 Good morning from Omaha, Texas. Last night we stayed at this lovely little truck stop, I don't know, there's a bunch of trucks pulled over, we couldn't find one of those famous picnic places. So it was very nice, slept pretty well. Today we're going to go hunt some diamonds I believe. Are you excited? I'm excited. You want to play in the dirt? Yeah. Alright, let's go find some diamonds. Let's go. We're here at Diamonds State Park over here in Arkansas. By the way, it's 37 acres of diamonds and what's your discovery today? The same thing we found yesterday. Let me get out of the thing. Yes, this is what we saw floating in the river and it stinks, you said? Yeah. Well, that means it definitely was alive. Let me break off a piece. It looks like rotten fruit or something. There's like seeds inside. Don't smell it? It's super stinky. Oh. It smells like dried pee kind of. We're about to get dirty. I'm just going to put the GoPro on time lapse and if we see something, I'll turn it back on. My hopes are not very high though, not to be pessimistic, but you know, optimist realist here. After a couple of minutes of playing in the water, the runoff, we got nada. We're going to start filling this thing up and bring it over to the wash station. Alright, so this is tired. Tired. This is one of the wash pavilions. Looks like we got some muddy old water. People shaking away. Trying to strike it rich. What they didn't know is that we got all the diamonds right here in this plastic bucket. Claire's got the perfect technique here. It's a grab and clump. I think there's even in your rocks, it's just mud. So we basically just filled this thing up full of dirt. Hey, that's enough? Yeah, let's try that. We think unsuccessful. We'll see. We got a couple of like little clear looking things. I wouldn't bet on it being a diamond. So if you think you need more than one bucket, you are mistaken, especially on a chunky muddy day like this. We're going to try and get the middle part over here where we started because we learned that trying to break up muddy chunks, not a productive way to hunt for diamonds. It's going to be a lot heavier than it was the first time, but you're carrying it. Yep, this is our new technique here. We're just going to take the saw stuff and when I say we, I mean Claire, good work Claire. Well, you like digging into dirt anyways. Yeah. That's what you want to do for a living. Yeah. Super cool. Obviously, there's no strategy or, I mean, it's just chance. I mean, your odds are better in Vegas, honestly. So that's where you rent and return the equipment over here. That is a diamond field. And next we're going to bring our diamond bag, which is a very high tech system here. What is your name? Glenn. It's a Glenn. Mr. Glenn is going to help us identify this cliff bar bag full of diamonds. That's a mother load. Okay. Yeah. We found the purple one. We know that's not a purple diamond. Yeah. Actually, that is amethyst. Amethyst? Yeah. Purple. Amethyst. Is there anything else in there? These two right here are agate. All right. Okay. Now agate actually has quartz crystal in the middle of it. So these are actually quartz crystals. Okay. Then you have your share of calcite. Now calcite is a really soft mineral and it's going to scratch my table and it's coming to come up chalky. Oh yeah. Okay. Now did you hear that? It scratched the table really hard. Yeah. Okay. So this is actually a quartz crystal. Wow. Okay. And that's how we tell the difference between the two where your... Quartz and quartz crystal. Your calcite, your calcite is a really soft mineral. Okay. So it's going to leave a chalky residue whereas your quartz crystals are a lot harder like a diamond. Okay. And they're going to scratch the table and you're going to hear it. And that's how we tell the difference. Uh huh. Oh yeah. I see that. Yeah. Right. Interesting. See there? Anything that leaves a chalky residue is going to be your calcite. And I'm afraid the rest of this is just going to be that calcite. The same kind of stuff. See how it all looks chalky? Yep. You know? Very opaque. Yeah. But we figured we'd just bring it down just for fun. And then of course your little amethyst right there which is purple. Yeah. So we have, the field is capable of producing this color amethyst out there. Wow. And it's about three to four feet deep out there on Canary Hill. Okay. Yeah. And that's where that, is that the blue? That's where this, that's where this was found here. Interesting. Uh, yeah. Is that where the blue dirt is? Uh, the green. Oh, the green, yeah. The green dirt on Canary Hill. Yeah. Interesting. Uh, volcanic tuff actually. Okay. And this lady right here, Ms. Janet, she is only one of two people, excuse me, that knows where that vein is. Oh, interesting. Interesting. So there's a special spot for it. Right. Oh, right. Well, after a fun afternoon of digging in the dirt, playing in the sand, we're going to stop into a little cafe in town here, a cute little town, by the way. And apparently they've got some interesting things on the menu. Oh, this has Southern written all over it, french fries, catfish, husk puppies, you know, beans, coleslaw, and a happy girl. All right. So we finished up dinner and met a viewer named Lane. Hi. You live in town here? Yes, sir. Yeah. That's cool. We didn't find any diamonds, but we found Lane. Lane. So good to meet you, man. Good to meet you. All right. Thanks for coming by. We'll see you later. See you. Thank you. All right. Thanks. You're welcome. Patrick of Storytelling of Filmmaking, we have now arrived very close to the next mine, close to tomorrow's mine, tomorrow's spot where we're going to be playing in the dirt. Again, tomorrow hopefully we're going to score. We're going to find something interesting, something to take home, nice little souvenir. Thanks for watching. I will see you guys on the road tomorrow.