This is a German and his digging machine, I wouldn't use one again! Sure they can dig well but hard to get along with
I could fill a book with the stories I heard when out at the ridge, real ones of fortunes found and losted. This guy lived his whole live on the opal field with his wife 'who died before her time' and his two daughters. One of which worked with us and proved as good as any man, I smiled when I hear she is in Alaska now hunting gold.
When he first arrived at lightning ridge in the 1970's he just started digging and came across a very rich run of opal nobbies, every time they needed some money he would go down and pop a couple out with a screwdriver! He felt they were safe in the ground until needed.
Well when it ran out he started digging across the field, most of those tunnels helped me dig around and it was his idea to look under the fault.
He brought a mpl lease to wash dirt into, but the guy laughed at him and told him there was no opal there. Well being stubborn he decided to dig the second level and have a look, well it was full of opal! He could see it in the backhoe bucket when digging. Then he brought in an excavator and dug out two claims, doing very well.
I digress, well here in this picture we worked together as he had given me the claim to scratch around in, and each week I'd show him some nice opal. So we dug a mountain of dirt out and piled it up waiting for rain to fill the wash dam, to start processing it.
We washed something like a 100 big truck loads, each about 18 cubes. For $30,000 of opal. The best stone fell out of the wall and we spotted it, I realised that its not the quantity of dirt but the right dirt that finds opal! Now iv would of dumped a lot of truck loads instead of washing them.
Well when I left him and went back to gouging I found a nice pocket of opal, one three carrot stone of red on black sold for $7000 to mr Chang. He complained for months as the backing was white porcelain and he couldn't sell it.
Well with the $18,000 I found and the $10,000 I got from the German I brought my own hoist and truck and felt like I'd made it as a miner.