AWESOME GUYS very well illustrated. I just purchased some to locate water on my property but asked them if God hears my prayers and the answer was yes.
@@spec24 Ahh yes, because they were utter idiots and morons in all of human history, all those billions and billions of people, while today they are such a spark of sunshine, all geniusses no doubt.
A sensitive douser can use his rods to find depth. The dousing rod is held by the end of the rod over the water source. It will "nod" up and down, counting out depth footage and will stop, to start moving back and forth when the stongest water channel is reached. There can be more than one channel of water at a location at different depth and the douser will find them all. Good luck!
Hi, we are very curious as to the outcome after you drilled the well? Was the dowsing accurate? I cannot find a video afterwards letting folks know how it went?
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed: th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html With all the other homestead building projects going on, we haven't had a chance to revisit filming about the well. We hope to film a follow up soon!
Ok, a little critique from a long time Witcher. Never seen anyone talk to the rods, doesnt mean it cant work, but being so far off on your depth does not lend to effectiveness. What is the rate of dry wells in that area???? Many places it doesnt matter where you drill there's water. Good luck on your project and life!
I don't have a precise number as dowsing is more art than science. But I'd assume quite deep as this study in an arid region showed at 96% success rate of hitting water: www.popularmechanics.com/science/a3199/1281661/
@@cottagefarmstead You will hit water regardless. Ground water is everywhere. It just depends on how far you dig before you give up. Once you start digging confirmation bias and the sunk cost fallacy will keep you going until you hit water since the you "know that it's there because of the diving rods."
Asked one old man known to use dowsing rods to check my property for underground water flow. He had no time so he asked me why i don't do it by myself.. What? How? He gave me 2 wires, just like some salvaged some, different size and materials alu and copper i think. It doesnt matter he told and demonstrated on house water connection. It worked the same for me and my wife. Its so freakin easy, just mindblowing that people doesnt use it more.
Hey guys, I'm determined to watch all of your videos, they're really informative and fantastic to watch and not too long so they're very watchable! I'm very interested in whether this method of dowsing actually worked or not. Is this where you found the water? I'm asking because I live in Spain and there's a lot of drought and I want to live off-grid so water is obviously the most important thing to keep in mind when looking for the perfect plot of land. Please can you let me know how you drilled for it and secured the water source? I can't find a video on that anywhere...
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed: th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html
@@cottagefarmstead Absolutely, I just showed your video to my wife and I saw your brother asked the rods if it's 400 feet deep and then they went straight. So there seems to have been an accurate prediction there. Thank you so much for your videos, they're brilliant. Have you guys thought of doing a video on earthbag house construction? Also known as 'rammed earth construction method'?
@@billclarke48 wood is plentiful here and we have access to a sawmill, so we’re focusing on mostly traditional building methods for our area when we get started on outbuildings. We have a whole playlist of when we built our house last year: th-cam.com/play/PLsO6IJVvhdGPGV2L_UTwm7QzMcjn5jhc8.html
The anecdotal theory is that willow is water loving tree that thrives in wetter soil, and therefore the willow branch seeks water…but I don’t think I have ever seen any science to back that up.
Great stuff. I see you did dig and indeed find a well, well done! Can you make a video as an update to this showing all that and what happened exactly? Cheers from NZ
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed: th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html With all the other homestead building projects going on, we haven't had a chance to revisit filming about the well.
@@cottagefarmstead Ahhh gotcha, all good! Thanks for the reply. Phwoar... that must be really hard getting through granite at all let alone 400 ft!! Glad you found water. So, million dollar question, was the water found where your divining rods indicated??
The whole "x" marks the spot exactly over your well... The water table would have been in a larger area so its not like ONLY where your well was is the ONLY spot. Seems more like people just thumbing the rods.
Theory is they cross when their is a disturbance in the earth’s magnetic pull. (Significant water, buried power lines, etc). But there is little to no science behind any of it. It just seems to have worked for thousands of years.
@@cottagefarmstead yes I used them the other day and they were going at a fast speed on certain areas going clockwise I was thinking that’s where there is more water just wasn’t sure
I used to believe in this for the most part until an 85 year old, second generation, well driller told me it was all BS. He said years ago when well digging was a lot more labor intensive well diggers would "find water" in areas that would be in the shade in the hot afternoon. An experienced well person can pretty well guess how deep the water is in a geographical area by other wells they have worked on in the area and the elevation compared to area lakes.
Not bs my parents made me find water by dowsing in the 90s before fast reliable internet to get us kids to look for fun different techniques used you can even use a clothes hanger like a willow branch
when standing still, you could easily see the guy's hands moving ever so slightly as he asked it questions about depth and flow rate... this confirms what every real academic study has ever found... slight manipulation of the rods, based on subconscious muscle movements.
It simple to figure that out just put the gods in two bottles with a bottle in each hand where your muscles can’t move them and they will still move disproving your silly notion but of course being a doubter you won’t even try it.
@@michaelwalsh9145 You can still tip your hands which would cause the rods to move. This actually would make it to where even more subtle movements would get them to turn because there will be less friction.
But you already know where the well and the proposed wells are so your subconscious will obviously take you there. It does work but demonstrating the way you are will just bring out the doubters.
Dowsing has been debunked numerous times. James Randi has spent his life debunking psychics, magicians, oracles and the like. He proved that dowsing is no better than pure chance. It is certainly possible to become a very savvy outdoorsman that can take many factors into account to make an educated guess. That is the best you can hope for.
@@lunarrn no i have not tried it because it has been tried hundreds of times.. people sick of the proliferation of absurd claims contrary to scienntific observation and common sense offer prizes for believers to prove their claim. The misguided and gullible try and fail. If wood or metal was attracted to water it would require redesign of wood and metal structure next water storage tanks. The center for inquiry offers a $500,000 prize for proof of any paranormal ability like dowsing water. So far dowsers who beleived strongly enough to drive out there cannot find the box hiding a water bottle in a room where the other 9 boxes hid no water.
@@lunarrn Ya you are right my not trying it is not proof that it is fraud or superstition. I did not say my not trying it is proof of anything. I said with $500,000 offered to anyone who can actually dowse a, many trying and all failing that is proof it is fraud or superstition. See wikipedia prize for paranormal for multiple organizations offering cash if you can prove dowsing or any other proof of the paranormal. Simple test just tell which cardboard box in a room hides a gallon of water.
Honestly I've seen crew members do this looking for utilities. Do I understand it. No. Can I make it work. No but. They keep doing it and it somehowb seems to work. Some how, some way. Not like shown, but. They some how find stuff that they shouldn't be able to find what the they seem to find
@@shawnembrey1118 We're not entirely sure. The well digger gave us a low flow rate and dug 500 feet before they said we hit water, but the water level today in the wall is about 40ft. We've run it for hours on the garden this summer and never had an issue, so not sure what numbers to believe. Runs 50psi or so after the pressure tank and about 20psi without it, so it will do the job of providing for us.
@@cottagefarmsteadThe rods found a spot where there was water. Pretty much any other spot would have also had water. It is basically impossible to not hit water eventually. I would have called having to dig through 500ft of granite to get to water a failure, but if you want to call it a success, you do you.
The answer is that no, it doesn't work. It's obviously gravity moving the rods because you're not standing/holding them perfectly level, and your own bias, subconscious or otherwise, is what is giving you consistency.
I've never seen water dowsed, i personally think its bullshit bc if you dig far enough you'll hit water anyways. HOWEVER, i have seen ibew lineman douse for buried power lines on mulitple occasions with startlijg accuracy.
Actually that is not true. Water isn't everywhere. I live in a water poor area, little ridge south of me about a mile long has at least ten dry wells on. it. We have 5 acre parcels. My neighbor to the east has two wells and still has to have a holding tank, the 3 neighbors to the west all have to haul water starting late summer. I witched my well, hit depth 150' and flow on the head 8gpm. My flow drop to about 3 in august, but I witched it in April. The best one is I witched a well for a friend. I heard later it was dry. Years later I ran Ito him and we got to talking about the well. Turns out his driller refused to drill where I said. they got a dry hole. He drilled another dry hole. My friend fired him and had a guy drill where I said and they got water at depth and flow. I dont believe it works but I know it does!!!
Any explanation of how dowsing works is just entirely guesswork, science doesn't have a clue why or how it works, but there are many other things in nature that haven't been explained by science yet; I used to be a sceptic until I tried it. I used a brass brazing rod, I bent one end 90 degrees to make a handle then I started walking until the rod suddenly turned by itself, I walked away, then I came back to that spot several times and the rod reacted the same way every time. Dowsing works!
It works by you turning the rods subconsciously. They turned once and everytime after that you turned them. They work to find ground water by there being ground water pretty much everywhere, so you can't miss. Just take these folks for example. They had to dig a 500ft well through granite to get to water, but they want to call that a success. I would call that a failure. Any time dowsing has been tested in controlled conditions, it fails.
@@ninjaneerk5601 , Not so, First of all, you hold the rods very loosely so that you won't turn it yourself and it doesn't always reveal underground water, sometimes it reveals underground pipes, etc. Like I said, I was a sceptic before I tried it.
@@4321grp The more loosely you hold them the easier it will be to get the rods to move because you are reducing the friction that resists the turning of the rods. Slight turning or twisting of your wrists causes gravity to pull the rods so that they rotate.
There's literally an underground ocean below you. No matter where you walk there will be water there. This is entirely ideamotor reactions. Every single step he took there he would have hit water at the same depth. Asking the rods a question? Get real
AWESOME GUYS very well illustrated. I just purchased some to locate water on my property but asked them if God hears my prayers and the answer was yes.
The history and explanation at 1:10 was the absolute best that has ever been shared. Very informative video and fun to watch
So glad you found it helpful! :-)
❤ شكرا
My husband swears by this! He's even found waterlines for the plumber trying to find a leak on our property.
Very cool! We're very curious to see if we do hit water in that spot!
ŵe ãre trying to find a leak in a water line, how do you do that?
@@chucksteffan6127 First you have to be completely re7@rded. Then hold a stick, and voila!
@@spec24 Ahh yes, because they were utter idiots and morons in all of human history, all those billions and billions of people, while today they are such a spark of sunshine, all geniusses no doubt.
Your hands are moving
Very nice presentation
Wish you much happiness and success in your Homestead venture
Thanks for sharing
I have tried this on my Dad's land. I could feel the pull and whenever I would walk around I would get drawn back to that spot.
A sensitive douser can use his rods to find depth. The dousing rod is held by the end of the rod over the water source. It will "nod" up and down, counting out depth footage and will stop, to start moving back and forth when the stongest water channel is reached. There can be more than one channel of water at a location at different depth and the douser will find them all. Good luck!
it works on water lines and power lines
Thanks for the great video! I’ve had some amazing artifact finds using dowsing rods made with copper rods and wooden handles. Best of luck💚
ITS 1000% BS.🤣
@@CWHolleman No it's not.
I couldn't find a follow up video. How did it work out?
Did dowsing for water ACTUALLY work?
th-cam.com/video/5kFplreIaRs/w-d-xo.html
Thank you. I'm clicking the link now to see.
Great video, I have land & I will b doing the same thing, thank you for video it,
I think it's magnetic field that makes them move. Live wires also make them cross
Magnetic field that answers yes and no questions ?
But cupper is not magnetic and it can't be moved by a magnetic field.
Unless there's current inside them
Or maybe their hands?
How accurate were they without dowsing? If you dig to the local water level you will fimd water all the time.
Turns out we are sitting on a 500 ft deep bed of granite, so we had to dig WAY deeper to hit water than most folk around.
@@cottagefarmstead sorry to hear that. Sounds expensive...
I have 100% accuracy in Venice 😊
Dowsing is con work at its finest.
Lol @@maxbrundle1599
Am going to try this myself
What type of rod? What size and what length? Please tell me.
Just needs to be something conductive. Ours are a bit of leftover scrap copper grounding rod. Precise size/length doesn't really matter.
i used a nylon rod for years, but even before that i would use a small branch in the shape of a y
Hi, we are very curious as to the outcome after you drilled the well? Was the dowsing accurate? I cannot find a video afterwards letting folks know how it went?
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed: th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html With all the other homestead building projects going on, we haven't had a chance to revisit filming about the well. We hope to film a follow up soon!
@@cottagefarmstead Yes, because ground water is literally everywhere in most locations. Dowsing is, has always been, and will always be a con.
Dowsing does not work.
@@CWHollemanhave you tried it? Obviously not.
Is amazing but how did you know the depth of the well?
Its so cool!
Can you ask for the next lotto numbers please! :)
This is so cool!
Ok, a little critique from a long time Witcher. Never seen anyone talk to the rods, doesnt mean it cant work, but being so far off on your depth does not lend to effectiveness. What is the rate of dry wells in that area???? Many places it doesnt matter where you drill there's water. Good luck on your project and life!
In an area like that there is always underground water not too far from the surface.
I tried it with sticks, works I think.
I wanna do it while high on shrooms. For better vibes
My father used dowsing rods to find water in our 10 acre ranch. The water was 455 feet deep
At 455 feet he probably would have found water wherever he would dig tbh.
Your father got lucky.
how long do these need to be
Don’t think there is a precise length required. Ours are just some bent copper wire about 18” or so.
So should I be looking for them to Cross or to point on another.
They cross (make an X) when you're on top of something
It's like a ouija board, dangerous
@Cottage Farmstead How deep under ground it is possible to detective water with this method/tool?
I don't have a precise number as dowsing is more art than science. But I'd assume quite deep as this study in an arid region showed at 96% success rate of hitting water: www.popularmechanics.com/science/a3199/1281661/
@@cottagefarmstead You will hit water regardless. Ground water is everywhere. It just depends on how far you dig before you give up. Once you start digging confirmation bias and the sunk cost fallacy will keep you going until you hit water since the you "know that it's there because of the diving rods."
Well said mr ninja @@ninjaneerk5601
It predated everything we know as history. It was the only way to find water until 20th century.
Lmao
Asked one old man known to use dowsing rods to check my property for underground water flow. He had no time so he asked me why i don't do it by myself.. What? How? He gave me 2 wires, just like some salvaged some, different size and materials alu and copper i think. It doesnt matter he told and demonstrated on house water connection. It worked the same for me and my wife. Its so freakin easy, just mindblowing that people doesnt use it more.
does it understand distance in meters?? 😅
And..which unit of measurement..in cms?in inches? In meters..what exactly?😃🤪😃
Yes it does.
Nice video
You just try it with a coconut with a bit of husk on it .look it up how its done in India
I want to buy such skewers, I did not find them
These were just scrap copper wire we bent to serve the purpose, nothing fancy or manufactured.
Get a couple of plastic straws to hold the copper rods.
Hey guys, I'm determined to watch all of your videos, they're really informative and fantastic to watch and not too long so they're very watchable! I'm very interested in whether this method of dowsing actually worked or not. Is this where you found the water? I'm asking because I live in Spain and there's a lot of drought and I want to live off-grid so water is obviously the most important thing to keep in mind when looking for the perfect plot of land. Please can you let me know how you drilled for it and secured the water source? I can't find a video on that anywhere...
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed:
th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html
@@cottagefarmstead Thanks for the update. 400ft of granite! That must've been expensive... 😬
@@billclarke48 Definitely more than we bargained for, but there's always something when building a house that is unexpected! Got to have water though!
@@cottagefarmstead Absolutely, I just showed your video to my wife and I saw your brother asked the rods if it's 400 feet deep and then they went straight. So there seems to have been an accurate prediction there. Thank you so much for your videos, they're brilliant. Have you guys thought of doing a video on earthbag house construction? Also known as 'rammed earth construction method'?
@@billclarke48 wood is plentiful here and we have access to a sawmill, so we’re focusing on mostly traditional building methods for our area when we get started on outbuildings. We have a whole playlist of when we built our house last year: th-cam.com/play/PLsO6IJVvhdGPGV2L_UTwm7QzMcjn5jhc8.html
Why does the willow branch detect it? Or will any branch work?
The anecdotal theory is that willow is water loving tree that thrives in wetter soil, and therefore the willow branch seeks water…but I don’t think I have ever seen any science to back that up.
no branch detects it, because it's total BS.
Great stuff. I see you did dig and indeed find a well, well done! Can you make a video as an update to this showing all that and what happened exactly? Cheers from NZ
Hello! We were both at our day jobs when the well digging truck and crew came so we were unable to film that day. They ended up having to drill through 400ft of granite which neither we nor the well drillers expected, but we did find water to supply our house and homestead eventually. We have a video of our water filtration system when we got that installed: th-cam.com/video/FWnNRIg1noI/w-d-xo.html With all the other homestead building projects going on, we haven't had a chance to revisit filming about the well.
@@cottagefarmstead Ahhh gotcha, all good! Thanks for the reply. Phwoar... that must be really hard getting through granite at all let alone 400 ft!! Glad you found water. So, million dollar question, was the water found where your divining rods indicated??
@@kadalora Yep! Water was eventually found at that spot underneath all that granite!
pretty easy to find something that's at the bottom of almost every hole, and as far as I know magnetism doesn't effect copper or wood
The whole "x" marks the spot exactly over your well... The water table would have been in a larger area so its not like ONLY where your well was is the ONLY spot. Seems more like people just thumbing the rods.
But that would be the closest since it is being pulled up from the ground.
oh please!
ok I'm not going for it, no way. lol, lol, lol
get the moonshine out of here.🤣
thats copper or mettal?
Our are copper, but any reactive/magnetic metal works
Pretty, pretty...cool.
Ask questions, move rod with your thumbs. 🤣
I woukd do it blind folded to the known well for people who dont believe
What is the reason when the rods go all crazy turning ?
Theory is they cross when their is a disturbance in the earth’s magnetic pull. (Significant water, buried power lines, etc). But there is little to no science behind any of it. It just seems to have worked for thousands of years.
@@cottagefarmstead yes I used them the other day and they were going at a fast speed on certain areas going clockwise I was thinking that’s where there is more water just wasn’t sure
The guy holding them moves his hands. That's why they move.
Please is it thesame with the German stick or brass we use
We can’t personally speak to it, as we have not tried any other materiel.
I used to believe in this for the most part until an 85 year old, second generation, well driller told me it was all BS. He said years ago when well digging was a lot more labor intensive well diggers would "find water" in areas that would be in the shade in the hot afternoon. An experienced well person can pretty well guess how deep the water is in a geographical area by other wells they have worked on in the area and the elevation compared to area lakes.
the thing i have never figured out is how people got accurate with depth
We have no idea either and obviously weren’t correct on our method as our well was 10x the depth we dowsed! 😜
Because if you dig deep enough in many places...you'll hit water.
Explained above. The dousing rod is held differently.
Not bs my parents made me find water by dowsing in the 90s before fast reliable internet to get us kids to look for fun different techniques used you can even use a clothes hanger like a willow branch
when standing still, you could easily see the guy's hands moving ever so slightly as he asked it questions about depth and flow rate... this confirms what every real academic study has ever found... slight manipulation of the rods, based on subconscious muscle movements.
It simple to figure that out just put the gods in two bottles with a bottle in each hand where your muscles can’t move them and they will still move disproving your silly notion but of course being a doubter you won’t even try it.
@@michaelwalsh9145so you can bottle gods now? And I thought the video was bull😂😂
@@crimro85 bloody predictive text, good one 😀😀😀
@@michaelwalsh9145 You can still tip your hands which would cause the rods to move. This actually would make it to where even more subtle movements would get them to turn because there will be less friction.
@@ninjaneerk5601 try it, you’d want to consciously tilt your hands to make the rods move.
Was with you until you started asking it questions
Is it a talking with spirits thing ?? It speaks English or is it multilingual
lmao, not only do they make up shit for why it finds the location, they also talk to the fucking rods
you're something else 🤣
guide him downhill to water, rock bottom at water, and as soon as you start going back uphill, the rods tilt back towards you.
I can actually see your hand moving manipulating the rods keep your hands as still as you can
But you already know where the well and the proposed wells are so your subconscious will obviously take you there. It does work but demonstrating the way you are will just bring out the doubters.
Dowsing has been debunked numerous times.
James Randi has spent his life debunking psychics, magicians, oracles and the like. He proved that dowsing is no better than pure chance.
It is certainly possible to become a very savvy outdoorsman that can take many factors into account to make an educated guess. That is the best you can hope for.
Watch him tilt his wrists up at 7:19, since he knows that the rods need to point to the well behind him.
What if I don't speak English!?
Have someone bury an object in the ground, and see if you can find it. You won't!
Thanks one sane response in a sea of ignorant ones. I just mansplained an essay about their perpetuation of fraud and superstition.
Have you tried this?
@@lunarrn no i have not tried it because it has been tried hundreds of times.. people sick of the proliferation of absurd claims contrary to scienntific observation and common sense offer prizes for believers to prove their claim. The misguided and gullible try and fail.
If wood or metal was attracted to water it would require redesign of wood and metal structure next water storage tanks. The center for inquiry offers a $500,000 prize for proof of any paranormal ability like dowsing water. So far dowsers who beleived strongly enough to drive out there cannot find the box hiding a water bottle in a room where the other 9 boxes hid no water.
@@JohnSmith-fj3uf just because you can’t do this doesn’t mean it’s fraud or superstition
@@lunarrn Ya you are right my not trying it is not proof that it is fraud or superstition. I did not say my not trying it is proof of anything. I said with $500,000 offered to anyone who can actually dowse a, many trying and all failing that is proof it is fraud or superstition. See wikipedia prize for paranormal for multiple organizations offering cash if you can prove dowsing or any other proof of the paranormal. Simple test just tell which cardboard box in a room hides a gallon of water.
definitly not spinning on a globe lol!
Honestly I've seen crew members do this looking for utilities. Do I understand it. No. Can I make it work. No but. They keep doing it and it somehowb seems to work. Some how, some way. Not like shown, but. They some how find stuff that they shouldn't be able to find what the they seem to find
It probably works better if you're barefooted that way you're completely grounded.
Used his hands to move it. Unreal
Did you ever dig the well and find water?
We did! It was much deeper, but the rods did find the spot!
@@cottagefarmstead What was the flow rate
@@shawnembrey1118 We're not entirely sure. The well digger gave us a low flow rate and dug 500 feet before they said we hit water, but the water level today in the wall is about 40ft. We've run it for hours on the garden this summer and never had an issue, so not sure what numbers to believe. Runs 50psi or so after the pressure tank and about 20psi without it, so it will do the job of providing for us.
@@cottagefarmsteadThe rods found a spot where there was water. Pretty much any other spot would have also had water. It is basically impossible to not hit water eventually. I would have called having to dig through 500ft of granite to get to water a failure, but if you want to call it a success, you do you.
The answer is that no, it doesn't work. It's obviously gravity moving the rods because you're not standing/holding them perfectly level, and your own bias, subconscious or otherwise, is what is giving you consistency.
I've never seen water dowsed, i personally think its bullshit bc if you dig far enough you'll hit water anyways.
HOWEVER, i have seen ibew lineman douse for buried power lines on mulitple occasions with startlijg accuracy.
What a contradiction
@davidcavaliere1525 one is water and one is an electrical field, where is the contradiction, oh great genius?
Actually that is not true. Water isn't everywhere. I live in a water poor area, little ridge south of me about a mile long has at least ten dry wells on. it. We have 5 acre parcels. My neighbor to the east has two wells and still has to have a holding tank, the 3 neighbors to the west all have to haul water starting late summer. I witched my well, hit depth 150' and flow on the head 8gpm. My flow drop to about 3 in august, but I witched it in April. The best one is I witched a well for a friend. I heard later it was dry. Years later I ran Ito him and we got to talking about the well. Turns out his driller refused to drill where I said. they got a dry hole. He drilled another dry hole. My friend fired him and had a guy drill where I said and they got water at depth and flow. I dont believe it works but I know it does!!!
You won't find water everywhere. At best 8-10 feet apart you'll have water lines! Much love.
Remember- you can go to hell for lying
The University of Germany? Do you mean a University IN Germany? Which one?? There are hundreds...
If you click into the video description, we already provided a link to the study referenced and the precise university.
Your boyfriend looks more like your brother than your brother.
I am itchy already just watching this… looks like a lot if bugs
Nothing more than the placebo effect in fact if you were to dig in most places you would find water there’s nothing super natural about this
A couple thousand acres is an insane amount of money.
Not if it's were no wants to live.
Witches! Burn 'em!
You guys look related
Total BS.
Ok, I'm sorry but those are the rattiest looking rods I have ever seen.
Any explanation of how dowsing works is just entirely guesswork, science doesn't have a clue why or how it works, but there are many other things in nature that haven't been explained by science yet; I used to be a sceptic until I tried it. I used a brass brazing rod, I bent one end 90 degrees to make a handle then I started walking until the rod suddenly turned by itself, I walked away, then I came back to that spot several times and the rod reacted the same way every time. Dowsing works!
It works by you turning the rods subconsciously. They turned once and everytime after that you turned them. They work to find ground water by there being ground water pretty much everywhere, so you can't miss. Just take these folks for example. They had to dig a 500ft well through granite to get to water, but they want to call that a success. I would call that a failure. Any time dowsing has been tested in controlled conditions, it fails.
@@ninjaneerk5601 , Not so, First of all, you hold the rods very loosely so that you won't turn it yourself and it doesn't always reveal underground water, sometimes it reveals underground pipes, etc. Like I said, I was a sceptic before I tried it.
@@4321grp The more loosely you hold them the easier it will be to get the rods to move because you are reducing the friction that resists the turning of the rods. Slight turning or twisting of your wrists causes gravity to pull the rods so that they rotate.
There's literally an underground ocean below you. No matter where you walk there will be water there. This is entirely ideamotor reactions. Every single step he took there he would have hit water at the same depth. Asking the rods a question? Get real
@Doctaphil64 @I_Like_Turtle390
Absolute nonsense.