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Updated Tuesday, August 25, 2009 10:34 am TWN, By Karl Vick, The Washington Post |
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Recession sparking modern-day U.S. gold rush nationwide“Thought we'd try to make a living at it,” Kim Lague said, standing in a mining camp that was busier during the Great Depression than it was in the Gold Rush of 1849, and is busy once again. And so, 18 months after a co-worker's pneumatic hammer drove a 2 1/2-inch stainless-steel nail into Ray Lague's skull 0151 “the plunger of the gun brushed my hat and discharged” 0151 the once-thriving contractor took his place among the prospectors lining the steep banks of the South Fork of the Stanislaus River, 40 miles west of Yosemite National Park. The bearded man helping him drag the mining gear into the water was a jobless logger who lost his home to foreclosure. Fifty feet downstream, an unemployed concrete-truck driver scoured the river bottom beside a laid-off furniture mover, back to prospecting after a day spent wrestling with the unemployment office. “You have to consider the economy,” said Gary Rhinevault, caretaker of the Lost Dutchman's Mining Association campground, where 45 prospectors pay as little as 30 cents a day to pitch their tents. “In 1932, there were more prospectors out trying to make a living than in the 1850s.” Even in the trough of today's great recession, most of the prospectors still double as hobbyists. The Lost Dutchman's club allows members to camp for six months at a time, and its dozen or so claims are crowded first with the motor homes of freewheeling retirees. But as the economy soured, their ranks were swelled by adults of working age, pulled by gold prices flirting with US$1,000 a troy ounce 0151 the highest in more than two decades 0151 and pushed by unfortunate circumstance. While there is no way to quantify the trend, anecdotally it is clear that the jobless are showing up not only in California but also elsewhere around the country where gold has been found in the past. “I have been seeing a lot of it this year, with so many people getting laid off or hours cut way back,” said Tim LeGrand, owner of TN Gold & Gems in Coker, Tenn. Permits for prospecting in the nearby Cherokee National Forest, named for the tribe pushed westward after gold was discovered in early 1800s, have more than doubled since 2007. “People come out with high hopes and don't realize the work that is involved until they get into it,” LeGrand said. “ Most try a few days and give up. Many struggle on and learn to pan. Very few get enough gold to do them any financial good.” | |||||||||||||