Around 2019, Paul Swanson stumbled across a YouTube video of Magnetic Mike hurling a high-power magnet into Florida waters to fish for metal.
“That one video, I was hooked,” Paul says.
With a background in construction and angling, Paul saw magnet fishing as a beautiful blend.
“Once I threw a rope with my magnet, it was all over with,” he says. “I’ve never been so happy to pull up a horseshoe in my life.”
That first horseshoe hangs from a plaque bearing the inscription, “Everybody needs a little luck,” in Paul’s Spokane, Washington, living room.
‘Soul Saver’
Magnet fishing was more than lucky for Paul.

“I call it my soul savior,” he says.
Paul has progressive multiple sclerosis and is raising two children with autism.
“I needed something to do that wouldn’t break the family’s budget,” he says. “And our water is so rich in history, I just had to see.”
Waterways surround Paul’s home. From the 111-mile Spokane River to more than 86 nearby lakes, he says it’s impossible to run out of places to explore.
“We had the great fire of Spokane back in the early 1900s,” he says. “There’s so much stuff in that waterway, in anybody’s waterways. It’s just never been seen.”
Paul teamed with other magnet fishing enthusiasts and the Spokane Riverkeeper organization to help clean up the surrounding waterways.
“I’ve fought very hard not to be in a wheelchair,” he says. “So, now I go around with crutches and a bilateral brace, and I surround myself with a lot of warrior friends.”
There are at least four longtime regulars who meet around once a month, and as many as 700 more magnet anglers pitch in on big projects, like the time they tried to set a World Record, bringing in more than 14 tons of findings.
Friends help gear Paul up to set out aboard his double-hulled Livingston, where they throw and pull from over the boat’s edge.
“They’re all good swimmers. Nobody would let me go,” Paul says. “They keep a good eye on me. My wife’s pretty happy about that.”
Paul’s friends call him Mag Neto.
“Because I’m a magnet fisherman and because of my legs and everything else,” he says. “It just kind of stuck with me.”
Surprises Surface
Plenty has stuck to Paul’s magnet. He and his buddies have fished up just about everything, from Model-T rims to bathtubs, shopping carts, bicycles, electric scooters, phones, knives and even a few historic guns.
It isn’t about profit or treasure hunting for them. In fact, they end up donating the proceeds from most of their finds to charities. If owners are traceable, they return items, too. Often, they’ve been called on to help retrieve lost items. Occasionally, they even rescue newbies in need.
“You gotta help them out sometimes,” Paul says. “They just don’t realize that if they’re on a metal bridge and they throw out a magnet, it slaps to the side of it. There are ways to get it off, and we’ve mastered it.”

When people are looking for gear or tips, Paul sends them to Muscular Magnetics, a company launched about seven years ago in Orem, Utah, and is now based in Idaho Falls.
Muscular Magnetics owner Michael Taylor built a great relationship with Paul.
“The moment I talked to Paul, he knew everything you could imagine about magnet fishing, probably better than I did, honestly,” Michael says. “He’s done great things where he is up in Washington.”
Michael says magnet fishing took off during the pandemic with people wanting to get out more, and that interest hasn’t diminished. The moment people see it, they want to know more.
“Once you get the idea, oh, you’re essentially underwater metal detecting, it sparks the interest,” he says. “People wonder, ‘What can I find?’ We have had customers that have pulled some extraordinarily awesome things out of the water.”
The top of that list includes a convenience store ATM retrieved from the waters separating New York and New Jersey. Magnet fishing enthusiasts have discovered live bombs that required the bomb squad. Then there are handguns, shotguns, and even a couple of sniper rifles fished out by a grandfather and his grandson in Florida.
Muscular Magnetics and several competitors offer kits with everything from low-power magnets for beginners to high-power double-sided magnets that can lift thousands of pounds.
Fish Responsibly
Paul says magnet fishing isn’t for everyone and stresses that high-power magnets are not toys. If you have a pacemaker, this is not the hobby for you. Hearing aids are magnet-sensitive, too.
“And don’t put your phone near it, or you’re going to wipe it clean,” Paul says.
He also recommends respecting the waterways. He avoids indigenous areas and stays clear of places where fish spawn. Former battle areas are also a hazard.
Michael says so far, there’s only one state with laws against magnet fishing: South Carolina.
“Really, any other state is game on as far as laws go,” he says. “Any public property, from what we’ve seen, is great for it.”
Paul recommends you ask first, even on public land.
“It’s a lot like a hunting sport,” Paul says. “You’re playing with something that is very serious. Just respect it, and you’ll be fine.”
