thanks mate, I have been sitting there when having a break and thinking that it can be inches away in any direction. the possibility of a big findshivan said:Nice to see you guys are onto some colour :Y: I hope there is some much bigger bits just round the corner for you.
20xwater said:I have been sitting there when having a break and thinking that it can be inches away in any direction. the possibility of a big find
is very real unlike the possibility of nice gold nuggets in a creek.
yeah stretched lower back ligaments pretty badly, working out was physio gone out of control lol. hernia began bout 20yrs ago I think, I liked trying to lift the front wheels of mum's vw off the ground, could only de-compress the shocks but. with anything its 'how dare it beat me' lol, last attempt ended with a sharp pain and tear feeling. oops lol. the last year working out just excelerated it, only thing that stopped me.Syndyne said:That is some good news. Glad to hear you're on the mend. Taking out your negatives on the dirt is definitely a good proposition. I used to do that too. :Y:
Hernia's are no fun. Went through that with my old man a few years back. He had a 6cm tear in the upper groin area which I think came from helping to push a caravan a few feet. It's a fairly extensive operation too. My good friend has had two Hernia's fixed, both from benching insanely heavy weight while stupidly showing off to his mates in the gym in the early 90's. He seriously regrets it now that he's older and a little wiser.
Just reading over on the DIY thread (nicely done on the cutting and definition by the way!) that you also had back issues? I too had things go south badly with a lower back injury.
Really gotta look after the old body, particularly once you hit the thirties and things don't heal like they used to. I felt invincible in my teens and twenties (as I'm sure we all do), then I was shot down by the injury while mining (about 11 years ago at the age of 27). Ended up tearing all the lower interior muscles between my spin and right hip simply by pushing the rickshaw into the dirt to start shovelling -just doing the same motion I'd done countless times before. It felt like getting hit with an axe and I just dropped to the floor of the drive and couldn't get up. The crawl to the shaft to climb out and the forty minute ride home over the corrugated road was something I'll never forget. Took four days to be able to sit up, a few weeks to be able to even walk upright comfortably and several months to feel somewhat normal while mining. When it happened I honestly thought I would never stand again. Very scary.
Pretty much back to normal now, other than a bit of stiffness in the lower back some mornings. But, it's something I'm highly conscious of when lifting anything these days, both in the gym and in general. I feel for anyone that's had a serious injury take place. It's a bugger of a ride, particularly when your working future is uncertain.
Anyhow, enough of my thread hijacking. Bring on the opal!
Cheers and stay safe Scott!
Shauno.
nice pic mate, I don't anything about opal but I know if you go to the local pub here there are 2 big rocks on the shelf with the flat face covered in a thing layer of beautiful opal, I think they call it a painted lady. I'm guessing they are worthless and just good show specimens as Im guessing extracting the opal of hard rock will just destroy/shatter the opal. I'm guessing there would be a chemical process but probly only worth doing if the opal was thick enough and of high quality to cut workable pieces out of it.wormy898 said:https://www.prospectingaustralia.com/forum/img/member-images/9591/1490101996_dsc_0020.jpg
I am only new to this sort of thing but is this of any value or a good piece
nearly got it all identified, more pics coming soon..Gilly47 said:Gee there are some pretty big words to understand there 20X
ray
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