A honeymoon hunting for English treasure
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Fred Booth and Helen Evers-Booth spent half of their 15-day
honeymoon treasure hunting in Norwich, England.
Both members of the West Coast Prospectors and Treasure Hunters
Assn., they had met at the club and bonded in the beginning through
the shared love of hunting for treasure.
They spent much of their honeymoon combing between 60 and 200
acres of historically-rich land with metal detectors for ancient
coins and artifacts.
“My wife and I found coins from the first to 3rd century A.D. and
we found coins and artifacts up to the 20th century,” said Fred
Booth, of Costa Mesa. “These are actual archeological sites -- old
medieval villages, or what remains of them ... There’s a tremendous
amount of history to be dug from the soil there.”
The Booths went to England to participate in the usual tour
circuit -- Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, museums -- and also as a part
of Discovery Tours International, a treasure hunting group organized
in conjunction with the British government and archeologists. Booth
added that the rules are in accordance with the treasure laws in
England.
“They have very, very distinct laws that you have to obey,” he
said. “Anything that’s found over 50-years-old becomes the property
of the crown ... Treasure hunting is really popular in England. We’re
talking from the times of the Celtic people to before Christ, through
the Normans, through the Saxons.”
Booth added that he and his wife would jump up and down in the
middle of fields after finally finding something. The hunts lasted
for eight hours every day for eight days.
“The only break we would take is a potty break,” he said.
Helen Evers-Booth said her favorite part of the trip was taking a
tour through one of the properties on which they were searching. The
owner, an elderly woman, walked her through the 1612 home.
“It was just marvelous,” said the 56-year-old. “It was like a
castle.”
But romantically enough, Fred Booth’s favorite part of the
honeymoon was something even more picturesque.
During the couple’s visit to the little town of Arundel, they sat
at a cafe by a little river. The weather had been dreadful for most
of the trip with rainstorms, Fred Booth said.
“But it was a beautiful, sunny day ... we sat on the river, had
sandwiches and tea, and as we were there, about eight to 10 white
swans came up the river,” he said.
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to TRAVEL TALES,
330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected];
or fax to (949) 646-4170.
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