I am thankful Brian was efficient in finding my wedding ring.
I searched everywhere and could not find it. I called Brian and within thirty minutes of coming to our home he had reunited me with my ring. Thank you Brian!

I searched everywhere and could not find it. I called Brian and within thirty minutes of coming to our home he had reunited me with my ring. Thank you Brian!



Professional Metal Detecting Service if you lost a ring or something precious to you. Please don’t wait until tomorrow, time will work against a successful recovery. PLEASE CALL AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! 310-953-5268
I received a text from David who was concerned that he had lost his ring while gardening in his back yard. We arranged a day and time for me to come and help him.
I got there a little late because of Los Angeles traffic, but not too bad. David met me at the gate to the yard, and took me back to explain what he believed caused the loss. It definitely sounded right to me. The area was on a slope with a lot of leaf and mulch coverage thick enough to hide a ring of any size. I began searching in the area he first showed me moving down the slope, and out of the box as well. About 5 minutes into the search I received a great signal, and put the pin pointer in for the final search. There was David’s ring. I came up with it, and he was happy and surprised to see it. This made his day, and mine as well!
Don’t let the County beach cleaning machines take your lost valuable, call as soon as possible! I will work hard, searching beaches, parks, and yards, using the most up to date metal detectors, to help you find what you thought might never be found again. I search, Beverly Hills, Hermosa Beach, Huntington Beach, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Malibu, Manhattan Beach, Newport Beach, Northridge, Pasadena, Redondo Beach, Santa Monica, Seal Beach, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Torrance, Venice Beach, Zuma Beach, and all parks, yards, gardens, and ponds (to 5 foot depths) in all of Orange County, all of Los Angeles County, Southern California, and Ventura County.
AGAIN, PLEASE CALL AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! 310-953-5268


Professional Metal Detecting Service if you lost a ring or something precious to you. Please don’t wait until tomorrow, time will work against a successful recovery. PLEASE CALL AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! 310-953-5268
Jared sent me a contact asking if I would be able to help find his lost wedding ring. I posed a few questions regarding the loss, and wondered if he was still at the site. He told me he lived in a city 50 miles away, so I figured not. It was already dark, but I told him I would go and do a search for him if he were able to pin point the area he thought the ring was lost. He thought about doing it the next day, but I explained how time would work against a successful recovery, so he gave me guidance to the area.
I arrived at the area, and made my way down to the pinned spot he had shown me in a satellite image. I marked the area and began a grid larger than he had shown to insure nothing was missed. I went pass after pass digging every tone to be sure. I found numerous pieces of trash metal, some with promising signals, but no ring. Then about 30 feet off the mark I received a good strong signal, dug, and had his ring. I took a picture, and told him I found it. I was in the process of writing to find out when I would be able to make the return when Jared told me that he and his wife were having dinner just 5 miles up the road on my way home. I let him know that I would meet him in the parking lot, and was on my way. When I got there he was outside waiting in disbelief that this all happened to get his ring back, and he told me he had only been married 2 months. How exciting is that!
Don’t let the County beach cleaning machines take your lost valuable, call as soon as possible! I will work hard, searching beaches, parks, and yards, using the most up to date metal detectors, to help you find what you thought might never be found again. I search, Beverly Hills, Hermosa Beach, Huntington Beach, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Malibu, Manhattan Beach, Newport Beach, Northridge, Pasadena, Redondo Beach, Santa Monica, Seal Beach, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Torrance, Venice Beach, Zuma Beach, and all parks, yards, gardens, and ponds (to 5 foot depths) in all of Orange County, all of Los Angeles County, Southern California, and Ventura County.
AGAIN, PLEASE CALL AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! 310-953-5268


I met Tom at his gorgeous property in the hills of Middle TN to search for some parts from a piece of machinery that were lost almost five months ago near a creek at the back of the property. Tom said he had some friends with metal detectors search for the items, but they were unsuccessful in finding the missing parts. One of Tom’s co-workers did an online search and found my information on TheRingFinders directory. Tom expressed how important it was that these two missing pieces were found. He showed me the areas where he last saw the missing parts back in July, before the ground was covered in fallen leaves. Within an hour I was able to locate both pieces that Tom needed. This just goes to show that it’s not always expensive jewelry or lost car keys that people need our help finding.
I received a message from a gentleman in River Ridge whose wife lost her platinum ring while walking through the front yard. They had a good idea of the general area where it slipped off, but after searching through the grass with a Minelab metal detector they purchased at Academy, they still couldn’t locate it.
I arrived at his home, introduced myself, turned on my detector, and the very first beep I heard was her ring. The entire recovery took about 5 seconds from when I turned the Nokta Makro Simplex Ultra on.
Always a great feeling handing a sentimental piece back to the owner.
If you’ve lost a ring or any metal item don’t hesitate to reach out to Anthony Cuccia at (985) 445-4514.


This ring find began Sunday afternoon when I got a text from Kelsey who lives in Wahiawa on Oahu and was enjoying her day with friends at Lanikuhonua Lagoon on Ko Olina resort. She put her Silver Owl Face ring in her beach bag for safe keeping. At the end of the day the ring was missing from the bag. Kelsey could only assume it fell out as she was putting items in and out of her bag. It was getting late but there was just enough sunlight that I could get out to the lagoon for a quick hunt. I grabbed my gear and headed off. The traffic was really good so I got to the lagoon faster then I thought. I started my hunt high up on the beach as that is where Kelsey had her beach items. I worked my way down the slope and also noticed a high tide went all the way to the top of this beach. That meant the ring probably traveled down the slope with each wave. On a leg about 3/4 of the way down the slope I got a broken my decent high tone on the Manticore. One scoop and there was an owl looking at me from inside my scoop. Wow! Now that’s a really cool ring. The eyes would follow you as you rotated the ring. When I got to my phone I texted then called Kelsey that i had found her unique sentimental ring. She was obviously very relieved and met me today near my work for the return. Have a Mele Kalikimaka and Aloha to Kelsey!
On December 8th, I was driving home to Waukesha, Wisconsin, from a successful ring search in McHenry, Illinois when my cellphone rang. The call was from Kenosha, Wisconsin, resident, Cheyene Hoppe. Cheyene and friends were enjoying a visit outside a downtown building two nights previous. That’s when a family heirloom ring went missing in the snow. The gold wedding ring was inscribed with the initials of Cheyene’s great grandfather along with the date of his wedding in 1914. He was married in Lithuania and later immigrated to the United States. Cheyene lovingly wore the ring in his memory. Now it was gone. She was heartbroken.
In the European way, Cheyene uses her hands a lot as she talks. But a flip of her hand resulted in the heirloom piece coming off. She had the sense that the ring ejected from her hand in an upward motion. But there was snow all around, including thick bushes, steps and landscaping. The ring could be anywhere.
Using my XP Deus II metal detector and hand probe, I carefully sifted through the snow on both sides of the walkway, probing in and around the snow-laden juniper bushes. The ring was nowhere to be found. Only three search locations remained, two planter boxes and a larger, 5’ tall box with several inches of snow covering them. The box was behind Cheyene at the time her ring came off. It had a sheet-metal top, which made using a metal detector out of the question. Instead, I used a small hand-held probe which allowed closer contact with the metal. Moving through the snow a few inches at a time, I cleared nearly two thirds of it from the box when a distinct beep noise announced the presence of a target. To everyone’s surprise, it was Cheyene’s heirloom ring! It was sitting in the snow on top of the box behind where she had been standing two nights before.
The smile on Cheyene’s face certainly tells the rest of the story! And I am so thrilled that the ring’s amazing 111-year-old story continues. 
Austin Gebert, was installing Christmas decorations in the front lawn of his McHenry, Illinois home when he lost his gold wedding ring. Nearly a foot of snow covered the ground. At one point, as Austin flipped snow off his cold bare hand, he felt the ring fly off. He told me on the phone, “It left my hand like a bullet.” The ring just vanished into the whiteness.
Austin reached out to me by phone on Sunday evening, December 7th. I arranged the hour-long drive the next morning and was greeted by Gabriela, Austin’s wife. She gave me a tour of the suspected lawn area. I noted several metallic Christmas decorations in the vicinity. These needed to be removed so as not to interfere with a metal-detection search.
An initial search failed to turn up Austin’s ring. I moved to a larger snow pile alongside the Gebert’s driveway where it had been shoveled. About 14 inches into the pile, I heard a faint signal in my headset. My trusty pin-pointer helped locate the target. Reaching in with my bare fingers I felt an unmistakable ring-like object and pulled it up and out into the light of day. Sure enough, it was Austin’s ring! 
Since Austin was at work, I presented the ring to Gabriela whose face lit up like Christmas lights. Her smile tells the rest of the story.
Thank you, Austin, for the privilege of searching for and finding your missing wedding ring!
A late November snowstorm gave Glendale, Wisconsin resident, Bob Goding, the opportunity to enjoy quality time with his grandchildren. The snow was just the right consistency for building a snowman. But in the process, Bob’s gold wedding ring went missing, most likely when he shook snow out of his glove. He contacted me a couple days later and we arranged to conduct a metal-detecting search for his ring on December 2nd.
On arrival, all that remained of poor Mr. Snowman, was a scattering of lumps. Bob and his wife had discretely dissected him (after the grandchildren had gone home), this in case the ring had become encased inside the jolly figure. Sadly, Bob’s ring remained at large. And Mr. Snowman’s lumpy remains only added insult to injury.
I embarked on a grid search in the front lawn where the snowman had been created. Boot prints of all sizes bore evidence happier times. As I expanded the search area, a signal in my headset invited attention. The conductivity numbers were in the range of a man’s gold ring. Indeed, the target turned out to be Bob’s missing, but now found, wedding ring! And the smile on Bob’s face tells the rest of the story. 
If you or someone you know has lost a ring in the snow, grass, leaves, sand, underwater, or elsewhere, chances are it’s still there. Don’t let its story end. Call today! We’d love to add your smile to our growing list of happy clients.