A Dog Brought Home ‘Rocks’ Every Day. The Truth Behind Them Left the Owner Stunned…It started as nothing more than a quirky habit. James Miller, a 42-year-old mechanic living on the outskirts of Ashford, Maine, often let his Labrador mix, Daisy, run free in the wooded area behind his house. She was an energetic dog with a knack for finding odd treasures—old tennis balls, sticks, and the occasional rusted tin can. But that summer, Daisy began dragging something unusual back to the porch: smooth, dark “rocks.”
At first, James barely paid attention. He figured Daisy had taken a liking to river stones scattered through the woods. But after the fifth or sixth time, he noticed a strange consistency. These weren’t ordinary rocks. They were dense, unusually heavy for their size, and some had jagged metallic glints beneath the dirt.
“What on earth are you bringing me, girl?” he muttered one evening, wiping grease from his hands after work and stooping to pick up Daisy’s latest find. He tapped it against the porch rail. It didn’t sound like rock at all—it gave off a faint metallic clink.
The mystery deepened when his neighbor, Emily Carter, came by to borrow a ladder. She spotted the growing pile beside the steps and frowned.
“James, where’d you get those?”
“Daisy keeps bringing them in from the woods. Strange, huh?”
Emily picked one up, rubbed at it with her thumb, and said, “This isn’t just stone. It looks like slag—leftovers from smelting or forging.”
James raised an eyebrow. There weren’t any factories around, just old logging trails and long-abandoned farmsteads. Curiosity gnawed at him. That night, he washed one of the “rocks” in his sink. Under the dirt, he saw streaks of copper and silver-colored veins, shining faintly under the kitchen light.
By the tenth “rock,” his curiosity had shifted into unease. Why were there so many buried out there? And why did Daisy keep finding them in the same patch of woods?
One humid August evening, Daisy returned panting harder than usual, dropping yet another lump at James’s feet. This one was larger, and when he rinsed it clean, his pulse quickened. It wasn’t slag. It looked like an ingot, crudely shaped, as though poured into a mold decades ago.
He stared at the gleaming hunk on his counter, the hairs on his arms prickling. Daisy wagged her tail, proud of her find.
James knew then—this wasn’t just a harmless quirk. His dog had stumbled onto something hidden, and possibly valuable. The woods behind his home held a secret.
And secrets like that rarely stayed buried for long….
It started as nothing more than a quirky habit. James Miller, a 42-year-old mechanic living on the outskirts of Ashford, Maine, often let his Labrador mix, Daisy, run free in the wooded area behind his house. She was an energetic dog with a knack for finding odd treasures—old tennis balls, sticks, even the occasional rusted tin can.
But that summer, Daisy began dragging something unusual back to the porch: smooth, dark “rocks.”
At first, James barely paid attention. He figured Daisy had simply taken a liking to river stones scattered through the woods. But after the fifth or sixth time, he noticed a strange consistency. These weren’t ordinary rocks. They were dense, unusually heavy for their size, and some carried jagged metallic glints beneath the dirt.
“What on earth are you bringing me, girl?” James muttered one evening, wiping grease from his hands after work and stooping to pick up Daisy’s latest find. He tapped it against the porch rail. It didn’t sound like stone at all—it gave off a faint metallic clink.
The mystery deepened when his neighbor, Emily Carter, came by to borrow a ladder. She spotted the growing pile beside the steps and frowned.
“James, where’d you get those?”
“Daisy keeps bringing them in from the woods. Strange, huh?”
Emily picked one up, rubbed at it with her thumb, and said, “This isn’t just stone. It looks like slag—leftovers from smelting or forging.”
James raised an eyebrow. There weren’t any factories nearby—only old logging trails and long-abandoned farmsteads. That night, curiosity got the better of him. He washed one of the “rocks” in his sink. Under the grime, he saw streaks of copper and faint silver veins, glimmering under the kitchen light.
By the tenth “rock,” unease had crept into his curiosity. Why were there so many buried out there? And why did Daisy keep returning to the same patch of woods?
One humid August evening, Daisy trotted back, panting hard, and dropped yet another lump at James’s feet. This one was larger. When he rinsed it clean, his pulse quickened. It wasn’t slag. It looked like an ingot, crudely shaped, as if poured into a mold decades ago.
He stared at the gleaming hunk on his counter, the hairs on his arms prickling. Daisy wagged her tail, proud of her discovery.
James realized then—this wasn’t just a harmless quirk. His dog had uncovered something hidden, and possibly valuable. The woods behind his home held a secret.
And secrets like that rarely stay buried for long.