
TwoAndAHalfCents wrote:I get about two to three times as many wheats as Canadian cents in Southern California. Most of the Canadian cents are copper too. The steel ones probably wind up stuck to magnets in coin counters instead of making it into the rolls I pick up.
Ecotic wrote:TwoAndAHalfCents wrote:I get about two to three times as many wheats as Canadian cents in Southern California. Most of the Canadian cents are copper too. The steel ones probably wind up stuck to magnets in coin counters instead of making it into the rolls I pick up.
I've always just figured that the reason there's more copper Canadians than non-copper Canadians circulating in the U.S. is for two basic reasons. One (and primarily), is that Canadian pennies cross over into America from American tourists or Canadian tourists, and therefore the Canadian pennies that we find have been traveling around in America for a number of years now and so this favors the older, copper pennies. And secondly because copper Canadians were made for a lot longer than American copper pennies, up to 1996.
But I'm from the Southeastern U.S., it'd be interesting to see someone do this if they live right on the American-Canadian border next to say, Toronto. I bet there'd be a lot more Canadians.
rochester here also, about right, Ive even found 35 georges in a roll once, as opposed to my record of 13 wheats in a roll.( the georges were in a batch of all canadian rolls I got in a bank pickup ahwile back)Dave wrote:In Rochester, NY, I get about 10 Canadian to 1 wheat.
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