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Post by woodyz on Aug 16, 2018 19:03:55 GMT -7
I have seen people do it including my Grand Father. He would use it to find buried pipelines when he worked for Texaco. And it work as far as I could tell. Sure he had a map and knew where it was supposed to be, but he learned fast that they were never exactly where the map said, so he would find how far the line was off before he wasted machinery time digging in the wrong place. I also watched him find an underground spring. He knew the spring came out on his property but he didn't know how deep it was or where it ran. He found it and dug a stock tank on top of it and always had clear cold water in it. His dam overflow when back into the spring and it remained running out the other side of the property in the same creek as it always had. Might come in handy to know how after SH%F This Mini-Course in Pendulum Dowsing is designed as a learning tool for beginners. lettertorobin.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/learningtodowseoutline_12-27-10.pdflettertorobin.wordpress.com/Dowsing is a type of divination employed in attempts to locate ground water, buried metals orores, gemstones, oil, gravesites,[1] and many other objects and materials without the use of scientific apparatus. Dowsing is considered a pseudoscience, and there is no scientific evidencethat it is any more effective than random chance.[2][3] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dowsing
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Post by olebama on Sept 7, 2018 19:36:19 GMT -7
My brother uses either 2 wire coat hangers (if you can find these anymore) straightened out and then bent at a 90 degree angle. One in each hand. walk around the area to find a buried pipe. when the wires cross, you have the pipe.
He also took a rod and a piece of copper pipe (small ID). Used the pipe to make a handle for the rod (bent at a 90 degree angle). Walk around to find a buried pipe. When the rod swings to one side, you have found the pipe. The rod will point downhill (the direction the water flows).
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