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Dowsing rod garden story
Dowsing rod garden story




dowsing rod garden story

Weird as all this seems, there must surely be a logical explanation for it. We find a second trapdoor in the other place identified by the rods, hiding more stones. I later discover that the church may have been built on the site of an earlier sacred place. My mum tugs at a trapdoor under one of them that I hadn’t noticed before it conceals a partially buried sarsen stone – the same type used to construct Stonehenge. As I walk around the internal perimeter, the rods repeatedly swing out wildly to the sides in two specific locations. Unnerved, but still aware I may be spotting patterns where none exist, we head into the pretty All Saints’ Church.

dowsing rod garden story

We do it again, and it happens in the same two spots. Then I ask her to do it again, but more slowly this time, they cross in two of the three locations – but no others. The first time she walks quickly, and the rods don’t cross at all. I allow my mum to stride off ahead, secretly noting each place where the rods cross, and then I pass her the rods and ask her to retrace our steps. Re-engaging my sceptical brain, we continue along a footpath following the stream. She directs me to a small bridge over a stream, as as I cross, the rods swing towards each other.

DOWSING ROD GARDEN STORY HOW TO

My mum hands me a pair of metal rods, and shows me how to hold them, gently but firmly, the long ends pointing forwards.

dowsing rod garden story

Hearing such anecdotes, I feel open to the possibility that dowsing might be able to detect water – even though my inner sceptic says there’s no logical explanation for it. Joining us on this excursion is a photographer, who recounts how a friend recently called out the local water company to fix a leak in his back garden, and the engineer used dowsing to locate the stopcock. Linda Geddes (right) being introduced to dowsing by her mother Isobel in a Wiltshire churchyard.






Dowsing rod garden story