Top Tip #45: Keep Records

One habit separates casual detectorists from consistently successful ones: keeping records. It doesn’t sound exciting, and it doesn’t beep or flash — but maintaining a log of your finds and the places they came from is one of the most powerful tools you can use to improve results over time.

I learned this the hard way.

Why Keeping Records Really Matters

Most of us remember our best finds — but memory is unreliable when you’re dealing with dozens of fields, permissions, and hundreds (sometimes thousands) of individual signals.

A proper log helps you:

  • Track progress over time
    You begin to see how your skills, research, and site choices improve year by year.
  • Spot patterns and productive areas
    Finds rarely happen at random. Clusters emerge — certain slopes, boundaries, routes, or soil types quietly reveal themselves only when you step back and review your notes.
  • Refine your detecting technique
    Looking back at what worked (and what didn’t) helps you adjust settings, coil choice, and search strategy with confidence.
  • Preserve historical context
    A single coin is interesting. A group of finds recorded with locations and dates tells a much richer story about how a site was used.
  • Stay organised and compliant
    Accurate records make reporting to the PAS, landowners, or clubs far easier — and far more professional.
  • Create a personal archive
    Years later, your logs become a fascinating record of your detecting life — not just what you found, but where, how, and why.

What to Record (Without Over complicating It)

You can go as detailed as you like, but at minimum I recommend noting:

  • Date
  • Site name or reference
  • General location (or grid reference)
  • Object type
  • Depth (if known)
  • Any brief observations (soil, condition, context)

Photos are a bonus — especially shots taken in situ before removal — but written notes remain invaluable long after phones are upgraded or files misplaced.

The Diaries That Changed How I Looked at Detecting

I always admired the metal detecting diaries my friend Brian kept.

They weren’t just lists of finds. They were beautifully detailed records of sites: sketches, field layouts, notes on soil and topography, snippets of local history, even the odd hand-drawn map. Over time, those diaries became works of art — but more importantly, they became an invaluable reference.

What struck me most was that Brian wasn’t just recording what he’d found — he was recording why he’d found it. Patterns emerged. Old routes became obvious. Productive areas revealed themselves not by chance, but through careful observation and record-keeping.

I envied that discipline. Like many detectorists, I told myself I’d “write it up later” and muddled through with spreadsheets, loose notes, and half-remembered details. It worked for a while — until it didn’t.

When finds mounted up, sites blurred together, and I realised I was losing information I could never recover, Brian’s diaries came back to mind. They weren’t just a record of the past — they were a tool for future success.

That’s when I started taking record-keeping seriously.

How I Actually Record Sites and Finds

Over the years I’ve tried spreadsheets, folders, and digital notes, but what finally stuck was a side-by-side system: site information on one page, finds on the facing page.

It keeps everything connected — the place and the objects found there — which is how detecting really works in practice.

Site Record (Left Page)

I always start a fresh Site Record page for each new site. Mixing multiple sites on one page is a false economy — it becomes confusing surprisingly quickly.

At the top, I note the basics:

  • Date
  • Site name
  • Landowner
  • Contact details

The Notes section is where the real value builds over time. This is for:

  • Research (references, historic maps, estate records)
  • Old footpaths, buildings, boundaries
  • Field names, acreage, land use
  • Observations from the ground

The lower part of the page is deliberately left open. Sometimes I sketch a field layout; sometimes I glue in a map extract or photo. If I have more notes than drawings, I just keep writing. Flexibility matters.

Finds Record (Right Page)

Opposite the site notes is the Finds Record, where each object is logged.

I try to record as much as is practical:

  • Identification (or best guess)
  • Material
  • Measurements (diameter, thickness, weight)
  • Any distinguishing features

Photos are invaluable. Ideally, I’ll take front and back shots (and side views for most artefacts), with a scale. If there are multiple images or digital records, I simply note where they’re stored in the Reference column.

The Findspot is best recorded as an accurate map reference where possible.
The Location records where the item is now — drawer, display, with the landowner, recorded, or sold.

For anything that needs expanding — PAS record numbers, detector settings, longer notes — the Reference column links it all together.

If a site runs over multiple pages, I just cross-reference the page numbers. Index pages at the back make it easy to find sites or specific finds later.

A Journal, Not a Rule book

The most important point is this: there’s no single “correct” way to keep records.

This is your journal. Use it in a way that suits how you detect. Some people write pages of notes. Others log only key finds. Both approaches work — as long as you’re consistent.

A Simple Option (If You Want One)

After years of trial and error, I eventually put together a very straightforward logbook based on this system — nothing fancy, no apps, just a practical tool that encourages the habit.

If you’re interested, I’ve linked to the logbooks on my website (which then links through to Amazon). There are versions covering:

No pressure — you can do all of this with a notebook if you prefer. The key thing is to start recording and keep going.

Final Thought

Most great detecting sites don’t reveal themselves in a single visit.
They reveal themselves over time, through patterns — and patterns only become visible when you write things down.

Your future self will thank you.

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