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Smoky Quartz Crystals | Rock Hounding in Dismal Swamp Idaho

March 29, 2016 by Heather Lewis Leave a Comment

So what do Smoky Quartz Crystals Look Like?

Smoky Quartz Crystals Found at Dismal Swamp
Smoky Quartz Crystals Found at Dismal Swamp

Idaho has an abundance of family outdoor activities that will cost you very little money. Idaho has 12 million acres of BLM (Bureau of Land Management) land that visitors and Idaho residents can recreate on.  This offers a huge diversity of opportunities for you and your family to get outdoors and have fun. Our family has taken advantage of many of these opportunities including hunting, fishing, fly fishing, four wheeling, camping, gold prospecting, and rock hounding. Most of our outings are on BLM and Idaho National Forest land.  The ability to visit so many different places is part of what makes Idaho so great.


Want to start rockhounding? Buy a Book that highlights rockhounding in Idaho. The most popular books are separated by counties. sites with GPS coordinates, and the minerals that can be found there. We started with places near us that we wanted to explore and planned a few short outings.  As we visited more and more of the places in the book, we kept returning to the Dismal Swamp Entry and finally planned a camping trip that allowed us to visit this location.

Smoky Quartz Crystal found in rock outcropping in dismal swamp.
Smoky Quartz Crystal found in a rock outcropping in dismal swamp.decided to go to Dismal Swamp, which is located 20 miles north of Featherville, Idaho.

Digging Smoky Quartz Crystals in Dismal Swamp Idaho

In Dismal Swamp, you can dig smoky quartz crystals and even more.  The equipment you need is a few buckets, a shovel, a rock pick, a few screens and maybe a sledgehammer.  When you get there you can dig almost anywhere to find smoky quartz crystals.  Most are really small but there are the occasions that you may find larger ones. There are hundreds of holes that people have already dug in which you can keep digging and still find more crystals.

When we visited Dismal Swamp we started by digging small amounts of soil and putting it on our screens then rinsing all the soil from the rocks. Next, we sift through the remaining rocks to find the quartz and the smoky quartz crystals. Keep repeating the process until you find crystals.  You must be patient as it will take a while to find the smoky quartz crystals.   You can also find crystals on the surface of the soil.  It will take a trained eye to find them so be careful when you are walking around. When we visited at Dismal Swamp my Father found a smoky quartz crystal embedded in the road.  He was pretty excited that the crystals were that prevalent.

Out Croppings

Rock Hounding Dismal Swamp for Smoky Quartz Crystals. Photo Taken by Evelyn Williams
Rock Hounding Dismal Swamp for Smoky Quartz Crystals. Photo Taken by Evelyn Williams

You can find smoky quartz crystals in rock outcroppings.  You can also find crystals embedded in the clay layers between the fractured pieces of rock.  The largest smoky quartz crystal that I have ever found came from a crack in a large rock that had several layers of the rock chipped away. Once we were to the clay layer that was between the cracks, that is where we found a smoky quartz crystal shaped like a prism. Carefully sift through the clay between rocks. Crystals will be surrounded by clay that appears to be a big ball of dirt.  Screens can be really helpful in sifting through the clay.

If you plan on making a weekend trip to Dismal Swamp there are a few campsites where you can make camp.  If you just plan on going for the day make sure to take plenty of water and snacks because it can get very hot there.  Good luck and happy digging!

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Gold Prospecting Idaho

March 24, 2016 by Jim Lewis Leave a Comment

Hidden Idaho Treasure Series

Interested in Gold Prospecting Idaho?

My Son and I Gold Prospecting in 2006.
My Son and I Gold Prospecting in 2006.

So it’s a new year and you are bored with all of your current hobbies. Well if you are considering picking up a new hobby, you should consider gold prospecting. Idaho has a diverse landscape with many things to offer adventurous people.

Every year people flock to Idaho’s BLM ground or Idaho National forests to camp, rock hound, fish, boat, hunt, four-wheel, hike, take photos, bicycle, and swim. Why not pick up gold prospecting when you are on one of your outings with your family this year. Prospecting can be a very inexpensive hobby or a very expensive hobby depending on the equipment you use to prospect with.

The Required Equipment for Gold Prospecting!

Beginner prospectors need a couple of different sized pans, a few classifiers (we recommend a 1/2″ classifier and a 1/4″ classifier), and maybe a sluice box if you are willing to part with the cash.  Buy some vials and at least one sniffer bottle.  Now you can make your own sniffer bottle with a plastic straw and a plastic bottle purchased at your local craft store.

You will need some buckets.  Best way to pick up buckets is; call up your local paint contractor. They should have buckets for next to nothing as they will have tons of them left over from projects.  Your other option is to buy buckets from your local hardware store.  Make sure to pick up a rock hammer, a couple of shovels and a strong back.  Gold Prospecting is hard work.

We made due for several years with very few prospecting tools. Our Tools included a sluice box, some gold pans, classifiers, a sniffer bottle, some vials and a shovel or two.

Gold Pans

Gold pans should be 14″ and the green seems to show the gold and not mark up as bad as the black ones.

Classifiers

Classifiers can be made by purchasing some screen from your local D & B store, building a frame and securing the screen in the frame. Glass stores may have little pieces of 1/8″ screen they would give away for next to nothing. If you are looking for a few classifiers to purchase please see the ones we recommend at the left.

Sluice Boxes

Sluice Boxes come in every shape and sized you can imagine.  If you search Google for wood sluice box plans, there are many do-it-yourself plans to making a sluice box.  We believe that you can not go wrong with a metal sluice box made by Keene engineering, Jobe, or Royal.  The one that we recommend extends to 50″ which allows for great gold recovery.  Shorter backpack sluice boxes are not all that great for gold recovery.  They do not allow the gravels to be washed long enough to pull the gold out of them. The longer the sluice box the better.

Rock Hammer

Rock hammers can be purchased at your local prospecting store or you can find an Estwing E3-22P 22-Ounce Rock Pick
that can be used as a small pick on amazon.com.

Misc:

Sniffer bottles, vials and other misc. gold prospecting accessories can be found at your local prospecting stores, Amazon, or a multitude of other websites on the internet.

Where do I find Gold?

My wife and I looking for new places to go gold prospecting in 2006
My wife and I looking for new places to go gold prospecting in 2006

That is the magic question.  You can find gold in many places.  Most prominent places to find gold are along streams and rivers.  To be more precise, on the inside corners of streams and rivers.  As the spring runoff fills the streams and rivers every year the massive volume of water make them run more violently.  As rapids become more violent they pick up dirt, debris, mud, clay and of course gold.

As water picks up gold in a river or stream it will not stay moving long.  As a river turns the waters will move into an inside corner or an eddy.  The slower moving water will drop the gold in these locations. Other locations you will find gold is behind large trees that are below the high water mark.  Behind and under rocks that are located on an inside corner or at the end of an island in a stream or river.

Where Specifics

Now when we are talking about gold prospecting on an inside corner of a river or stream.  Please don’t make the same mistakes we did.  We spend countless hours prospecting in locations that had no gold to speak of.  We simply did not understand where on the inside corner to dig.  Rivers and streams will slowdowns all the way around an inside corner.  The location you will need to find is the one where the corner starts.  Where the water starts to slow down.

The Weight of Gold

Just to give you some reference.  We all know how heavy lead is?  The specific gravity of lead is 11 times heavier than water.  Black Sands that gold is found it is also 11 times heavier than the specific gravity of water. Platinum, on the other hand, has a specific gravity 21.5 times heavier than water.  (According to Wikipedia: Specific Gravity is the ratio of the density of a substance to the density of a reference substance.)

The specific gravity of gold is 19.32 times heavier than water.

The weight of gold is what makes it fall from suspension prior to just about any other material.  This is the reason to look in the first place gold could drop while you are gold prospecting.

Sluice Box Setup

When you set up your sluice box it should be set at a slope of 1″ per 1′.  When your sluice box is set up, make sure it is filled up with water flowing through it at least 2/3 full.  Also, test a little material and make sure the water is flowing fast enough to wash the gravels you are going to prospect.

Classify the material that you run through your sluice box to at least 1/4″. This allows the sluice box to capture more gold when you run it.  If rocks that are too large are put into the sluice box the water will great an eddy around them and wash gold out of the sluice box.

If you would like a lesson on gold panning watch this video on youtube.

Where do we go gold prospecting in Idaho?

You can find gold in just about every region of Idaho.  This gives gold prospectors a wide variety of places to go.  Captain E.D. Pierce leading a group of 10 prospectors found gold in what is now Pierce Idaho in 1860.  In 1862 George Grimes with a party of prospectors founded the Boise Basin mines.  From 1860 to 1865 people flooded into the Florence and Boise basins.  As more people claimed lands in the Two gold mining basins. Prospectors were having to travel greater distances to claim their own lands to mine.  With the influx of people moving all over the state, people found gold in almost every major stream and river in the state.

If you are looking for places to go gold prospecting today, you can try the Coeur d’Alene river, the snake river, the salmon river, the Boise River and most of their major tributaries.  One of these four rivers is within a short driving distance of just about every town or city in Idaho.  This leaves your options to find a place to go gold prospecting open.  We have prospected on the snake river, the salmon river, and the Boise River.  We have found gold on all three rivers.

Good luck gold prospecting and remember ☠ marks the spot!

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How to Select a Reel for a beginning Angler!

April 8, 2015 by Martin William Leave a Comment

How to Select a Reel for a beginning Angler!  (Foxy the Fish Dog!)
Foxy the Trusty Fishing Partner!

How to Select a Reel for a beginning Angler.

If you want to learn how to fish or you are planning a family fishing trip and have children along.  It is best to purchase the right reel or your kids are not going to enjoy fishing. If you want your children to enjoy the sport of fishing, it is best to not hand them your pro reel as they will not be able to cast the line and will soon become very uninterested in fishing.  With a little bit of planning you can prevent yourself a ton of work fixing reels.

Fishing reels come in different shapes and sizes with mainly five groups including closed face spinning, open faced, electric, fly, and bait casting.  The best option for beginners are closed face and open faced spinning reels with open faced as the second choice. Some children may be able to handle other reels however it is best to start with the cheaper and the easiest to handle of the two options. You may have been fishing for many years and may not realize just how hard it is to cast that first line. Your children will want to do their best and have fun at the same time, so you want to ensure they can handle the reel you

Boat by the Lake. Image provided by Martin William
Boat by the Lake. Image provided by Martin William

choose. For young children, you may want to stay with a cane pole, but once they reach anywhere from four to nine years of age is time to give them a pole and reel that is closer to what mom and dad use.

In order to choose the right reel, there are three things that need to be considered.  Skill level,the type of fishing you will be doing (or the species of fish you will be chasing), and where you will be fishing. If you are a beginner, it is recommended that you begin with a closed face reel as they are easier to use and less expensive.

The closed face reel is so easy to use, you do not need much skill to perfect this as a beginner.  This will also reduce the chance of tangles in your’s or your children’s reels making your fishing trip a more pleasant experience.  If you have children going on their first fishing trip, then this is a much better reel for them. The spool holds the line as well as covers all the mechanical parts with one button on the top or possibly at the back of the reel. In order to use this type of reel, all you do is press the button as you begin the cast and let it go as you finish casting.

Idaho Free Fishing day is right around the corner, we hope this shows you how to select a Reel for a beginning angler so you can get your children out enjoy some fishing.

To learn more about the best fishing supplies for the novice or even the pros, visit SeaGear Marine Supply.

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Hunter’s Safety for Children

September 26, 2014 by Aubrey Moulton Leave a Comment

Hunters Safety for Children
Teach your kids hunter education, and show them the value of hunting in the great outdoors.

Hunters Safety for Children!

With hunting season just around the corner, thousands of people across the country are going to be gearing up to participate in this classic sport. Many people who are not familiar with hunting may perceive the sport to be quite dangerous due to the use of weapons. However, hunting is one of the safest sports that someone can engage in as long as the proper safety measures are being followed. There are far less injuries in hunting than in a sport like football. This means that introducing your children to the sport is fine as long as you teach them how to hunt safely.


Before jumping straight into the woods and handing your child a gun, there are a few important restrictions to think about enforcing in your own life:

  • Children under 15 who are shooting should have a state hunting license, undergo a hunter safety course, and always be with an adult – preferably one who is certified in hunter safety.
  • Do not leave a child alone in the woods when you are hunting.
  • You and your child should wear florescent orange to lessen the chance of an accident.

Once you and your child are out in the woods and ready to hunt, there are a few more things to think about. Your child needs to be aware of the safety measures that have to be taken any time there is a gun involved. Injuries and deaths only occur when someone doesn’t follow some of these basic safety measures:

    Recent Hunter Education Graduate!
    Recent Hunter Education Graduate!

  • Always point the firearm in a safe direction and never at anything you are unwilling to destroy.
  • Always keep the finger off the trigger until ready to shoot.
  • Always keep the firearm unloaded with the ammunition stored separately until you are in the hunting area and ready to shoot.
  • Be sure of your target-and that means what might be beyond or behind that target.
  • Make sure that any animal you bring to your vehicle is dead before loading into the car and leaving.
  • Do not bring small children with you to hunt.
  • Do not let your child climb down a tree or throua fence with a loaded gun. Make them hand the gun to you before climbing to down the tree or through the fence.
  • Make sure that your child knows to never shoot at a sound or a movement. They need to see the target at which they are aiming.

Hunting is one of the oldest sports known to man, and it can be enjoyed with people of all ages as long as the proper safety precautions are being followed. If you are an experienced hunter, do not be afraid to introduce your child to hunting.

There are valuable life lessons to be learned in this sport, and children are more receptive to rules and guidelines than we sometimes give them credit for. Be clear in your instructions, and model the proper behavior so they see you are taking it serious as well.

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Brownlee Reservoir Bass Fishing – One of Idaho’s Hidden Treasures

July 17, 2014 by Jim Lewis Leave a Comment

The Largest Fish My Daughter has ever caught, this small mouth bass is approximately 1.5 Lbs.
The Largest Fish My Daughter has ever caught, this small mouth bass is approximately 1.5 Lbs.

Hidden Idaho Treasure Series

Brownlee Reservoir bass fishing at Woodhead Park!

Where is it?

Hidden in the hills of western Idaho Brownlee Reservoir is a great destination for your family to fish, go swimming or pull out the wake board and catch some air. While Brownlee Reservoir is not was well known as some of Idaho’s greatest places to visit, it is definitely a must see.

Located approximately 28 miles north east of Cambridge Idaho on highway 71, Idaho Power’s Woodhead Park is a beautiful place to stay when you visit Brownlee reservoir.

The Largest Bass My wife has ever caught weighted in at 2 Lbs. 10 Oz.
The Largest Bass My wife has ever caught weighted in at 2 Lbs. 10 Oz.

Woodhead Park?

Woodhead Park located on the Idaho side of Brownlee Reservoir, just a few miles upstream of the dam. Built in 1959, Idaho Power remodeled and expanded the park in 1995 to improve the camping, parking and boating areas.

Ed Woodhead inspired the name of this award-winning park. Mr. Woodhead was chief construction engineer of the nearby Brownlee Power Plant.

Most of the park has mature shade trees, a boat launch, many boat docks, showers that are included in your camping fees, four restrooms, and a fish cleaning station. They also have a free Day use area and several places to tent camp. Even if you are not a fisherman Woodhead park is a great place to camp, if the beautiful vistas do not draw you to this location maybe the great deer hunting or chucker hunting will.

If you forget something at home, don’t worry the Gateway Store and Café located about three miles from the park just may have what you need. They have a great staff of very friendly people and will do whatever they can to help you out.

Brownlee Reservoir Bass Fishing Vista | Looking North on the Reservoir
Brownlee Vista | Looking North on the Reservoir

Brownlee?

Brownlee creek and Brownlee Dam is named after John Brownlee a prospector and an entrepreneur who operated a ferry near the site where the current Brownlee Dam and power plant is located. According to the Idaho Historical Society John Brownlee operated his ferry in that location from 1862 to 1864. There is speculation whether Tim Goodale knew about this route when he lead a train of 70 wagons over his cutoff via freeze out hill to the Powder River and crossed the river at the Brownlee Ferry in late 1862.

In 1864 or 1865 John Brownlee Abandoned his ferry or sunk it; there are actually different reports, then he moved to the Boise basin as he thought he could make a better living as a prospector.

Tim Goodale occupied John Brownlee’s log cabin for a while, even though the ferry business did not amount to anything. There was virtually no ferry business at this location until the Heath mines were discovered and the road from Pine Valley Oregon to the mines was improved in 1876 by William A. West.

William A. West operated the ferry under a new charter and eventually bought out all the interests of his partners. The Brownlee Ferry was operated under several owners until the 1920’s.

Historical References

Idaho State Historical Society – Reference Series – No 54 – Snake River Ferries
Cambridge to Brownlee Ferry
Idaho State Historical Society – Reference Series – No 436

This is the First Largemouth Bass i have ever caught, it had beautiful colors.
This is the First Largemouth Bass i have ever caught, it had beautiful colors.

Fishing Brownlee Reservoir!

Brownlee is considered one of the best fisheries in Idaho and Oregon, considering the reservoir is approximately 58 miles long and there are at least 7 game fish actively sought after. The list of game fish includes Small Mouth Bass, Large Mouth Bass, Catfish, Crappie, Bluegill, Trout, and perch.

The locals say that two guys in a six hour outing can catch between 200 to 300 crappie, and when you get in to the bass or perch the action can be dynamite. If you are teaching your children to fish, this is a great place to get kids hooked up and enthusiastic about fishing. The phenomenal Brownlee reservoir bass fishing has brought our family back to this great location 9 out of the last 10 years.

Planning a fishing trip can be a pain if you do not own a boat. However you can rent a boat or charter a fishing trip in either Richland Oregon or Cambridge Idaho.

The chucker hunting in the fall can be fantastic; however the hills are rugged so you need to be in pretty good shape to do any serous hunting around the reservoir.

Visit Woodhead Park and catch some action on Brownlee reservoir bass fishing in Idaho!

If you are planning a fishing trip, take a little time and research Woodhead Park on Brownlee Reservoir in Idaho. Take your family to Woodhead Park, one trip will get you HOOKED.

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