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Friday, July 27, 2012

Small miner waiver....


        It’s that time of year again.  If you have 10 claims or less, you qualify for the Bureau of Land Management Maintenance Fee Waiver Certification Form 3830-2, more commonly called the small miner’s waiver.

         Previous years we have received a mailing that provided at least a draft of this form, but no mailing this year (cost cutting?).  The form, however, is online at the Montana-Dakota BLM site.  We just printed it from there.

         First and foremost… if you qualify for this form it must be postmarked by Aug. 31 or it is invalid.  That will mean sacrificing your claim.  It does not have to be notarized or filed at the county.


         So let’s get to work on this form.  Otherwise, you need to budget $140 for every 20-acre parcel you have claimed!

1.     This small miner waiver is filed for the assessment year beginning Sept. 1, 2012 and ending on Sept. 1, 2013.

2.     The undersigned and all related parties owned 10 or fewer mining claims, mill, or tunnel sites located and maintained on federal lands in the United States of America on Sept. 1, 2012.

3-6 are information items.

7.     The mining claims, mill or tunnel sites for which this waiver from payment of the maintenance fee is requested, are: (Here you fill in claim or site name and BLM serial number [MMC]).

          This form then needs to be signed by all claim owners (extra room on back).  Make a copy for your records and mail the original to BLM for filing by Aug. 31.  No filing fee is needed.

          If you run off the form, instructions are on page 2.

          Additional note:  If you have located a claim prevous to Aug. 31, 2012, you must either include the new claim(s) on your small miner's waiver or pay the $140 maintenance fee.  We got caught on this once and ended up forking out an additional $140 to keep the claim.  I cannot say this with authority, but we believe you do not have to have a MMC to do this, but write pending MMC on the form.

          If you are having trouble finding or printing the form, drop me an email at hillshistory1876@gmail.com and I will email you the form to print.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Trommels, sluices, riffles


        First off, we want to clarify something we are hearing from a number of people.  Members of the Gold Prospectors of America are telling us that they are limited to hand trowels and pans in the Black Hills.  A direct quote from SD Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources, the state agency that regulates mining in South Dakota, states Recreational mining, such as gold panning and mineral collecting that make use of hand-held equipment such as picks, shovels, gold pans, sluice boxes, or metal detectors is exempt from permit requirements. A mine permit is required for portable dredges or other mechanized equipment, even for use in recreational mining.”

        Secondly, we see a lot of innovative equipment out there.  A lot of what we see is commonly termed, “reinventing the mouse trap” or in this case, reinventing the gold trap!   Our geologist friend was a little puzzled why I use a cheap little black pan for test pans… until he saw me panning in a tiny stream and/or a tub!  That small pan doesn’t need much water, has small built-in riffles and does the trick nicely!  Now with larger amounts of concentrates, for example sluice box clean-up, choose a pan that suits your hand size and has a reasonably large inner circle circumference… allowing swirling!   

        So our conclusion would be… they all probably work, but you don’t have to spend a lot of money!  It’s the same gold, whether the equipment cost hundreds or a few $$.

        On this theme, the third item we will talk about is the tried and true, the basic concept that still works and is simple enough for someone with construction skills to build instead of buy!

        We refer to “How and Where to Pan Gold” by Wayne Winters, originally published in 1961.


        Bob wants you to pay attention to how simple an effective trommel can be!  This is a great example of a little electric trommel simply mounted on skids with one motor running both pump and trommel.  Note the small chute at the top where gravels are dumped and then it appears they are hand-fed.  Discharge is small enough to use only a wheelbarrow, indicating how much is being fed.  The set-up of 4-5 foot cut in the gravel has set this operation up very well for recirculation of water.  Even though there’s 1000’s of holes in the punch plate of the trommel, the discharge chute shows water dripping.  This might be designed to help gravel move down the chute or could be that much water actually retained in the spent gravels.  A simple screen would save those gallons.

         This commercial trommel set up demonstrates a good scenario for riffles in the sluice.  Note that closer to the trommel, riffles become more closely spaced until they are of equal distance.  At the bottom of the sluice, the gaps are for the fine gold to settle and carry water away from the operation.  Hard to imagine any gold getting away!

         Note that sluices are lined with tin, which these days could be easily bought at a lumber yard as flashing.

         A large grizzly is set up behind the main trommel with the only conveyor being a discharge for oversized rock.  The dump truck, seen top left, is vintage but effective with haul road leading to main grizzly.  It looks like a direct dump.

         Simple but effective, the difference between a few hundred dollars and thousands!

          Good news for all interested in our Iron Creek permit... an August hearing is tentatively scheduled and we may get mining yet!

        A final note to check out Black Hills Simple Life Magazine on-line… another editorial effort in my family circle!  We did a short prospecting article this time and there are tons of interesting and informative articles on all aspects of Black Hills living!

Monday, July 2, 2012


 

First and foremost, Happy Independence Day! All that we love, all that we cherish, is made possible by this great American way of life!

We now digress to a more sober thought… millions are suffering the heat of summer. Power outages contribute to the problem, leaving some metropolitan areas sweltering.

We consider ourselves very lucky. For those of you who have visited the Black Hills, it is rare for the nights to stay hot. About 7 p.m., it starts to cool and many nights you are reaching for jackets in the evening and covers before dawn. Even at Rally time, yet a month away in August, we shiver to see someone riding motorcycle late afternoon into the Hills, hoping they have leather in the saddlebag. A 100 degree day quickly cools to the 50s and 60s, dipping even lower in some of those “icebox canyons” we know so well.

We’ve already had a few of those nights that fail to cool, or like last night we get a late afternoon rain shower and then it warmed back up!

This year the problem is compounded by smoke from forest fires. You hesitate to open windows in the evening when Hills fires dampen because every valley has waves of smoke drifting by.

That thunderstorm that dampens the smoke and dust puts firefighters on alert for the next spark.

Many fireworks shows have been cancelled. The grandkids are all groaning because there will be no fun with bottle rockets, Roman candles…

We’re old enough to remember M*A*S*H the first time around. This past week, it was a sobering thought each morning to hear the Black Hawk helicopters going out each morning to fight the war against fire. Each evening they returned, signaling the end of that day’s fight. The local news filled in details of casualties of the day… acres burned, homes evacuated, percentage of containment.

We’re lucky enough to live in the Northern Hills, where Ponderosa Pine are still predominantly green. That allows us to breathe a little easier, but a recently controlled fire at Crow Peak and a new fire near Newcastle keep the air smoky and all of us adults on constant alert.

So it’s 9 a.m., the a/c is on (sigh) and as we listen to the morning update on Hills’ fires, we schedule our day on what should be an August routine of things to do around home until late afternoon when we can hopefully escape the heat by driving up the gulch to a claim!