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Dowsing - Wikipedia Dowsing is a type of divination employed in attempts to locate ground water, buried metals or ores, gemstones, oil, claimed radiations (radiesthesia), [1] gravesites, [2] malign "earth vibrations" [3] and many other objects and materials without the use of a scientific apparatus
American Society of Dowsers - HOME Founded in 1961, ASD has spent decades exploring and teaching the secrets of dowsing—an age-old practice used to locate hidden water, minerals, and even lost objects with little more than a simple rod or pendulum
Is Dowsing Real, or Just a Bunch of Hocus-Pocus? When it comes to water witches — also known as dowsers, diviners, doodlebuggers and various other names — we're faced with two distinct possibilities One, they're either really good, and have been for a long time, at pulling a fast one on desperate landowners looking for groundwater
What Is Dowsing And Why It’s More Important Than Ever We can all dowse and learn to hone the skill For many, dowsing conjures images of a white-haired man with a forked stick looking for water Dowsing’s roots go much deeper than that, and much farther back than the tools we now associate with dowsing, such as the pendulum, forked stick, or dowsing rods (L-shaped bent rods)
Dowsing | Divination, Pendulum, Water Witching | Britannica dowsing, in occultism, use of a forked piece of hazel, rowan, or willow wood or of a Y-shaped metal rod or of a pendulum suspended by a nylon or silk thread, in an attempt to detect such hidden substances as water, minerals, treasure, archaeological remains, and even dead bodies
Water Dowsing | U. S. Geological Survey - USGS. gov "Water dowsing" refers in general to the practice of using a forked stick, rod, pendulum, or similar device to locate underground water, minerals, or other hidden or lost substances, and has been a subject of discussion and controversy for hundreds, if not thousands, of years
THE ANCIENT PRACTICE OF DOWSING - American Outdoor Guide A dowser walks over an area holding their dowsing rod, palms up, and focuses on water or the object of the search A tug or downward pull on the far end of the rod often indicates they’ve found the right spot
dowsing (a. k. a. water witching, radiesthesia) - The Skeptics . . . Dowsing is the action of a person--called the dowser --using a rod, stick, or object hung from a string--called a dowsing rod, dowsing stick, doodlebug (when used to locate oil), divining rod, or pendulum --to locate such things as underground water, hidden metal, buried treasure, oil, lost persons or golf balls, etc