"] If you used a trommel at Beechworth with four blokes (working the creek, not the banks) you would never know anyone was ever there as it's a sandy sort of creek bed. So it entirely depends on the terrain you are in. If you do some highbanking it's easy to level out your tailings pile, when I leave an area you really would not know I was there. Detector holes are usually a scrape and a small dig, but if you make no effort to cover them up it basically says you don't give two stuffs, so the greens get narky. Every form of prospecting can be rectified to make it look like you weren't there with a bit of effort, and it really is just the decent thing to do. We're pretty lucky here in Vic that we can use bits of equipment banned in most states, so keeping under the radar by having little to no effect on the bush is the way to keep it that way. [/QUOTE]
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