TrashGrabber
Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2022
- Messages
- 18
Yes, behind the cinder block that's behind me is a turn of the century National Cash Register. My wife and I also pulled out a victorian-era silver gallery tray with our grappling hook, along with many other items.Magnet fishing?
Judging by the amount of rust on it, I would say it was a very long time. If you chip off some of the rust you may be able to find a brand name and possibly a model number. If you can do that then you will be able to find out when that model was made. I think "nadogail" may very well be correct, it may have been lost when the bridge was built, or possibly when and/or if it was repaired.


Cool! Looks like you may have yourself a honey hole.Yes, behind the cinder block that's behind me is a turn of the century National Cash Register. My wife and I also pulled out a victorian-era silver gallery tray with our grappling hook, along with many other items.
Thinking about doing that.Maybe try electrolysis on the hammer.
We also found two more newer cash registers(empty), along with a change machine full of quarters, a Beretta 84F barrel, a western model L66 knife, a whole Nissan Z engine, sunken axe cut timber, and parts from multiple vehicles.Cool! Looks like you may have yourself a honey hole.
Guaranteed the gun and the knife were involved in crimes..lolWe also found two more newer cash registers(empty), along with a change machine full of quarters, a Beretta 84F barrel, a western model L66 knife, a whole Nissan Z engine, sunken axe cut timber, and parts from multiple vehicles.
I spend so much time in it my name might as well be Mud.You may also find an aluminum baseball bat that was used to kiss someone upside the cranium there.
It appears to be a criminal dumping ground for the past century at least. Went there again yesterday and found a 300+lb. safe and ANOTHER jackhammer.Everything under that bridge was involved in a crime.
Unfortunately, no.Is the older cash register brass?
Kratos Orion 2400lb. magnet and a grappling hook.What the hell do you use for bait for that kind of stuff?!?!
Judging by how deteriorated the Jackhammers are I'd say they've been in there longer than THAT safe. I did find the door to another safe which is just as crusty as the jackhammers. We've only checked a 50ft. section of the river and we've found so much stuff. We've been pulling out parts from at least three different vehicles including a school bus.I wonder if they used the jack hammer/drill to open the safes?
We finished watching the two seasons of "Righteous Gemstones" on HBO. Two of the characters ditched an suv into a marsh, and the top of the roof was still showing. The girl said it didn't sink. The guy said to not worry, when the tide comes in it will cover it. Seems the tide was already in, and the next day you could see most of the suv. Funny series, 'cept for all the cussing between family members.The 'honey hole' is at the edge of the bridge. Pull-up, wrestle the heavy item to the bridge edge, push! Splash! Small, light items like handguns might be a short distance further into the body of water away from the bridge. I suspect that given the time this location has 'collected' deposits of disposed goods, it's there, layers-upon-layers of discarded metal objects. That's a very-small body of running water, in my youth, I'd probably refer to that as a 'creek.' It's shallow too, which I suspect would lead to the discovery of discarded goods, as they piled-up on-top of each other. Eventually, the last 'crime syndicate deposit' fails to become submerged, because the prior night's throwaways came to-rest just-below the surface. That's what's happened here in so. FL.
Stolen vehicles are spotted when favorite, frequently-used dumping points in the local canals accumulate so-many vehicles, that the top one doesn't sink, as it's on-top of a vertical stack of earlier abandoned/discarded vehicles. Then the local PD or FD gets a training day in submerged vehicle recovery, as the divers attach tow-truck cables to rigging so the abandoned vehicles can be removed. They have also been spotted when PD helicopters overfly the canals, looking for visible vehicles in the water.
The spot where we are is technically a "Creek" but a river feeds into it about a mile upstream so we just call it all a river. It floods quite often and gets up to 25ft. deep.The 'honey hole' is at the edge of the bridge. Pull-up, wrestle the heavy item to the bridge edge, push! Splash! Small, light items like handguns might be a short distance further into the body of water away from the bridge. I suspect that given the time this location has 'collected' deposits of disposed goods, it's there, layers-upon-layers of discarded metal objects. That's a very-small body of running water, in my youth, I'd probably refer to that as a 'creek.' It's shallow too, which I suspect would lead to the discovery of discarded goods, as they piled-up on-top of each other. Eventually, the last 'crime syndicate deposit' fails to become submerged, because the prior night's throwaways came to-rest just-below the surface. That's what's happened here in so. FL.
Stolen vehicles are spotted when favorite, frequently-used dumping points in the local canals accumulate so-many vehicles, that the top one doesn't sink, as it's on-top of a vertical stack of earlier abandoned/discarded vehicles. Then the local PD or FD gets a training day in submerged vehicle recovery, as the divers attach tow-truck cables to rigging so the abandoned vehicles can be removed. They have also been spotted when PD helicopters overfly the canals, looking for visible vehicles in the water.
That's fantastic. I was thinking you were going to say a dead horse. We pulled a bunch of dead deer out of the water too. Someone was dumping those as well.A friend of mine was doing something similar to you, Normally, he and a buddy would dive golf courses for lost balls. They decided to do a little something different. He was diving at the base of a bridge. The lake water had very poor visibility. He was probing along and all of a sudden he was looking eye-to-eye with a horse. It scared him so much he started screaming. After the initial shock, he looked closer, it was a little kids quarter ride like used to be in front of grocery stores. Someone had stolen it, pried open the coin box, then tossed it over the side of the bridge.
Hah, a good story. It reminds me of an apocryphal tale from my youth.The lake water had very poor visibility. He was probing along and all of a sudden he was looking eye-to-eye with a horse. It scared him so much he started screaming.

