I have been collecting coins since I was 5. I think it is fun to go through change when given it by a cashier and look at the dates on each coin to see if you got lucky and found a silver piece. After checking dates, anything that isnt of higher value gets put aside, and I have been doing this for 17 years. My plan is to take all the bullion and cash it in to buy the love of my life a wedding ring in a year or two.
I also enjoy on occasion going to banks and buying circulated rolls of half dollars and going through them and taking the silver ones out. Nickels are fun too but a little more time consuming.
It's a very kind gesture of you. Who wouldn't want to own such a beautiful item? Also, with the way things are going with banks at the moment why should anyone trust them with their savings? More people will begin to invest in precious metals and the price will rise. Now is probably a very good time to start collecting and a solid silver Canadian quarter would be a fine way to start anyone's collection. Send the coin to me and I will try to add a silver coin from each country to it until I have a silver coin from as many countries as I can collect. I'll post you a picture every time I get a new one. It will be good fun and a great thing to pass on to my sons.
I researched both silver and bitcoin for investing / long term savings starting at the same time last year in October. Since then, I've daily checked several websites for news/knowledge on both. They really interested me and I bought some 90% and 4 ASEs in December and tried to buy some bitcoin also at that time, but the moneypak/bitinstant (only way to purchase around me) operator at the CVS wasn't understandable and the balance showed up incorrect at the register so I cancelled when they were around $14 /BTC
I strongly believe the current economic system the world has been forced to run on of fractional reserve banking and overly abused fiat inflationary policies to devalue the (debt but actually the) wealth/buying power of the working class of entire nations is completely unsustainable. Physical Silver, just like Bitcoin, appeals to me with it's non-inflationary nature which is what people deserve to have the ability to save the fruits of their labor in and with its very personalized and direct control by the individual.
Plus, the silver coins have exxcellent artwork and it's shiny
I have two Ben Franklin half dollars: One is a 1961, and the other one is 1958. I also have three Walking Liberty half dollars: They are very worn and as best as I can tell the dates are - 1920, 1929, and one unreadable. Upon further investigation, I have learned that my two Eisenhower dollars are not sliver. I also have a few more none silver coins that have zero silver content, but I still keep for their sentimental value. Like coins from my family members birth years, and coins that are not silver, but not widely circulated anymore (a few Kennedy 1/2 dollars one a Bicentennial!).
I've had these coins sitting in a cut glass bowl for years - it's only added to when I am lucky and find a coin. Soon I would like to start adding silver dimes, nickles, and silver grams (these are in my low wage price range). Recently because of my financial circumstances, and my increased interest/awareness in silver I have started to educate myself about silver and sliver coins. I have found the websites
http://www.coinflation.com and
http://www.silvergrambars.com/calculator to be particularly helpful.
I would love to have a Silver Canadian Quarter as my 6th sliver coin!
Silver is only produced when stars explode! There's a relatively limited quantity of it here on Earth, and it is used for a wide variety of applications ranging from thermoelectric conductors to cloud seeding. Besides these things that give it inherent value, it has been used as currency and precious jewelry for thousands of years. Modern mining techniques and its removal from circulation in many currencies have made silver a relative bargin these days.
I'm acutely aware of the monetary value of silver because I work with dental amalgams. A few ounces of the silver containing amalgam "waste" can be recycled for thousands of dollars.
I have chosen you 5 to get the free quarters!
I will send you all a PM to find out where to send it and get them out some time this week.
If i can't get in touch with any of these 5 then I will pick others.
Thanks for the great replies it was good to see such a response. I will do this again for sure, probably outside of newbie jail.