GOLD RUSH

Gold Rush | Kevin Beets Makes $82,500 from His FIRST Solo Gold Weigh

 


Kevin Beets Battles Breakdown Chaos at Scribner Creek — and the Race to 1,000 Ounces Gets Brutal

Gold Rush': Familiar Face Makes Unexpected Return to Join Kevin Beets &  Reveals Bold New Look

A 300-Pound Problem Stops Everything

At Scribner Creek, Kevin Beets’ season hits another wall — literally.
A massive rock jams itself in the pre-wash, shutting the entire plant down. Kevin tries “polite encouragement,” which quickly turns into sledgehammer warfare.

When that fails, the team calls in John — the human forklift.

With a mix of leverage, brute force, and luck, the crew manages to muscle the 300-pound boulder out of the machine. Kevin laughs:
“Didn’t know he was that big when we hired him.”

The crisis is over — but the clock isn’t slowing down. Kevin needs 100 ounces a week to stay on track.

New Hire, New Trouble

Kevin’s crew finally starts running, and he introduces his newest recruit: 22-year-old Caden, a young miner with five years of experience and a family mining history.

But just two days in, Caden spots disaster.

Water is spraying everywhere.
Something is seriously wrong.

Kevin arrives to find multiple spray bars broken clean off, likely from heavy rocks bouncing off the deck. With broken wash bars, the plant is losing gold into the tailings — unacceptable for a crew that’s already behind.

Emergency Repairs Before More Gold Is Lost

Working fast, Kevin cuts off the damaged bars and fabricates shorter, stronger replacements. The fix is quick, but every lost minute costs gold.

Once the new bars are installed, the crew restarts the plant — and for the first time all season, Scribner Creek is finally sluicing properly.

Gold Rush: Kevin Beets makes his biggest haul yet as Tony nears his season  goal

The First Gold Weigh-In: A Harsh Reality Check

After 3½ months of grinding stress, breakdowns, repairs, and delays, Kevin is finally ready for his first gold weigh of the season.

The pressure is intense — Kevin needs big numbers to make his 1,000-ounce goal. Even Parker stops by, admitting he’s poured $2 million into the Beets operation this year.

The weigh begins.

  • 1 ounce
  • 2
  • 5
  • 10
  • 15
  • 20
  • 25
  • 30
  • 33 ounces total

Worth $82,500 — but far from what Kevin needs.

Parker delivers the tough truth:
“You have to crank things up.”

Kevin nods. They all know it — the runway is getting short.

Can Kevin Still Hit 1,000 Ounces?

The question hangs in the air as Parker leaves.

Kevin admits what nobody wants to say out loud:
“I don’t know yet.”

The season is running out of time.
The breakdowns keep coming.
And the pressure is only getting worse.

But if there’s one constant in the Klondike, it’s this:

A Beets never quits.


 

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