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Searching For $2 Million Treasure

allen griggsallen griggs Member Posts: 35,241 ✭✭✭✭
edited February 2016 in General Discussion
Treasure hunter disappears searching for $2 million in gold
By Associated Press January 31, 2016 | 12:22pm



missing_treasure_hunter_zps2j34nmv5.jpg

Forrest Fenn says that he hid this bronze chest containing nearly $2 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.


ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - An antiquities dealer who inspired tens of thousands to search the Rocky Mountains for $2 million in hidden treasure now leads an increasingly desperate mission to find one of his fans.

Forrest Fenn has been flying out in chartered helicopters or planes, searching remote stretches of the upper Rio Grande for any sign of Randy Bilyeu, now missing in the wild for more than three frigid weeks. Fellow treasure hunters also are searching for Bilyeu, who was last seen on Jan. 5 while trying to solve Fenn's mystery.

"Every time we go out and don't find Randy it's discouraging but we're not going to give up," Fenn told The Associated Press. "There are still places out there that I want to look."

Fenn, an eccentric 85-year-old from Santa Fe, has inspired a cult following since his announcement several years ago that he stashed a small bronze chest containing nearly $2 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts somewhere in the Rockies. He dropped clues to its whereabouts in a cryptic poem in his self-published memoir, "The Thrill of the Chase."

The hidden treasure has inspired thousands to search in vain through remote corners of New Mexico, Yellowstone National Park and elsewhere in the mountains. Treasure hunters share their experiences on blogs and brainstorm about the clues. The mystery has been featured by national media, igniting even more interest.

Fenn gets about 120 emails a day from people looking for his 40-pound box, and believes 65,000 people have searched for the stash, some using family vacations to venture into the woods.


"The hope of finding the treasure is one thing, of course, but there's a sense of adventure when you get out in the mountains and in the sunshine and the fresh air," Fenn explained.

"One of my motives was to get the kids off the couch and away from the game machine."

But the search can be risky: Some have forded swollen creeks in Yellowstone and were rescued by rangers. A Texas woman spent a worrisome night in the New Mexico woods after being caught in the dark. Others have been cited for digging on public land, and federal managers have warned treasure hunters not to damage archaeological or biological resources.

No "Fenner" has been in a more dangerous a predicament than Bilyeu, a 54-year-old grandfather wsameved to Colorado two years ago to follow this dream.

Family and friends say he bought a raft and set out on Jan. 5 after scouting for two weeks along the river west of Santa Fe. He had a GPS device, a wetsuit and waders, and brought along his little white dog, Leo.

More than a week passed before a worried friend reached out to his ex-wife in Florida, Linda Bilyeu, who filed a missing person's report on Jan. 14. His raft and dog were found the next day.

Bilyeu left maps with markings in his car that fellow treasure hunters are using to narrow their search. He also left a sandwich, suggesting that he hadn't planned to be gone long.

The New Mexico Search and Rescue team and state police scanned canyons and mesas along the river by air and on foot, even bringing in dogs to sniff for clues, but suspended their efforts after several days.

"Unfortunately, we just don't have anything to go on right now," State Police spokeswoman Sgt. Elizabeth Armijo said. "If someone were to find clothing or footprints or just something that might be indicative of the hiker, then we would have an area to go to. But we just have not found that yet."

The treasure hunters - led by Fenn - have not given up.

"We know that Randy studied this area very well. He even noted that certain areas were dangerous when the weather was bad and he had done quite a bit of research," said Sacha Johnston, a treasure hunter helping to coordinate searches. "He wasn't just randomly kayaking down the Rio Grande one day. He knew where he was going. He had a plan."

Fenn never meant for his treasure hunt to be easy: His poem points searchers to somewhere beyond "where warm waters halt . in the canyon down . too far to walk . below the home of Brown."

Getting out would be dicey as well, he wrote: ". from there it's no place for the meek/The end is ever drawing nigh/There'll be no paddle up your creek/Just heavy loads and water high."

This was all supposed to be fun, of course. Now the search for Bilyeu is taking an emotional and physical toll on Fenn, who spends his days organizing, hiring aircraft, and worrying.

His fans stand ready to admonish anyone who dares blame Fenn for Bilyeu's disappearance, saying they're all responsible adults.

Fenn, for his part, has issued plenty of warnings, along with more clues. Among them: He says there's no point to searching in winter, when snow would hide the treasure. He also said "the treasure is hidden higher than 5,000 feet above sea level," but it isn't buried, nor in a graveyard, "nor associated with any structure."

And he has no plans to reveal its location.

"There have been too many people looking," Fenn said. "It would not be fair to them if we shut the thing down."

Comments

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    Dads3040Dads3040 Member Posts: 13,552 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I saw that story, Allen. Interesting puzzle with a heckuva payoff. Not sure the mystery or the payoff is worth risking your life over.
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    wpagewpage Member Posts: 10,204 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Sounds like a new reality show...
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    fishkiller41fishkiller41 Member Posts: 50,608
    edited November -1
    Sounds like a Late Spring or Summer adventure to me.
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    GrasshopperGrasshopper Member Posts: 16,749 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Trying to find a small box in the Rockys,,,well , offhand better chance winning the powerball.
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    select-fireselect-fire Member Posts: 69,453 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Must be the reason that company wants your land.
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    notnownotnow Member Posts: 1,811 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    So, realisticly, if this treasure was all gold coins, how big of a contaiiner would it fit. A gallon jug? A quart jug? An adult sock?
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    He DogHe Dog Member Posts: 50,954 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    New Mexico is over 110,000 square miles. All I can tell you is it is not buried in my yard.
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    JunkballerJunkballer Member Posts: 9,183 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I hope for his sake the treasure is really out there and not a case of a wild goose chase gone bad, that would be terrible.

    "Never do wrong to make a friend----or to keep one".....Robert E. Lee

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    mnrivrat48mnrivrat48 Member Posts: 1,711 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    quote:So, realisticly, if this treasure was all gold coins, how big of a contaiiner would it fit. A gallon jug? A quart jug? An adult sock?

    I think the picture in the first post is of the actual treasure.

    quote:Forrest Fenn says that he hid this bronze chest containing nearly $2 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.
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    allen griggsallen griggs Member Posts: 35,241 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    The treasure would weigh 104 pounds.
    That 80 year old geezer didn't haul that up into the wilderness by himself, he needed one, or two, young bucks to tote that load.

    Hard for 3 people to keep a secret, especially a $2 million secret.
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    milesmiles Member Posts: 2,548 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    $2 million in gold, jewelry and artifacts.. Nothing about gold coins, What kind of artifacts. One single artifact could be worth a million bucks and what a piece of jewelry is worth without knowing is like wondering, how long is a piece of string.

    If Forest Finn got creative in the treasure he buried, the box could be amazingly small. In 2009, a gold 1933 double eagle sold for 7.59 million bucks.

    I could be way off base here because I don't have all the clues but sometimes you gotta think outside the box... No pun intended.
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