Wedding band found in attic insulation.
I received a call from Marv M. on Wednesday, Dec. 16th, as I headed into church. He had lost his wedding ring 2 months prior while working in his attic. As he brushed his hands together to remove the insulation dust, his ring slipped off, hit the roof and fell into the insulation. He had a good idea where it had fallen so he borrowed a neighbor’s old metal detector and attempted to locate it himself. The problem was, it had fallen into an area where there were a lot of TV cables and electrical lines. The metal detector was an older model with limited discrimination and sensitivity adjustments and just chattered the whole time it was turned on. I made the trip out to Muskegon Friday afternoon after stopping at Menards for a painter’s coverall and dust mask (not knowing if it was fiberglass insulation I’d be hunting in). I was able to discriminate out the nails, electrical handy boxes and truss plates but the electrical lines cause chatter that’s impossible to eliminate short of shutting off power to the whole house (anyone who’s detected under overhead power lines knows the chatter I’m referring to). I turned the sensitivity down to the point the chatter was ‘manageable’ and was determined to find a solid signal. It was only about a 6′ square section I needed to concentrate on and I was able to find the ring in about 15 minutes.


Katelyn was to have her engagement ring and wedding band soldered together this week because she was going to be married this Friday; the only problem was she had just lost her engagement ring in Lake Michigan! Her cousin Kim called me and asked if I could come out right away, I said, « Absolutely, I’ll be there in about 40 minutes. » Katelyn’s Aunt Carol and Uncle Tom stayed with her in the water to mark the approximate location that Katelyn saw her ring fall off while I made the drive out to Holland State Park. The three of them, with Katlyn’s younger cousins, Mikayla and Sawyer, spread out to form a 20′ square area for me to do a thorough search in. At first I thought it wasn’t in the area they thought as I got no hits at all after my first pass though the area. I went back and searched again and found it right next to Mikala on the edge of the search area; I was probably standing on it when I started my search. It actually only took about 10 or 15 minutes to search the 20 sq. ft. area and find the ring. That was one very happy bride to be and another smiling face for my book of smiles.





