1). Ally Slopers Gully - area we found pushed and heavily worked. There were not a great deal of scratchings and we found very little trash and no gold.
2). Big Timber Gully - an unplanned stop en-route so a quick swing around pulled out a few lead shot and other trash. Looks like a large camping area so didn't expect much.
3). The most promising area - we had every intention of venturing "deep into the jungle" but OMG - it was THICK!!! Put on your smallest elliptical coil and push around under the scrub. We got plenty of signals, but were all predominantly shot gun pellets. We figured if we slowed down a bit next time, we'd find other (yellow) targets that were missed.
Also, we were lucky to get 30 meters deep in this area and didn't even get to the good stuff - (colored in yellow for obvious reasons). I don't mind sharing this information because I doubt we'd be trying to get in there again, unless a bush fire cleans it out. I'd suggest coming in from the other side and make your way in best you can. Your 2WD will be okay in summer, but expect a severe, deep paint scraping. Take water, UHF and GPS if you want to survive the outing.
4). A nice little area, dug a hole around 70cm to find a piece of rusted tin with the 7000. A bit of a gully and looked partially surfaced. Plenty of interesting directions you could wonder of looking. Would re-visit this area for a better look around, particularly south of the area as the bush was thicker. Obvious signs of having regular prospecting.
Lots of iron stone in this part of Inglewood but found detectors only reacted to specific individual stones and not the ground in general.
Detectors used today: SDC 2300 with elliptical coil, Modified GPX 5000 12x8 NF coil, 2 X GPZ 7000's with standard coils.