Thanks for the great reports, Mike and tett, congratulations to you and all
the other folks successfully recovering the precious heavenly stones.
Met-made karma-chains, why not ... ;-)
Matthias
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike Bandli" <[email protected]>
To: "tett" <[email protected]>
Cc: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 5:14 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Buzzard Hunt
A big congrats to Tett on his first ever find! We were all honored to be a
part of it and his reaction was both priceless and infectious. You couldn't
have asked for a better stone, really. Beautiful piece ad the Buzzard
definitely got him buzzed to find many more.
Congrats to Patrick Herrmann for finding some exceptional stones as well.
That day our little gridding group was like a meteorite conveyor belt
cranking one out every 5 minutes or so. It is sad to see the machinery
getting prepped to mutilate the field, but it is planting time and
farmer's have to farm.
Rob and I noted a few strange firsts (for us) during this trip. They are:
Finding meteorite within 2 minutes of arrival at strewnfield.
Finding meteorite while tying shoe-lace.
Finding meteorite under water.
Finding meteorite embedded in cow dung.
Park car, open door to find meteorite.
Park car, get out, find one meteorite at the back of car and one at the
front.
We noticed four (very) elderly folks walking the roads dragging magnet
canes across the gravel and stopped to talk. It became quickly obvious
that they had no idea what they were looking for when they asked if the
gravel dust on the bottom of their magnets was the meteorite. We didn't
have any stones with us at the moment so Rob and I decided to hop into the
field and see if we could find a stone to show them what they look like.
We looked at our watch to time how quickly we could find a meteorite and
within about 4 steps and under 30 seconds we found a stone. We quickly ran
back to the elderly group and presented them with their first rock from
space. The reactions were unforgettable. 4 more meteorite hunters born in
their 70's and warm, fuzzy feelings for everyone. We dubbed this the
'Karma Stone' as it led to a chain of events taking us to a very fruitful
area that we wouldn't have hunted had that not happened.
Some notes on this magnificent fall:
Many of the stones are exceptionally fresh. Some with no visible
oxidation. The snow has had little effect on the material and this is, in
part, due to the constant very dry air moving across them. Even the stone
found under water looked good. Meteorites found on top of vegetation
looked like they fell that same day. Meteorite in contact with the soil,
especially with broken surfaces, showed the most oxidation. The stone I
found in the dung was broken in half with the exposed interior facing up,
but had no visible oxidation. Apparently, cow poo has some anti-oxidizing
properties :) Lots of flow lines on pieces, which is not so typical for
H-type crust.
Another magical life experience on the books.
Mike Bandli
----- Original Message -----
From: "tett" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, May 6, 2009 4:21:20 AM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: [meteorite-list] Buzzard
Hello List,
I have just returned from Buzzard Coulee after 4 exhausting days of
travel and meteorite hunting. It was wonderful to experience the
Prairies and to hunt with other meteorite enthusiasts. Hunted with
friends from the Royal Ontario Museum, Patrick Herrmann, Rob Wessel and
Mike Bandli.
All of us were successful. Mike and Rob took me under there wings the
first day out and shortly after starting with them I found a 90 gram
individual with over 90% crust. I was on cloud 9! This stone turned
out to be the largest our small group was going to find. After giving
half of my haul back to the land owner, as payment for rights to hunt, I
came home with just under 1/4 kilo (12 individuals). Will post some
pictures soon.
The plows are now working and it looks like the farmer's fields will be
tilled any day now. However, there is much woodland to be searched and
I am sure many fine specimens are waiting to be found. The woodlands
will be extremely tough to search and it will take much more work to
find anything compared to our field hunting. They may even prove
impossible to search.
Having walked over 50 km in 2 full days and 2 half days I now have a
greater appreciation for how difficult it is to hunt for these
treasures. Buzzard Coulee was easy compared to many and it still took
about 3 km of walking (on average) before finding a stone. I don't
think I would have been able to stand West where many hunters were lucky
to find one stone in a day.
Cheers!
Mike (tett) Tettenborn
Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada
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