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Metal Detecting History Podcast
UK Metal Detecting News 2026: Iron Age Hoards, Nighthawking and a Big Giveaway
What's been happening in the world of UK metal detecting in 2026? In this solo episode, Katie rounds up the biggest stories so far this year and announces the Detecting History 100th episode giveaway competition.
First up, the Melsonby Hoard goes on public display at the Yorkshire Museum from 15 May. Over 800 Iron Age objects including the first evidence of four-wheeled wagons in Britain. Then we look at the Portable Antiquities Scheme's record-breaking year with over 79,000 finds recorded, and why your local Finds Liaison Officer needs your support more than ever.
We also cover the Great Baddow Hoard, 933 Iron Age gold coins now secured for the Museum of Chelmsford, but with a cautionary tale about what happens when you detect without permission. That leads into the rise of nighthawking, with Humberside Police reporting increased illegal detecting on protected land.
On the brighter side, the Chew Valley Hoard's incredible journey from field to national tour shows the system working as it should. And a father and son's Anglo-Saxon find in Lincolnshire has inspired an entire jewellery collection.
Plus, Katie announces the 100th episode giveaway with prizes from Regton, The Etching Booth, Composite Cleaning Company, and S&D Detectorist.
ENTER THE COMPETITION Go to @detectinghistorychannel on Instagram, like the competition post, share it on your stories, comment "100" and subscribe to our YouTube channel. UK only. Details on the post.
LINKS AND RESOURCES Melsonby Hoard exhibition: yorkshiremuseum.org.uk Report your finds: finds.org.uk Report nighthawking: call 101 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111
SPONSORS AND PARTNERS Regton: regton.com (use Katie's affiliate discount code DHPODCAST) The Etching Booth: www.instagram.comthe_etching_booth Composite Cleaning Company www.cleaningpencil.com and https://snddetectorist.com
CONNECT WITH DETECTING HISTORY YouTube: Detecting History Channel Instagram: @detectinghistorychannel
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The Detectorists Actor Who Finds More Than History | Kenneth Collard
56:44|This week's episode is a special one as its the 100th one! Our guest is very special too....! Actor Kenneth Collard, known to this community as the Mayor from the BBC series The Detectorists, and to a wider audience from Cuckoo, House of the Dragon, The Capture and most recently Beyond Paradise. But Kenneth has been a detectorist since the early 1980s, long before any of those credits, starting out with a basic C-scope in the forests of Germany and chasing that coin-shaped thrill ever since.During lockdown, Kenneth picked up his Equinox 800 and turned to the Thames foreshore, barely getting his PLA permit before the system closed. He has been learning to read the foreshore ever since, mentored by experienced mudlarks and working alongside his now great friend Carrie from Carry On Larkin.In this episode Kenneth talks about filming The Detectorists alongside Mackenzie Crook, the tobacco pipe bowl depicting an African man that was displayed in the Museum of London Docklands Secrets of the Thames exhibition alongside a cowry shell Kenneth found at the same moment, and his all-time top find, which has nothing to do with history and everything to do with being in the right place at the right time.He also shares his plans to develop a mudlarking TV show, talks about the Spanish Ardite minted in Barcelona for a child king and a Peruvian silver two reals found on the same stretch of foreshore, and signs off with one of the most genuinely motivating closers this podcast has had.Watch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel | Find Detecting History on Instagram and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannel | Use code DHPodcast at Regton.com for 10% off some items.
Gloucestershire Detectorists: Roman Hoards, Hammered Gold and a Find Never Seen in Britain
53:34|Darren Searle and Rod from Gloucestershire Detectorists join Katie to tell the story of two finds that most detectorists will never experience in a lifetime of searching.The first: a scattered Roman hoard where both Darren and Rod's very first signals on a brand new field turned out to be Roman coins. What followed was multiple return visits, over 400 coins recovered, a Roman silver ring and a Roman lead seal found by Rod that was nearly discarded as scrap and turned out to be unique in Britain.The second: a hammered scattered hoard on a farm where the landowner had been openly sceptical about the hobby. The find included quarter nobles and half nobles, and eventually 26 hammered coins recovered over several visits. That one went to auction and found a home with an American historian who supports archaeological digs in the UK.Darren also talks through their Minelab Manticore setup, the moment the Manticore picked up a deep gold hammered coin that the Nox 600 couldn't reach, how their relationship with their FLO made the Treasure Act process far smoother than most, and what is still on the bucket list including a gold stater and a gold Roman.Watch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on Friday on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel | Find Detecting History on Instagram and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannel | Use code DHPodcast at regton.com for 10% off some items.
Erin and Jamie Bottles from the Deep: A WWII Revolver, Two Hoards and Loch Larking in Scotland
59:47|Jamie and Erin from Bottles from the Deep join Katie to talk about loch larking, their unique hobby of snorkeling in Scottish lochs to find Victorian bottles, ceramics and all sorts of historical treasures.Jamie shares the story of finding a rare WWII Colt Commando revolver in a loch, discovering a scattered medieval coin hoard whilst metal detecting dating to around 1307 with coins from Alexander III, John Balliol and Edward I, and a secret Bronze Age hoard found just one week earlier. Erin talks about their favourite finds including Codd marble bottles, Staffordshire Flow Blue ceramics, cocaine-infused Victorian wine bottles and why every loch in Scotland seems to have a teapot in it.They also cover how they research new lochs using the National Library of Scotland maps, LiDAR and old fishing spots, plus Jamie's journey into metal detecting with his Minelab Equinox 600. Find Jamie and Erin on both YouTube and Instagram @bottlesfromthedeep.Watch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel | Find Detecting History on Instagram and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannel | Use code DHPodcast at regton.com for 10% off some items.
Metal Detecting in Oxfordshire: Hammered Coins, Roman Finds and Getting Permissions
53:08|UK metal detecting podcast. This week Katie is joined by Lewis from lewis_detects on Instagram, an Oxfordshire-based detectorist with seven years of experience finding hammered coins, Roman artefacts and medieval silver across the fields of southern England.Lewis talks through his best metal detecting finds: a Roman brooch, a cut half Stephen penny, and a 1636 Charles I shilling found at a historical drama film set, found next to an ancient tree on a brilliant signal. He also shares how he runs his Deus metal detector completely screen-free on tones only, and why he always chooses ploughed fields over pasture.Topics covered include how to get metal detecting permissions from landowners, using LiDAR for research, the PAS database at finds.org, the National Library of Scotland side-by-side maps with GPS, and the pros and cons of club digs versus solo permissions.Lewis's bucket list: Gold, Roman gold, and a complete Saxon penny.Katie also announces a giveaway for the 100th episode with prizes from Regton, The Etching Booth, Swing and Dig Detectorist and Composite Cleaning Pencil.Watch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel | Find Detecting History on Instagram, Facebook and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannel | Use code DHPodcast at regton.com for 10% off some items.
Sam Willoughby (the_peaky_larker): Tudor Buckles, Thames Trade Beads and the Archaeo-Detectorist
47:18|This week Katie sits down with Sam Willoughby, known on Instagram as the_peaky_larker, a Kent-based mudlarker, metal detectorist and self-described archaeo-detectorist who bridges both worlds with the kind of knowledge and ethics that makes you want to get outside immediately.Sam shares how furlough in 2020 sent him to the banks of the Medway and eventually onto the Thames foreshore itself, where he waited 18 months for his Port of London Authority permit. He talks about upgrading from a Garrett ACE 150 to the Minelab Xterra Pro, why a 6-inch coil is non-negotiable on the foreshore, and how he became the only detectorist on an active Roman site in an elderly couple's back garden that has now yielded around 30 Roman coins.There are finds too. A late Tudor buckle dug from a new permission while still recovering from a cold. A minuscule Hudson's Bay Company trade bead, red and black, manufactured in Britain and traded with indigenous peoples in North America for fur pelts. And one weird discovery that turned out to be a Victorian bedpan with a hospital crest, which Sam very wisely gave to a friend.The conversation also covers the Dove's typeface mystery, the ethics of mudlarking on the foreshore, Thames Explorer Trust exhibitions, and a farmer near Richborough Roman Fort who took matters into his own hands with a bucket of copper nails.Find Sam on Instagram at @peakylarkerWatch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel | Find Detecting History on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannel | Use code DHPodcast at regton.com for 10% off some items.
Emma Found THREE Celtic Coins in a short space of time and Landed Her Dream Job Mid-Dig.
44:40|Emma Youell (https://www.instagram.com/emloveoldstuff/) is back, and she has had quite a couple of years.Since her last appearance on the podcast, Emma has ticked off not one but two items from her detecting bucket list finding two Iron Age quarter staters and a potent within just a couple of months. Three Celtic coins. Extraordinary.But that's just the start. Emma has been quietly doing some of the most important work in the hobby right now, creating video content for the National Council for Metal Detecting, including a film about Scottish treasure law and a deep dive into the brand new NCMD app. She shares the incredible story of how one detectorist used that app to track his Roman finds across a map... and accidentally discovered an entire hidden Roman road.Emma also opens up about her work as a PAS self-recorder, her ongoing involvement with Time Team (including an upcoming dig at a Roman site in Brancaster, Norfolk), and how she found out her animations were going to appear on a Channel 4 show via a phone call received while standing in a Lincolnshire field mid-dig.Plus her Kent Women in Business award win, her obsession with the musical Epic, and a round of Would You Rather that gets surprisingly philosophical.Watch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannel. Find Detecting History on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/@DetectingHistoryChannel | Use code DHPodcast at https://regton.com/ for 10% off some items.
Metal Detecting Canada to England: Wayne May of Treasure Earth on Hammered Coins, the Philippines and Time Travelling Through History
52:54|This week Katie is joined by Wayne May, the Canadian detectorist behind the hugely popular YouTube channel Treasure Earth, which has amassed over 44,000 subscribers since Wayne relaunched it in 2022. Based in Calgary, Alberta, Wayne has deep roots in Hampshire and Wiltshire, and that connection to English soil has shaped him into one of the most well-travelled detectorists in the community.In this episode Wayne shares his origin story, from a Radio Shack detector turning up in a neighbour's yard in 1979, to a gold ring find in the 90s that sealed his fate, to rediscovering the hobby with an XP Deus 1 in British Columbia around 2010 and never looking back.Wayne talks through what it feels like as a Canadian to pull an Edward I hammered coin from a Hampshire field, why the Roman occupation of Britain fascinates him above all other eras, and how his second cousin Margaret Hawks was part of the original Time Team. He also opens up about detecting logistics across borders, travelling with the Deus 2 through Philippine airport security, building 3D printed cases for his kit, and the very different challenges of detecting in bear country.They also cover the realities of a six month detecting season in Calgary, the freedom Canadians enjoy on public land compared to the UK permissions system, the playground cleanup initiative that spread to 3,000 sites across Canada, and Wayne's use of AI to imagine the stories behind the finds he digs up.Plus, Wayne reveals his plans to return to England in August, a Portugal trip in the pipeline, and the channels he rates most in the detecting community right now.A genuinely warm conversation between two detectorists who might just end up in the same Hampshire field before the year is out.Find Wayne at https://www.youtube.com/@treasurearth and on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/treasurearth.earth/ and TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@treasure.earthWatch the full interview version of this episode from 6:30pm on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/@detectinghistorychannelFind Detecting History on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube at @detectinghistorychannelUse code DHPodcast at regton.com for 10% off your metal detecting order.
UK Metal Detecting: Roman Hoards, Henry VIII Coins and Viking Gold | Darren Booth Returns
01:00:05|This week on the UK's metal detecting and mudlarking podcast, Darren Booth of History Unearthed is back. We dig into his 337-coin Roman hoard now heading for a major museum display, his Henry VIII sovereign penny found in Cumbria, and the Viking gold coin recently unearthed in Norfolk with links to the Great Heathen Army. We also cover the £3.5 million Henry VIII heart pendant found in Warwickshire, and Darren's laser-engraved finds boards that have nearly paid for themselves in six weeks.Darren's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/history__unearthed/The Etching Booth Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_etching_booth/Darren's YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/@HistoryUnearthedmd10% off some items at Regton Metal Detectors using promo code DHPodcastFollow the podcast on all socials:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/detectinghistorychannel/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DetectingHistoryChannel/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@detectinghistorychannelYoutube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@DetectingHistoryChannel