Stop looking like a tourist
Most beginners don’t fail because gold is impossible to find. They fail because they rock up like excited tourists, wave a detector or a pan around for a bit, and expect the bush to hand them treasure out of politeness. It doesn’t work like that.
The short version
Don’t start with “where would it be fun to search?” Start with “where would heavy gold logically settle, slow down, trap, or get left behind?”
Beginners search vibes, not ground
They walk into the bush, see open space, and start swinging. Or they hit a creek and pan whatever patch looks easy to reach. That is tourist behaviour. Gold does not care what looks convenient, scenic, or emotionally encouraging.
If your search pattern would make sense to someone who has never thought about gravity, water flow, bedrock, wash, or old workings, you are probably just sightseeing with extra steps.
Look for traps, not wishes
Gold is heavy. That means you should be asking where heavy material slows down, drops out, gets trapped, and stays put. Inside bends, cracks in bedrock, downstream of obstructions, old wash zones, low points, and changes in flow all matter more than whether a spot feels lucky.
Prospecting starts getting less random the second you stop asking where you want gold to be and start asking where it had no choice but to end up.
Your first ground-reading checklist
Before you touch a pan or turn on a detector, ask where the heavier stuff would naturally settle compared with the lighter rubbish.
Big rocks, bedrock cracks, shallow drop-offs, changes in creek shape, wash lines, and old workings are all clues. Gold likes getting hung up where the easy ride ends.
Pretty creek sections and wide open swing-friendly flats are not automatically good ground. Ease and beauty are not prospecting indicators.
Do not commit your whole day to a dumb guess. Sample small spots, compare results, and let the ground tell you whether it is worth more effort.
If there are signs of old workings, there was at least a reason someone bothered. That does not mean easy gold remains, but it does mean the area earned attention once.
Gold is not hiding from you. It is obeying physics.
If a spot only feels good because it is easy, comfortable, or looks romantic in the afternoon light, that is not prospecting logic. That is bush cosplay.
The whole game gets better once you stop thinking like a hopeful tourist and start thinking like a suspicious bastard reading clues.
Chapter 1
Ground reading before gear fantasies.