Sentimental Charm Necklace Found in Ocean City NJ Beach Sand by Ring Finders South Jersey John Favano




This Ring Find began when I got a text from Kyle who was on vacation from Vallejo, California and staying at the Aulani Resort. While tossing a football he noticed his ring missing and assumed it had fallen off in neck deep high tide water. Since it was high tide and getting late I told Kyle I would be there first light at the low tide to see if I could find his ring. Kyle sent some excellent photos to help with the line up but no ring was found. Then a gentlemen approached me for a Gold Chain recovery a bit farther down the beach, but I didn’t find that either. Probably scuba depth! As I was heading back to my car, thinking I had failed twice, Kyle came out to the beach. He assured me that I had certainly covered the right area, but I decided to do a few more grid lines. As I was returning to shore after that attempt I got a loud number 35 on the Manticore in calf deep water and there in my scoop was Kyle’s Wedding Ring. It shocked the both of us. I can only guess the ring was either hit by the football and got flung towards shore or that’s where it actually fell off and wasn’t noticed until much deeper water. In any case Kyle was blessed with a return. Aloha to Kyle!
After a phone conversation with Terri, I learned she had possibly lost her white gold & diamond ring while doing some gardening. There was also a chance it could have been lost in some other locations, but she and her husband Scott had done some searching in those places with no luck. After a Google search, she found The Ring Finders and we set a time when I could come over and search. A little over an hour into the search, I was detecting near the end of a rock garden area where the grass started. Terri was standing a few feet away and I heard a yell that could only mean one thing……..she had spotted her ring in the grass area I was approaching. Amazing! I asked her to wave it under the coil on my Equinox 900, a solid low tone 16. Sometimes a ring is found by a stranger and returned, sometimes a detectorist from The Ring Finders is able to find and return a ring, and sometimes the owner has an eagle eye and finds what they thought was lost forever. Terri’s ring is back on her finger where it belongs and I will never forget the look of joy on her face when she found it.



Miguel asked me if I could help him find his ring which he just lost. He had been sifting the sand for half and hour. It took under a minute to locate it. He was stoked!
Sergio was at the beach in Coronado and when doing a simple stretch with his arms, his wedding ring flew off into the soft sand. Raking with his fingers came up dry, so, onto the web he went for help. He contacted both Stan and Curtis here in SoCal who gave him my number. Thanks guys! Sergio wasn’t able to meet me right away to show me the search area, but, he did the next best thing, which was GPS coordinates and photos he’d taken at the loss site. Armed with this info, I went to the beach and figured out the likely location by the landmarks in the photos. I started a spiral search from where I stood, and after about a 1/2 hour I had covered about a 50 foot circle…..but no ring. Hmmm, that was strange as I had reviewed the photos several times and was sure I was in the correct area. Time to start over, so, I walked back to my initial starting point and got a good signal right there! I looked down and realized that the signal was right under my first left foot print in the sand! That was a first for me to have been actually standing on the target I was looking for! I guess I need to learn to get out of my own way! Great to meet you and your sons Sergio, and thank you for the reward.



I received a call from a woman who was hoping I could help recover a couple of rings lost on the beach. I assured her that I could help and gathered some more details about the location and what had happened.
Kristen explained that she had been on the beach with a group of friends, and at some point, the rings were placed inside a shoe that was sitting on top of a towel. Later in the day, when they packed up, the towel was picked up and shaken out—unfortunately sending the rings tumbling into the sand without anyone noticing at the time.
It wasn’t until later that they realized the rings were missing. They quickly returned to the beach and searched the area themselves but had no luck finding them.
I told her I could be there shortly and asked her to meet me at the dune crossover so we could walk out together to the search area. Once on the beach, she showed me where they had been set up. Based on her description, I marked off roughly a 20-by-20-foot area to begin the search.
It didn’t take long.
Within just a few moments, I got a solid signal and had the first ring in my scoop. Shortly after that, I picked up another signal—and there was the second ring.
Both rings recovered within minutes.
The look of relief and happiness on their faces was priceless. What had seemed like a frustrating and disappointing loss just hours earlier turned into a complete recovery.
Another great reminder that even when items are lost in the sand, they’re often still right where they fell—it just takes the right equipment and experience to bring them back.

Dave’s beloved platinum wedding band that mysteriously vanished in his Braddock Heights, Maryland backyard before being successfully recovered by metal detectorist Brian Rudolph.

A smiling Dave proudly holds up his cherished platinum wedding ring after Brian Rudolph solved the mystery and recovered the sentimental piece for him and his wife Elizabeth.
Brian Rudolph, Lost Item Recovery Specialist (also known as THE RING HERO) searches Land, Water, Sand, Snow, Leaves, Cliffs, Houses and Vehicles. He Will Find Your Lost Item! Call ASAP (301) 466-8644!
By Brian Rudolph – Professional Ring Finder & Metal Detectorist
Owner, METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC (Clarksburg, Maryland)
There are some lost ring recoveries that seem straightforward at first… and then there are the searches that turn into full-blown mysteries. This particular recovery in Braddock Heights, Maryland definitely fell into the second category!
Dave had been outside tending to chores around his backyard when suddenly he felt something unusual happen. In one quick movement, his beloved platinum wedding band flew off his finger and disappeared somewhere into the landscape behind his home. At first, Dave assumed the ring would be easy to locate. After all, how far could it possibly have gone?
What he expected to be a quick search lasting only a few minutes eventually turned into hours of frustration spread across multiple days. Dave carefully searched the property himself and even attempted using a metal detector, but despite all of his efforts, the cherished wedding band remained missing.
Eventually, Dave searched online for professional help and came across me, Brian Rudolph, owner of METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC and proud member of the elite international recovery directory known as THE RING FINDERS. After speaking together on the phone and reviewing all of the details surrounding the disappearance, we scheduled a time for me to come out and investigate the mystery firsthand.
By the time I arrived at Dave’s Braddock Heights, Maryland property, evening darkness had already begun settling in across the backyard. Fortunately, searching at night has never been a problem for me because I use specialized night gear that allows me to continue metal detecting even after sunset.
Dave guided me down a hill in the backyard to the area where he remembered feeling the ring fly from his finger. Once I gathered my equipment from the vehicle, I immediately got to work tracing the exact path Dave had taken earlier that day.
I began metal detecting along the walkway leading from a fenced-in section of the yard toward the house. Every signal checked out negative for the missing ring. I then searched beneath several pine trees nearby, but once again I came up empty-handed aside from miscellaneous buried metal objects scattered throughout the soil. Still determined, I expanded the search across the grassy hillside. Signal after signal appeared on my detector, yet none of them belonged to Dave’s platinum wedding band.
At that point, I began reconsidering the physics behind how the ring may have flown off Dave’s finger. Even though Dave believed the ring had traveled toward the front left side of him, I explained that rings often end up in completely different directions than what the mind remembers. Our brains frequently reconstruct moments incorrectly during stressful situations, causing people to become convinced something happened one way when reality tells a different story.
With that in mind, I decided to search farther down the hill near the fenced-in area where the family dogs often roam and play. Unfortunately, the fence itself created another challenge because the metal fencing produced overwhelming detector signals that masked smaller nearby objects like a ring. That meant I could not effectively metal detect directly against the fence line. Instead, I carefully switched to a visual and manual inspection of the grass along the bottom edge of the fence. And then… the mystery was solved!
Right there against the fence line, partially concealed in the grass, sat Dave’s handsome platinum wedding band exactly where nobody expected it to be! Dave stood nearby as I uncovered the cherished symbol of love that his wife Elizabeth had placed on his finger years earlier.
The excitement and relief on Dave’s face were absolutely priceless. After spending so many frustrating hours unsuccessfully searching for the ring himself, it was incredibly rewarding for both of us to finally celebrate the recovery together.
Dave truly was a wonderful gentleman from England, and I thoroughly enjoyed spending time with him during the recovery adventure. We chatted for a while after the successful search before I eventually headed home, grateful once again to have helped preserve another treasured symbol of marriage and commitment.
Every recovery has its own story, but this Braddock Heights ring mystery served as another reminder that sometimes the missing object is not where the mind insists it should be — it is where the evidence quietly leads you instead.
SUBSCRIBE TO BRIAN’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL TO VIEW THIS SEARCH VIDEO!
To receive a NOTIFICATION letting you know when the video is uploaded to YOUTUBE: go to YOUTUBE by CLICKING THE LINK BELOW or OPEN your YOUTUBE APP on your device, go to the SEARCH BAR, type: THE RING HERO, click SUBSCRIBE and lastly, CLICK ON THE “BELL” to receive NOTIFICATIONS when this latest search video is available to view!
BRIAN’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL LINK:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmcn09QqWhHrj-7SGqlUBJQ
CALL BRIAN RUDOLPH WITH THE RING FINDERS AT (301) 466-8644! 
VISIT THE RING FINDER’S WEBSITE TO READ MORE OF BRIAN’S SUCCESSFUL SEARCH STORIES at:
TheRingFinders.com/Brian.Rudolph/
HE WILL RETURN TO YOU WHAT HAS BEEN LOST!
VISIT BRIAN’S BUSINESS WEBSITE FOR ADDITIONAL SERVICES, STORIES AND INFORMATION AT: www.MetalDetectingAdventures.net
Contact me for all your metal detecting and recovery needs. Rob 402-580-6933. Land, water, cracks in concrete, rings, keys, hearing aids, phones, buried cache, etc. Assisting law enforcement. Serving Lincoln and the greater Nebraska area. Why rent a metal detector when you can have the best.
Terry, like all of us have, was feeling the frustrations of life. In a moment of lasps the ring was taken off and thrown. Thrown into one of the worst locations, filled with trash and landscaping debris. She immediately regretted this……She tried to find it. Many times returning to the spot, sliding down the steep hill in desperation. She even bought a metal detector, grasping at anything she could do to find her ring. She finally ended up on the internet. Theringfinders.com was her best hope. After hours of searching through the rough terrain her ring is back where it belongs. Always an honor to help someone get back such an irreplaceable item.




Izzah’s stunning 22 karat yellow gold family heirloom ring featuring beautiful oval rubies and sparkling diamonds, recovered from the snow in Ellicott City, Maryland by Brian Rudolph of THE RING FINDERS.

Smiles and relief! Izzah happily poses with her treasured family heirloom ring after professional metal detectorist Brian Rudolph of METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC successfully recovered it from the snowy sledding hill.
Brian Rudolph, Lost Item Recovery Specialist (also known as THE RING HERO) searches Land, Water, Sand, Snow, Leaves, Cliffs, Houses and Vehicles. He Will Find Your Lost Item! Call ASAP (301) 466-8644!
By Brian Rudolph – Professional Ring Finder & Metal Detectorist
Owner, METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC (Clarksburg, Maryland)
What started out as a joyful winter afternoon of sledding in Ellicott City quickly turned into a heartbreaking situation for Izzah and her husband Danish. The couple had been enjoying the snow-covered hills in the front yard of Izzah’s aunt’s home when disaster struck.
At some point after getting off the sled, Izzah suddenly realized that her extraordinary 22 karat yellow gold family heirloom ring had disappeared from her finger. The stunning piece featured multiple oval-shaped rubies surrounded by brilliant round diamonds throughout the wide gold band. More than just an expensive piece of jewelry, the ring held deep sentimental value because it had been lovingly gifted to Izzah by her mother. Panic immediately set in.
The couple searched frantically through the snow at both the top and bottom of the hill where they had been sledding. Despite their determination, the precious family heirloom remained missing. Refusing to give up, Izzah and Danish even purchased a metal detector in hopes of recovering the ring themselves. Unfortunately, the detector continuously beeped at numerous metal targets beneath the snow, leaving the couple overwhelmed and discouraged. They eventually assumed the detector was defective.
Still desperate to recover the irreplaceable treasure, the couple searched online and discovered THE RING FINDERS, an international directory of professional metal detectorists who specialize in locating lost jewelry and valuables. That’s when they contacted me, Brian Rudolph, professional metal detectorist and owner of METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC.
After gathering all of the important details over the phone and reassuring the couple that I would do everything possible to help, I headed out to the snowy recovery site in Ellicott City.
Once I arrived, Izzah and Danish walked me through the sledding path and pointed out the two most likely locations where the ring could have fallen off. After surveying the scene, I returned to my vehicle to retrieve the specialized equipment needed for the search.
Within minutes of beginning the recovery operation, my metal detector produced a strong and very promising signal near the bottom of the hill. Buried beneath the snow was the missing 22 karat yellow gold ruby and diamond heirloom ring!
The couple could hardly believe how quickly the treasured piece had been recovered — especially because they had already searched over the same exact location themselves. In situations like these, surrounding metal objects can sometimes mask the signal of a small gold ring, making recovery extremely difficult for inexperienced detectorists using entry-level equipment. Professional experience combined with advanced recovery equipment often makes all the difference.
The moment Izzah saw her mother’s precious heirloom safely back in her hands, an incredible sense of relief and happiness filled the snowy yard. Both she and Danish were beyond grateful that the ring had been rescued before the snow melted or the item disappeared forever.
Recoveries like this are the reason I love what I do. Preserving meaningful heirlooms and reuniting families with their priceless treasures is one of the most rewarding parts of being a member of THE RING FINDERS and owner of METAL DETECTING ADVENTURES INC. Thankfully, this beautiful family heirloom can now continue to be passed down from generation to generation for many years to come.
SUBSCRIBE TO BRIAN’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL TO VIEW THIS SEARCH VIDEO!
To receive a NOTIFICATION letting you know when the video is uploaded to YOUTUBE: go to YOUTUBE by CLICKING THE LINK BELOW or OPEN your YOUTUBE APP on your device, go to the SEARCH BAR, type: THE RING HERO, click SUBSCRIBE and lastly, CLICK ON THE “BELL” to receive NOTIFICATIONS when this latest search video is available to view!
BRIAN’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL LINK:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmcn09QqWhHrj-7SGqlUBJQ
CALL BRIAN RUDOLPH WITH THE RING FINDERS AT (301) 466-8644! 
VISIT THE RING FINDER’S WEBSITE TO READ MORE OF BRIAN’S SUCCESSFUL SEARCH STORIES at:
TheRingFinders.com/Brian.Rudolph/
HE WILL RETURN TO YOU WHAT HAS BEEN LOST!
VISIT BRIAN’S BUSINESS WEBSITE FOR ADDITIONAL SERVICES, STORIES AND INFORMATION AT: www.MetalDetectingAdventures.net
The Ring Finders of Maine, With Recovery and Return #211
I received a phone call from Madison, on Sunday May 10th. Madison explaind that she had gotten into a heated “discussion” with her husband Jake, two days earlier, on Friday. As they were standing near the end of their driveway, in the Town of Windham, Maine, Madison took her engagement ring off and threw it across the very busy road, they live on. She immediately regretted that decision and told me it was not like her to do that. Madison and Jake then went acoss the road, to where they thought the ring had landed, in the leaves, grass and lots of roadside trash. Like any situation with witnesses they each saw something different. Madison thought the ring went to the left of her and further back in the leaves, near a rock wall and the woods. Jake thought the ring went to the right and would be closer to the road, in the leaves. After a long search, without success, the couple knew they needed help. Madison called her father for advice and he recommended his friend, who had a metal detector. Her fathers friend arrived, Friday evening and it was now dark outside. He was shown the area and after a search of the area, he could not find the ring. Now what? Keep searching is what they did. The next day, Saturday, both Madison and Jake spent hours searching for the ring in the leaves, grass and trash. The couple told me it was an was an exhaustive search and they had given up hope of finding the ring visually and would no longer keep searching that way. Madison told me that she couldn’t give up hope and gave it one last shot of searching visually, on Sunday morning. The result was the same and even though the area had already been searched with a metal detector, they personally did not know him or if he had any experience finding rings. That is when they decided to call The Ring Finders of Maine. It was now approximately 1:30pm and I told Madison that I would be there by 3:00pm. I just needed to get my gear together and drive the 45+ minutes to Windham.
I arrived at their property at 2:45pm and was promptly met by Madision and Jake. Madison told me she was standing next to the driveway parking spot, that I had just pulled into and threw the ring “as hard and far as I could”, across the two lane road. I looked at the distance to the other side and my first thought was, “could she have thrown the ring that far?” Madison had been standing 15-20 feet back from the breakdown lane, then there were the two lanes, another breakdown lane before the leaves and grass, where they thought the ring was. I then said “Are you sure you threw it that far? I don’t think I could throw it that far. Did you check the road on Friday, after you threw it?” Madison and Jake told me that they indeed checked the road, two days prior and had not found the engagement ring. They both believed the ring made it into the leaves but couldn’t agree if it went to the left or to the right. Ok then, lets start searching. I would estimate a 100 foot long stretch of the road to approximately 25 foot depth to the rock wall needed to be searched. I brought my 9” coil for this roadside search because I know that roadside searches with have decades and decades of metal trash , foil, pull tabs, etc. , above and below the surface. I needed the small coil so I wouldn’t get overloaded with lots metal trash targets, all at the same time. This could cause me to miss the very low tone of a gold engagement ring, if all I am hearing is 30 year old beer and soda cans, under the surface. The road runs Northeast – Southwest and I started by heading southwest, right on the edge of the roads curbing, checking the leaves and the gravel, on the road. I still wasn’t convinced the ring made it to the leaves. As I finished my first grid pass, along the road, nothing but cans and foil were found. Heading Southeast now and it started to rain lightly but still no ring. The rain really started coming down now and then we heard the rumble of thunder and a flash of lightening. Because of the circumstances, I called the search off and told them I would be back very early, in the morning, to finish the search.
When I arrived home, I called Gary Hill to see if he was interested in joining me. He agreed to come and help and I told him the situation. We arrived back at Madison and Jake’s home, at 6:30am. I showed Gary the search area and told him that I really had my doubts that the ring made it that far across the road. Gary was also skeptical and he searched the grassy area, just in front of where she had been standing, before the greakdown lane. No ring. We both agreed that if the ring had been in the road that it most likely had been hit and could be anywhere up or down the road. Anyways, Gary and I started searching the area between the breakdown lane and rock wall. After a half hour or so, still no ring. Madison then came out and started searching with us. I then asked Madison to do a test for us. I didn’t have a test ring with me but I did have a penny. I asked her to go to where she had been standing , when she threw the ring. I asked her to throw the penny as hard and as far as she could. I was more interested in the direction the penny went in than the distance. The penny and ring are completely differtent in size and shape so the distance could be different but the throwing motion would give me the direction. After throwing 3-4 pennies, we knew that the direction was the ring went to the northeast BUT not surprisingly every single penny hit the road and dd not make it to the leaves, in the air. A few pennies did roll into the leaves but a ring would not roll, like a coin. At this point Madison needed to get her children ready for the school bus and went back across the street. Gary and I continued to search but this time Gary would walk further down the road, in the northeast direction, scanning the road as he searched, for the ring. If the ring had landed in the northeast lane, there was a good chance the ring was hit and moved further down the road. I continued searching the leaves, going as far back as the rock wall. I kept thinking that the ring may also have landed in the Southwest lane, meaning the ring could be down the road, in that direction. This is why when a ring isn’t found, we have to expand our search area. Gary and I still had not found the ring when Madison came back to the search. She started walking the road on the Southwest lane. After a few minutes, Gary and I heard Madison yell out something about not believing she found it and as we looked down the road she was smiling ear to ear, having found the ring in the complete oppisite direction of where she had thrown it and on the oppisite side of the road we had been searching. As Gary and I rushed over, we could see the ring was damaged, from being hit by a passing vehicle or two or three. Thankfully all the diamonds were still intact and the band itself could be repaired. Madison thanked us and told us that if we hadn’t come back to search and listen to us on the different scenarios of the ring being hit, she never, ever would have found it down the road. She told us that she was done searching until we had come back. Hey, I always say, once we are on scene, it is all hands on deck. “Teamwork is Dreamwork.” Madison was very appreciative of our efforts, in the rain and then returning, to help her. We received smiles and hugs and all will be good, once the ring is repaired.
We will never know exactly where the ring landed but I feel that it was probably near the yellow center lines and was hit multiple times. With the ring 40-50 feet down the road, to her right and the southwest direction, I have a hard time believing the ring moved that far after being hit, just once.
Madison asked that I not use their real names or photos and I agreed. We all make mistakes and I don’t judge people for what they have done in a momentary lapse of judgement. As you all know, from reading my stories, people throwing rings is not an isolated incident. Over the last three years, we have now recovered, I believe 6-7 rings that have been thrown by both men and women. So, please don’t judge and just be happy that Madison has her engagement ring back.
So quite a search to say the least but another ring is back on the finger (as soon as it’s repaired). We love our job. We have the best job in the world and remember, “If it matters to you, it matters to us”💍🙏

