AUSTRALIA: Alongside a winding creek in japanese Australia’s Nice Dividing Vary, Jhob Drinkwater bends over his pan, digging patiently into the earth.
He scoops up soil and gravel, shovelling them into his pan whereas sifting out the heavier rocks and pebbles.
Then, crouching by the water’s edge, he swirls the pan in light circles till the muddy water spills away and solely a skinny layer of sediment stays – and with it, hopefully, the faint glint of gold.
“As you’ll be able to see, I’ve discovered a reasonably good little bit of color there. Only a good dozen little specks,” Drinkwater mentioned, displaying CNA a tiny yellow cluster – no bigger than a number of grains of sand pressed collectively on the backside of his pan.
“I might arrange camp right here all day, carry the canine and a barbecue down. Possibly on the finish of the day, I’ll have a good bit of fine gold to have within the pan and in my pocket as nicely.”
A GOLD REVIVAL IN HISTORIC TOWN
Drinkwater grew up with gold mining in his blood.
He hails from Hill Finish, a former gold mining city in New South Wales that has seen a current surge of tourists chasing a modern-day model of the gold rush.
