The Ring Finders Blog

Carlsbad metal detector nearby to help,Beware of metal detector rentals & hire an expert!

  • from Carlsbad (California, United States)

 

Metal detector personnel helped find a lost ring at Carlsbad beach San Diego. Call or text Curtis Cox 760 889 2751 before it’s too late! Don’t use cheap metal detector rental suppliers!

Here’s another successful recovery during the summer of 2025. A call for help came just before sundown,,fortunately I reside nearby & was there quickly. Soon after scanning the small dry sand area where she witnessed it disappear a signal beeped on my metal detector then her ring magically reappeared back in her hand. She was thrilled & thankful I could help find what could have been lost forever.

 

Beware of cheap metal detector rentals especially if you lost your keepsake at a public place…Generally lost rings at the beach will be found in less than 1-2 days by SoCal hobby detectorists or YouTube detectorists that desperately need your jewelry for content!

Engagement Ring Lost In The Newmarket, New Hampshire Snow Found With A Metal Detector

  • from Old Orchard Beach (Maine, United States)

I received the following message, at 7:30am, Monday January 27th,

“Hello, my name is Marissa B****. I’m located in Newmarket, New Hampshire . Um, I was just calling, um, to see if someone could come out and help me potentially very quickly. Um, I was getting snow off my car and my ring fell off my finger and it’s somewhere in the snow and I’ve just been searching for it and I didn’t know if someone just could come and help me. I live in an apartment building and they’re gonna come plow soon. Um, so I was just wondering if you could help me out, my number is 603-***_****. Thank you very much.”

I immediately called Marissa back and I could tell she was upset by her cracking voice and what sounded like sobbing. Marissa explained that as she was cleaning her vehicle off, her White Gold and Yellow Diamond Engagement Ring had come off and landed in the snow. Marissa and her fiance’ had searched the snow where the ring had fallen but they couldn’t find it. To add even more pressure, the snowplows, that plow the large apartment complex, were just a few buildings away and would be at her building, within two hours. She asked if I could come down there, ASAP, and search. Without hesitation I told Marissa, I would load my equipment up and be there as soon as I could. I also asked her to not have the plows, plow where her car was parked, until I could get there. I knew Newmarket, was just a little SW of Portsmouth New Hampshire and was an hour away, from our home in Saco, Maine, on a good day. This morning the roads were still slick, with black ice and the plows were still out. Hopefully, The Maine Turnpike would be all clear. Marissa agreed to talk with the plow operators, should they arrive, before I do.
Once I was on the road, I called a still emotional Marissa and told her I was already on the Maine Turnpike and gave her an ETA. As soon as I told her that, I could hear a little relief, in her voice . Just knowing someone was on their way to help her, calmed her down. As Cheryl and I made our way down to New Hampshire, the traffic was flowing smoothly, although a little slower, than normal. We arrived at her apartment complex in approximately 1 1/4 hours, about 15 minutes slower, than usual. Once we got out of the vehicle, a cold stiff wind hit us. Temperature at the arrival time was 10 degrees with a feel like wind chill temperature of -2 degrees, brrrrr🥶🥶🥶
We were met by Marissa and she showed me where her car was parked, when her engagement ring came off. It was a very small area and I could see all the disturbed snow, where Marissa and her fiance’ had been searching, without any luck. After throwing a gold test ring, in the snow and showing Marissa how the metal detector works, I got down to business. I performed an east/west grid search. A few targets were heard but I knew they weren’t the engagement ring. I then searched the area again, this time in a north/South grid pattern. Still no engagement ring was found. I had only been searching for 10 minutes and already had searched the very small area, twice, with no luck. I then expanded the search, to just over the piles of snow and within a few minutes, I received the tone I was listening for. A nice low tone, reading 15-16 on the detectors VDI screen. A classic gold target, for a small ring. I grabbed my pinpointer and located the target, in the snow. Once located , I could see the outline of a ring, with some stones but couldn’t make out the color of the stone. I wanted to surprise Marissa so without telling her I had found the ring, I asked her about the color of the stone and she replied “The diamond, yellow”. I then reached down, picked up the ring, from the snow and asked, “Is this it?’ As Marissa walked towards me I could see her eyes welling up and she then thanked me, as she turned away from the camera. Marissa then gave me a hug and I could see the happy tears. What a great feeling it is to be able to help people like Marissa. She was possibly an hour away from having her diamond plowed and lost forever or even damaged, beyond repair. As the weather was brutally cold, Marissa then went back inside her apartment and Cheryl and I quickly jumped back in our vehicle and turned the heat up.
Being retired came into play today because if I was still working, a regular job, , I would not have been able to leave immediately and who knows what might have happened, with the ring. As I always preach, time is of the essence and this was a situation that proves that’s saying. So Cheryl and I went hunting for a HOT Dunkin” coffee for her, for our drive home. Once she got a little coffee in her, Cheryl became a happy camper. I was a happy camper, as soon as I saw Mariss’s engagement ring, in the snow. Another ring, back on the owners finger and I truly have the best job, in the world.❤️🙏

 

Lost 24K Gold Wedding Ring at Four Seasons Beach Ko Olina Resort…FOUND!!!

  • from O‘ahu (Hawaii, United States)

This ring find began when I got a call from Four Seasons Beach Team informing me that one of their guests named Evan who was on vacation from Oakland, California and lost his 24K Gold Wedding band in the lagoon and wanted to know if I could recover it.  I said “Of course” and to give that guest my number and I could coordinate the recovery.  Evan called and told me he was swimming on his back in about 4 feet of water and his Wedding Ring slipped off and disappeared into the murky water.  High surf has been pounding our west coast and stirring up the Ko Olina lagoons.  I told Evan I would arrive the next morning at the low tide which would be around 10am.  I arrived a bit early and discovered another detectorist on the beach.  The beach team told him he couldn’t be there, at the same time I was arriving.  His name was Paul, nice guy,  just read the rules online wrong.  I did direct him to Paradise Cove beach which is open to all detectors.  I counted out the umbrella Evan told me the ring should be straight out from and entered the water a little right of that to create a grid search.  I went out to neck deep water turned left.  I took two steps and Boom screaming high tone.  Four scoops later in the murky water and finally the heavy 24K gold ring was in the scoop.  I went back to my car to text Evan a pic and he confirmed.  I went back to the Four Seasons Beach entry and there was Evan for the return.  Another one for the book of smiles.  Aloha to Evan!

Ring found in Miami Beach metal detecting

  • from Miami (Florida, United States)

If you lost a ring or piece of jewelry and need a metal detector to find it, give me a call/text (Louis) 305-608-1870.  I have a metal detecting service in the Miami area.  I can come out and help you find it.  Be sure to check my over 150 successful recoveries on my main page

Lost earring in beach volleyball court

  • from Miami (Florida, United States)

Got a call from someone who lost an earring in a beach volleyball court.  This is the second time I’ve been called out to this Condo.  If you or someone you know anybody who has lost a piece of jewelry on the beach, in the water or in the backyard, give me a call/text, Louis 305-608-1870

Lost Gold Ring in the Snow Found in St. Clair Shores Michigan

  • from Detroit (Michigan, United States)

Frosty Dog Fred….

Loves the snow, so just the other night Derek let him out in the yard to do dog stuff. Well, more time passed as usual, so Derek looked out and didn’t see Fred. Derek went out and found Fred hiding out in about a foot of snow. Reaching for him thinking something was wrong Fred bolted off and started to zigzag thru more snow. By time Derek got him back inside he noticed his ring missing. With my MXT metal detector I started a simple grid search thru the deep snow and got a great signal. Pinpointing down thru the snow revealed Derek’s ring partially frozen to the top of the grass. Carefully removing it I placed it in Derek’s hand to thaw. Excited to have his ring back he decided next time to handle things differently with frosty dog Fred….should he decide to play opossum again!

Jonathan

His & Hers Platinum Wedding bands Lost, Recovered and Returned in Villanova, PA!!!

  • from Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, United States)

Thanks to fellow Ring Finder, John Favano, for the referral! Jerry reached out to me after losing his beautiful platinum wedding band while playing in the snow in the front yard of his Villanova, PA home. After searching for several hours on his hands and knees in the fresh snow he thought he would try to get a better idea of what the ring would look like in the snow….so….yeah….he borrowed his wife’s matching wedding band and threw that down. As you can guess….he immediately lost that one too! After several more hours of searching with rakes and shovels he finally surrendered and got in touch with a professional. He lost them on a Sunday….I was there with my metal detector Monday afternoon. Within 3 minutes total….I had recovered both rings! Jerry told me he briefly considered renting or purchasing a metal detector before calling me. I told him of the countless times I get the called after people buy or rent machine in an effort to find themselves…I told him the experience of the guy using the machine is more important than the machine itself! I was very happy to reunite Jerry and his wife with their beautiful rings!

 

LOST DIAMOND RING IN SAINT MARTINVILLE, LA – FOUND

  • from Lafayette (Louisiana, United States)
Contact:

Charissa was trying to get her cat out of a tree in her back yard. Shaking a branch did not work so she climbed in the tree and finally was successful. After getting back on the ground, she realized her diamond ring was not on her finger. She looked for it around the tree without luck. We then got the call for help. We had her describe where she had walked in the yard and climbed in the tree before she noticed the ring was gone. We hunted the area for about a half hour before Carrie found it. The odd thing was, we both had searched that area before Carrie located it. The area was where she had held onto a small branch and shook it in an attempt to scare the cat. As hard as it is to imagine, did the ring get stuck on that branch and fall after we had both made a first pass through that area? Either that or we’re really not that good.

The Bad Dude!

  • from St. Augustine (Florida, United States)

June 2023. I received a call late on a Friday afternoon from a gentleman living in far west Saint John’s county saying that he had lost a very sentimental ring while cutting down some Oak tree branches on his property with his wife. No worries, I made plans to drive out to him first thing Saturday morning to find the ring. Arriving at this home he came out to meet us (brought a friend along who was getting into metal detecting) and judging by the way he carried himself, the walk that tells you, “He’s a bad dude!” Ex Marine kind of walk.

He points to the area he was working when he lost his ring and as soon as he sees my friend’s hat “Vietnam Veteran” they begin to bond in only the way ex-military can. He goes on the tell us that he spent several years in North Africa chasing “Bad Guys” and that the ring had a special encoding that outlined his missions. With that he also says “That all I can tell you” well that is all I wanted to hear!

My friend and I go into the wooded area and about ½ hour later I get a strong hit and move the leaves and branches to expose his ring. It was a large palladium ring with some type of etching around the ring. Judging from the size of the ring, he had lost quite a bit of weight, so the ring easily slipped off his finger. Needless to say, he was ecstatic and want to give us a reward but we both said “No” please donate it to a veteran’s organization and “Thank you for your service!”

Mom knows best!

  • from St. Augustine (Florida, United States)

October 2024. Saturday mid-morning I got a call from a woman whose daughter just lost her engagement ring on a baseball field. Turns out the woman (mom) was with her daughter and son practicing his baseball skills. Mom had told her daughter “Don’t take off your engagement ring and put it in a pants pocket you will lose it” – mom knows best!

Well, the daughter didn’t take that advice and lost her ring while practicing with her brother somewhere on the baseball field. They had been raking the red clay since she had lost the ring with no luck. When I arrived, the mother greeted me and pointed out where her daughter was on the ballfield (mostly out on the right field catching fly balls but also ran the bases a few times). Figuring the ring had only been lost a few hours it would be right on the surface, so I covered the right outfield in about 45 minutes looking for a high signal indication something on the surface with no luck. I then moved onto the infield bases and the red clay. They were still raking the red clay, so I started to run a pattern around the bases starting at home plate going around the based the first time then moving out about 2 feet and proceeding to detect around the bases a second time.

As I passed 2nd base on the 2nd run, I got a very strong hit. When the coil of my metal detector passed over the signal up popped the ring from the red clay. The sun was out and the sunlight hit the diamond, and it just lit up and sparkled. I picked it up and said to the mother and daughter “anyone looking for a diamond engagement ring?” Both Mother and daughter started to scream, and shout followed by a river of tears as they said they thought the ring was gone forever. They wanted to give me a reward but figuring it was so close to Thanksgiving I refused and told them it would be great if they donate the reward to a local food bank which the mother texted me later in the day and said they did.