The Mystery Of Dowsing
By James Donahue
A few years ago our well began to go dry and we were forced to hire a well driller. After spending
time as a young man working with oil well crews, I know from experience that every driller has a "system" for finding water,
and it is usually based on superstition rather than scientific proof.
After all, knowing exactly what lies deep in the Earth under our feet is hardly an exact science.
Geologists think they have some idea, but there are always surprises.
The well driller we hired was no exception. He thought he knew were to find water on our property,
and proceeded to set up his rig in the side yard.
My wife was a fly in his ointment, however. She has known most of her life that she can dowse for
things. Using bent willow sticks or sometimes bent coat hangers, she has had remarkable success in making those long extended
parts go crazy in her hands when she stands over a target. She is especially good at dowsing for water.
She offered to check for the existence of water where our driller said he thought it would
be. When she stood over the spot with coat hangers in hand, the metal rods stood motionless. Strangely, when she took one
step to the left, the rods sprang to life. She suggested an obstruction, and proposed that the bit be moved slightly south
from where the driller had it parked.
Perhaps out of pride, or just pure arrogance, the man refused to budge. He insisted on drilling
right where he said the water was. It was a big mistake. When he was about 800 feet down, his diamond bit hung up on something
very big and hard . . . I suppose a large bolder. After fishing for the bit for another day, our driller sadly gave up, moved
his rig a few feet to the south, and successfully found water.
It was a hard lesson. Either because he didn't believe in dowsing, or perhaps he thought a woman
could not, or should not dowse, the man lost more than his profit in the cost of his diamond tipped bit and the lost
days of labor on our site.
Even though the practice is commonly used all over the world, science looks at dowsing with a jaundiced
eye. I think that is because it smacks of psychic or right-brain functioning. It cannot be explained in any other way.
I have read of dowsers who successfully found a variety of other things buried in the earth, like
gas and water lines, septic tanks, old road beds and building foundations. One man in England uses it to follow ley lines.
A woman in Indiana uses pendulums and other devices to find lost grave sites.
I think science rejects dowsing as a valid tool because it does not seem to work for everybody.
Also, because they fear public ridicule, practitioners don't like to admit they use it.
The various names given dowsing by scoffers helps explain why it has escaped serious public acceptance.
The names include rhabdomancy, divining, witching, and doodlebugging.
The easiest dowsing tool can be made from common metal coat hangers. Cut the hangers at the neck,
then straighten and bend them at right angles so that the shorter pieces form handles. Some like to cut the handles to a length
of about four inches, so they don't extend below the hand.
When my spouse dowses, she holds the rods in both hands, and walks around until something
happens. Proper dowsers are said to hold the rods forward, with elbows at the waist and forearms parallel to the ground. Grip
the rods enough to keep them parallel to each other, and horizontal to the ground.
When a target is underfoot, the rods will swing wildly. For some they criss-cross. For others they
will swing away from one another. When I followed my wife in her quest for water, I discovered that I too can
dowse. When over a water bed I tried to hold the metal rods in place, but found the force that drove them so strong,
my grip failed to prevent them from swinging.
Theories as to why dowsing works range from altered energy fields created by running water to breaks
in magnetic polarity from the disturbed soil.
That so many different things can be found through dowsing makes me think there is something else
involved here. I believe dowsing is another form of tapping into the collective matrix. To be successful, the dowser must
be capable of using right brain functioning.
Thus it is possible, when the handler of the rods has a specific target in mind, to easily locate
missing objects in the Earth by just thinking about the target and letting the rods tell us what we already subconsciously
know.