


It was a long, sleepless night. I tossed and turned and thought about any possibility of finding the ring. The possibility was slim since it might be at the beach. As we had gathered the chairs they had been dragged across the beach and one and slipped out of the bag going up the path. It could have remained with the chair until we set them up again at camp. We knew the ring could be anywhere and probably lost for good.
When it was finally light enough outside, Doug and I got up and gathered a collection of possible tools (colander, deep fat fryer spoon, plastic bowl and nail to punch holes) and headed to the beach. I took the camera because I had taken a picture of Rod and Steph the day before and thought it might help us with a location. The best tool turned out to be the fryer scoop and I started digging. The most I found was an unrecognizable nickel and a shiny dime. Doug took over the scoop and I started to just sift through the sand with my hands. We talked about possibly driving to Ketchum and finding a store with a metal detector. Doug decided to walk the path and I resumed sifting with the scoop. We had been searching a 10 square foot area and I kept uttering a simple prayer to guide me where to look. Doug came back and I decided to keep scooping until we left. I sat back for a minute to rest, but stuck the scoop on the other side of me and shook. I couldn't believe the sound - it was a clinking. Usually it was bark or small rocks left
