| Monday, July 13, 2009 |
| Went to pick berries and found gold instead |
The New York Times article: Barren Berry Season Leads to Far Richer Discovery tells the tale of a pair of Swedish grandmothers now credited with discovering what experts say may be one of the richest gold deposits in Europe. Berry picking is a serious business to Mrs. Wiik (pronounced VEEK), who was born in this village of 171, and her friend, Harriet Svensson, 69. For 40 years the two, widows with children and grandchildren, have explored every patch of field and forest clearing in the region, hunting for mushrooms and wild berries — blueberries, raspberries, blackberries, cloudberries.
But the women are also amateur geologists. They never leave home for a stroll in forests or fields without their geologists’ hammers, with their 30-inch handles, and their magnifying eyepieces, dangling from ribbons around their necks.
So in that terrible August when the blueberry crop failed, they decided to poke around for minerals. They went to a place called Sorkullen, far down an unpaved logging road, where trees had recently been felled, upending the earth and exposing rock to the air. Using their hammers, they cleared soil from around the stones, digging for about six hours, deeper and deeper, until they found a rock with a dull glimmer. While the land was owned by a logging company, the mineral rights were up for grabs, so the pair obtained those. So far they have earned $125,000 from a company that is doing test drills. They can earn more for future test drills and if a full fledged mine is deemed viable, they stand to earn 20% of the profits.
Wonder if more folks will be carrying pick axes along with their buckets this blueberry picking season? |
| posted by Boston Gal @ 2:25 PM *
* Subscribe to Boston Gal's Open Wallet |
Links to this post:
|
|