Dowsing
All About Dowsing
by Stephen Wagner
IT'S AN ANCIENT ART USED FOR FINDING WATER, BURIED TREASURE AND EVEN MISSING PEOPLE.
HERE'S
WHAT IT IS, HOW IT WORKS, THE METHODS AND TOOLS -- AND HOW YOU CAN LEARN TO
DOWSE
A man
walking through an empty field holding a Y-shaped stick before him in both
hands can be a peculiar sight.
What is he doing? Either he's
leading some bizarre, solitary parade... or he's dowsing.
WHAT
IS DOWSING?
Dowsing,
in general terms, is the art of finding hidden things.
Usually, this is
accomplished with the aid of a dowsing stick, rods or a pendulum.
Also known as
divining, water witching, doodlebugging and other names, dowsing is an ancient
practice whose origins are lost in long-forgotten history.
However, it is thought
to date back at least 8,000 years. Wall murals, estimated to be about 8,000
years old, discovered in the Tassili Caves of North Africa depict tribesmen
surrounding a man with a forked stick, possibly dowsing for water.
Artwork from ancient China
and Egypt seem to show people using forked tools in what might have been
dowsing activities.
Dowsing may have been
mentioned in the Bible, although not by name, when Moses and Aaron used a
"rod" to locate water.
The first unambiguous written
accounts of dowsing come from the Middle Ages when dowsers in Europe used it to
help find coal deposits.
During the 15th and 16th
centuries, dowsers were often denounced as practitioners of evil.
Martin Luther said
dowsing was "the work of devil" (and hence the term "water
witching").
In more modern times, dowsing
has been used to find water for wells, mineral deposits, oil, buried treasure,
archaeological artifacts - even missing people.
How the dowsing technique was
first discovered is unknown, yet those who practice it are unwavering in their
affirmations that it does work.
HOW
DOES DOWSING WORK?
The
quick answer is that no one really knows - not even experienced dowsers.
Some theorize there is a
psychic connection established between the dowser and the sought object.
All things, living and
inanimate, the theory suggests, possess an energy force.
The dowser, by concentrating
on the hidden object, is somehow able to tune in to the energy force or
"vibration" of the object which, in turn, forces the dowsing rod or
stick to move.
The dowsing tool may act as a
kind of amplifier or antenna for tuning into the energy.
Skeptics, of course, say that
dowsing doesn't work at all. Dowsers who seem to have a track record for
success, they contend, are either lucky or they have good instincts or trained
knowledge for where water, minerals and the like can be found.
For believer or skeptic,
there's no definitive proof either way.
Albert Einstein,
however, was convinced of the authenticity of dowsing. He said, "I know very well that many scientists
consider dowsing as they do astrology, as a type of ancient superstition.
According to my conviction this is, however, unjustified. The dowsing rod is a
simple instrument which shows the reaction of the human nervous system to
certain factors which are unknown to us at this time."
WHO
CAN DOWSE?
Dowers
say that anyone can do it. Like most psychic abilities, it may be a latent
power that all humans possess.
And, like any other ability,
the average person might become better at it with practice. However, there are
some people whose dowsing powers are extraordinary:
· Emmy
Kittemann, daughter of a dowser, was one of the most acclaimed dowsers in
Germany. In her most famous case, she correctly dowsed the location of a
mineralized spring for the village of Tegernsee. All previous drillings found
only water with heavy sulfur content. Yet Kitteman accurately predicted the
depth at which the water would be found as well as its iodine-rich content.
· In
17th century France, Jacques Aymar Vernay, a stonemason by trade, used his
dowsing talents to successfully track criminals. His dowsing rod, on more than
one occasion, led authorities to the whereabouts of murderers.
· In
December, 1992, a Mr. and Mrs. Anders and Berith Lindgren were hunting with
their friends when their dog ran off and disappeared. An extensive search
proved fruitless. A few days later they sought the help of dowser Leif
Andersson. His dowsing techniques led the hunters to a small lake where they
indeed found the body of the dog, where it had apparently fallen through the
thin ice and died.
Dowsing is one of the few
psychic talents that can be applied directly for profitable result or as a
business.
Some well-known names from
history practiced dowsing, including Leonardo De Vinci, Robert Boyle
(considered the father of modern chemistry), Charles Richet (a Nobel Prize winner), General Rommel of the German
Army, and General George S. Patton.
"General Patton,"
writes Don Nolan in his article A Brief History of Dowsing , "had
a complete willow tree flown to Morocco so that a dowser could use branches
from it to find water to replace the wells the German Army had blown up. The
British army used dowsers on the Falkland Islands to remove mines."
Professor Hans Dieter Betz
(professor of physics, Munich university) headed a team of scientists that
investigated the ability of dowsers to find underground drinkable supplies, taking
them to 10 different countries.
On the advice of dowers, they
sank some 2,000 wells with a very high success rate. In Sri Lanka, where the
geological conditions are said to be difficult, some 691 wells were drilled
for, based on the advice of dowsers, with a 96% success rate.
Geohydrologists given the
same task took two months to evaluate a site where a dowser would compete his
survey in minutes.
The geohydrologists had a
21% success rate, as a result of which the German government has sponsored 100
dowers to work in the arid zones of Southern India to find drinkable water.
TYPES
OF DOWSING
There
are several types or methods of dowsing:
· Forked stick. The most traditional method uses a small
Y-shaped tree branch (most often from a willow). The dowser holds the branch
parallel to the ground by the top of the Y shape, then walks over the area to
be probed. When the dowser passes over the sought object, the end of the branch
is drawn down, pointing to the spot at which the object can be found.
· Rods. An alternate method uses two L-shaped
metal rods, one held in each hand parallel to the ground and parallel to each
other. In this case, when the dowser passes over the sought object, the rods
either swing apart or cross each other. You can easily make dowsing rods from
wire coat hangers.
· Map dowsing. Some dowsers don't even have to visit
the location to be dowsed. For them, a map of the area is sufficient over which
they hold a pendulum. They know they have located the target area when the
pendulum begins to move in a circle or back and forth.
RELATED POSTS:
.
What is water dowsing?
CLICK HERE . . .
.
Movement
CLICK HERE . . .
.
Materials
CLICK HERE . . .
.
Multi-Media Filter, Highly-Activated Carbon Filter, Zeolite-Process Water Softener With Brine Tank, Fiberglass Ballast-Type Pressure Tank (fully automatic backwash & regeneration) |
.
PURICARE
Water
Treatment
Systems
.
...
Aganan, Pavia, Iloilo, Philippines
...
CLICK HERE . . . to view company profile . . .
CLICK HERE . . . to view company profile . . .
No comments:
Post a Comment