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DOWSING, or
divining, is a traditional method used to discover water, underground
pipes and cables, lost objects and missing people, earth energies and to
suggest healing therapies etc. There are a number of different devices
that have been designed over the years that accentuate the body`s natural
involuntary movement when the "target" is found. These devices vary from
the familiar "Y" rod, made from a thin flexible branch of a tree, "L"
shaped rods usually made from thin metal rods, to more complex devices.
Some dowsers become so proficient that these aids are often not required;
the dowser is able to detect the unbalancing effect that causes the device
to move, even though for most of us the device seems to move on its own
accord.
AS DOWSING is a natural ability -
anyone prepared to give it a try can do it - dowsers are very much
down-to-earth people from all walks of life. What we have in common is the
recognition that dowsing has been used for centuries for many purposes
and, even today, can be profitable in the most unlikely technical based
industries and occupations.
DOWSERS located
many of the mines in Devon and Cornwall in the sixteenth century. Dowsing
remains an accepted "tool of the trade" in many professions throughout the
world.
For example, surveyors and
builders need and use dowsing to locate underground pipes and cables etc.,
where maps are unreliable or non-existent, before digging foundations and
the like.
Until privatization of the
water industry in the UK, dowsing rods were normal equipment in Water
Board vans, especially as there were few reliable maps of our water and
drainage systems.
FOR A MORE
detailed description of dowsing, past and present, have a look at the South Coast
Dowsers web site.
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