A tin of paint bought for $10 at a garage sale changed one man's life - more than a decade after he took it home.
Lightning Ridge man Tony O'Brien was living in western Sydney more than 12 years ago when he bought a pair of one-gallon (3.8-litre) tins of house paint at an deceased estate auction.
Taking his new acquisitions home, he pried the lid off one only to find it was unusable.
"One of them was watered-down paint so it was useless, it was no good," he told A Current Affair.
Mr O'Brien left the second tin undisturbed for some years, until he eventually decided to open it up as well.
To his disgust, he found it was full of sand and, fed up, he tossed it onto a rubbish heap at the outback Lightning Ridge property where he now lived.
It sat on the heap for a decade or more, enduring temperatures of up to 50 degrees and torrential rains.
"I was going to toss it out one day when I was having a clean-up," Mr O'Brien said.
"And I thought, no, better keep that sand - might need it for a bit of grouting."
However, he didn't dig around in the tin yet, until returning home one day from his $10-an-hour weeding job.
"The sand wouldn't come out, it was all wet," he said.
"I put my hands in it, I felt the bottom of a bag and thought, that can't be right."
To his own disbelief, Mr O'Brien pulled out bags of money in $5000 bundles.
"My jaw just fell," he said.
One further catch remained - the money was all in old Australian paper notes, rather than modern plastic.
Mr O'Brien laid it all out in his house, covering his doona, carpet and lounge.
"The doona sucked the water out (but) I had to get rid of the doona," he said.
Two days later, during which Mr O'Brien didn't dare leave his home, he re-packaged the money and took it to the bank.
He emerged $45,000 richer.

