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By Ulf Dannenberg
When Carl moved from Southern California to
Eureka (CA) and took on a maintenance job with Mobil Oil ten
years ago, he never thought that one day he would become a gold
miner. Actually, his wife Judy is to blame.
She told him that "There is Gold in those
hills and rivers." On weekends they went to the Trinity
River, shovel and gold pan in hand, and started digging. The gold
they found barely covered the bottom of a little glass vial, but
Carl thought that they were doing pretty good. One Sunday they
met a man working with a sluice box, and Carl thought, "Gee,
what a neat device; you move a lot more material." So he
bought a sluice and found more gold. It seems that gold miners at
an early stage have to go through the different steps of growing
into the "business." In other words, your equipment
grows with your experience. Sure enough, a little later Carl met
a man with a 2-inch dredge; and to Carl, that was an earth-moving
machine. A 2-inch dredge was the next toy he bought, and the gold
he found was better. Pretty soon he had his own claim and made a
pennyweight a day. To improve his knowledge about mining he read
Dave McCracken's book on "Advanced Dredging
Techniques." Carl had a lot of questions and gave Dave a
call. Dave at that time was just starting with The New 49'ers
gold mining club. It didn't take long to convince Carl that
joining the club had a lot of advantages for him. He became a
member. He worked his 2-inch dredge along the Klamath River,
sticking to the side of the river in shallow waters all summer
long. And, always going back to Eureka and his job on weekdays.
The next step in his mining experience was
inevitable. He saw someone working a 5-inch dredge and said,
"Wait a minute, there's something wrong here. I have to have
a 5-inch dredge." Next thing, Carl was gone to buy one. He
moved near the confluence of Tim's Creek and the Klamath River
on club claims, and found a virgin streak of overburden with
shallow bedrock. Three and a half ounces! It was the largest
amount of gold he had ever dredged up in one day. This was still
part-time mining. Each weekend he and his wife Judy went home
with at least an ounce of gold. When his boss put too much
pressure on him, Carl felt it was time to take up dredging on a
commercial scale. Subconsciously he'd known all the time that his
future was in becoming a gold miner. He quit his job and moved to
Happy Camp on a permanent basis. He could live easily off the
gold he found and was quite happy.
One summer, however, was quite different.
Not that he was running out of gold. Oh, no! But, Carl was
running into all kinds of trouble. Carl became "famous"
at the Saturday potlucks telling stories about his encounters
with MURPHY'S LAW. These mishaps were quite funny to listen to,
but only because of Carl's unique way of telling these tales. He
is definitely not the kind of guy who sheds tears over spilled
milk. His kind of humor forbids that.
Here are two incidents told in his own words:
"I got here and was in a real hurry to get
into the water. Found a nice spot on one of the new club claims
and wanted to show this new guy how to put a dredge into the
water. He had never seen this kind of operation before. I told
him this is "a piece of cake", I've done it many times.
So, he just stood there watching us lowering the dredge down into
this steep canyon. We had two safety ropes on the dredge, two
guys on top of the road; Gordon and myself, guiding the rig down.
Suddenly something snapped, I didn't know what. And there it
went! From zero to 60 in 6 seconds. I saw Gordon stepping away
from the dredge and running away. One of the security ropes came
whirling down the slope like an angry snake and nobody wanted to
get caught by it. Finally the trailer with the dredge hit the
bank at the end of the slope and tilted sideways.
The air compressor, gas tank and water pump all
broke loose. When I got down there I couldn't help myself. I
started laughing out loud. It was a total disaster. We pulled the
trailer with the dredge back up the hill and I had the dredge
repaired for $280. The newcomer who watched us must have thought
that we were a bunch of crazies. He had that kind of expression
on his face."
"A few weeks later I dredged with my
partner Jerry just below Happy Camp. We wanted to move the dredge
a bit downstream. I'm holding the dredge on a rope and my partner
Jerry is out of sight behind the dredge, when all of a sudden the
current caught the dredge and the safety line became tight like a
guitar string. It started to slip through my fingers six inches
at a time. I looked around. There was no place where I could tie
the rope and I just couldn't hold on much longer. So I let go of
the rope and gripped the highline that was still attached to the
dredge, and I managed to make it to shore with it. Two little
bushes were all I could find to tie the rope around. But the
dredge had put on speed and when the highline around the bushes
tightened, SNAP! It ripped the bushes right out of the ground.
The dredge was free to go and made it around the bend and out of
sight."
"Meanwhile, Jerry was standing on this large
rock looking after the dredge like an Indian with one hand
shading his eyes. I asked him what was going on, and he replied
"It's way down - now it stopped - no, wait a minute - it's
going again." I knew then that I had to make it fast across
the river to get to my car and drive after the dredge. Swimming
through the current like Johnny Weissmuller, I barely made it to
the other side and up the slope, got into Jerry's car and drove
after the dredge."
"Every turn-out I stopped and looked. No dredge
in sight. I drove on, and suddenly I saw something yellow. It was
the dredge. I parked the car on the side of the road next to a
Cal-Trans truck and got out. My heartbeat must have been up to
200. My knees were wobbly, I could hardly breathe, and thought I
was close to a heart attack. I lay down on the road pavement to
catch my breath and the driver of the Cal-Trans truck jumped out
and came over to me. I was spreadeagled on the road. No breath,
and my heart in my throat. So the guy asked me if he could help,
if I needed something. All I could ask was, "Do you have a
cigarette?" He said, "Yeah - need anything else?"
So I croaked, "You got a light?" So he lights my
cigarette and doesn't know what the heck is going on. He looks
over the side down towards the river and asked me if that is my
dredge down there. "Yeah," I said, "does it look
alright?" He told me that my dredge was still swimming. When
I finished smoking I got up and took a look. The dredge was stuck
on a piece of bedrock right in the middle of the river surrounded
by raging whitewater."
"Something had to be done fast, before the
current could rip it off the rock. I slid down the shale,
slipping and falling through thorny bushes. I jumped into the
water a hundred yards above the dredge and tried swimming across
the river. I knew that if I missed the dredge I would be swept a
mile downstream before I could make it up to the road again. I
barely made it. I held on to a piece of bedrock next to the
dredge. It took me quite a while to find a secure position and
think things over. There was 600 feet of highline floating
downstream in a fast current. I tell you, if you had dragged that
line in, you'd know what you had done. It was a heck of a job to
do. But I did it. By that time there was a crowd way up on the
highway. Two Highway Patrol officers, two men from the Forest
Service and also two guys from Cal-Trans. They really enjoyed the
action and were applauding when I had the dredge secured. Now I
looked for a spot where I could climb up the slope. I took my
regulator and airline and looked for a deer trail, but all I
could see was poison oak everywhere. I was in a bad mood. I could
have kicked a bear's butt and not worried about the consequences.
I heard and saw rattlers on my way up through the poison oak, but
I just didn't care. Finally I made it to the top, but a few
hundred yards away from the crowd. I had another cigarette and
Jerry pulled up in his car. He was really scared about me. I
asked him why and he said that the Highway Patrolmen thought I
would kill myself, because the last thing they saw of me, was me
disappearing into the bushes with a rope around my neck. Of
course, the 'rope' was my airline and regulator and by
no means was I going to kill myself over this accident. I laughed
for a few minutes and it took away the tension."
Carl works his new 6-inch dredge with great
success making between three-quarters and one ounce a day. He
works all summer and goes back to Eureka for the winter where he
goes metal detecting along the beaches. When you happen to meet
him, ask him about the many other MURPHY stories he has
experienced. He will tell you in detail, and laugh about it.
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