I forgot to mention.

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
~ tinpan~
I can start digging anywhere for 3 minutes and find a piece of junk. You have proved nothing.besides you cannot find anything called treasure, you cannot even post a clear pic. I can find 10th of a gram of gold in the hardest mineralized ground in the world. Thats more than any dowser has ever found. Theres no easy way of finding treasure and takes years to learn.You think can you pick up a couple of rods and way them around and your onto something. Well stop talking rubbish.

Typical skeptic reply...With over 57 million square miles of land in the world I know your first statement is just B/S...A lot of this land man has not been there so there will be no junk. You may be able to find a 10th of a gram of gold in mineralized soil but the odds of you seeing it when it come out of the shovel are close to zero. The time it takes to learn and develop his treasure finding skills may take years or months..
He has found a proven way to look treasure...8,000 years of history is hard to beat..If you do not want to read about what he finds you don’t have to...Art
 

OP
OP
lesjcbs

lesjcbs

Hero Member
Jul 14, 2011
880
338
Detector(s) used
Pocket dowsing L- Rods shown above. Whites Beach Comber, Bounty Hunter Sharp Shooter II, Whites TM 808, Canon 350D EOS Digital Rebel XT DSLR Camera.
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
tinpan: You are so mistaken it's unreal. Come with me and lets see if junk is everywhere to be dug up. :laughing9:

As for it taking forever to find treasure as you define it, SPEAK FOR AND ABOUT YOURSELF. When using JUST a metal detector with a very small diameter coil on it that's say from 8" to 12" to thouroughly cover and search an area four 4 square miles in size, yes it's going to take forever, and everyone knows that. Since when did you discover that? Unless you have dowsed successfully, you will never know what it's like to go over a vast area in the middle of no mans land to within inches of an unseen target, then dig it up. For some dowsers, 4 square miles is nothing.

Since when did you become the definer of what treasure is and is not and why? Some people consider glass bottles as treasure, railroad date nails is treasure to some, still others consider old rusty shovels as treasure, some look for relics like old guns, knives, cannon balls, buttons etc. I have a freind who donated such items he found in a cave in southern Utah. I got news for you, treasure in in the eye of the beholder.

As for my picture being out of focus, yes I know that. I never was much with cameras but I will learn and eventually get it right. What will you say then, more low blows? You're real quality aren't you.

So HOWL ON BUDDY and I will keep posting pictures of things I hopefully will find while dowsing.
 

OP
OP
lesjcbs

lesjcbs

Hero Member
Jul 14, 2011
880
338
Detector(s) used
Pocket dowsing L- Rods shown above. Whites Beach Comber, Bounty Hunter Sharp Shooter II, Whites TM 808, Canon 350D EOS Digital Rebel XT DSLR Camera.
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Lots of junk there and that's ok.

Hey tinpn: William Shakespeare has a message for you and all other skeptics like you. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio (tinpan), than are dreamt of in your philosophy (science)."

__________________________________________________________________


Practicing Medicine and dowsing has one very important thing in common, they are both an art, not a science.
 

rebel003

Full Member
Feb 17, 2011
149
71
Winston, Georgia
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
SWR said:
lesjcbs said:
tinpan: Not even a nice try.

I posted some finds earlier while dowsing. What did you do, pretend I didn't post them or that they are not there? Yes, they are not valuable like a pot of gold woud be, but since when did you become the judge of what a treasure is supposed to be and why? Is it that you put your head in the sand and didn't want to see those metal things I found while dowsing? I explained in detail why they are significant. You must have ignore that also?

By the way, you can find metals with $3.00 magnets found in hardware stores (ACE, Sears, Lowes, Home Depot etc) and they don't run on batteries. Dah! Batteries have nothing to do with this subject. So how about giving it the old fashioned effort to keep on subject. If you can muster that, you just might become more impressive.

Noble metals are magnetic? :icon_scratch:

Do dowsers actually believe tin foil, pull-tabs and rusty nails are treasure? (According to Art... real dowsers do not dig such trash)
Strange SWR when I look at the pictures on your web site showing the valuables you have found, you show the alum cans in nealry all the pictures. It appears by your standards your md ability to find real treasure is sorely lacking...
Why don’t you try and look up what the word means before you pass judgement. Check out item 3…
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/treasure
treas•ure
  <a href="http://dictionary.reference.com/audio.html/lunaWAV/T04/T0459400" target="_blank"><img src="http://sp.dictionary.com/dictstatic/g/d/speaker.gif" border="0" alt="treasure pronunciation" /></a> ˈtrɛʒ ərShow Spelled [trezh-er] Show IPA noun, verb, -ured, -ur•ing.
noun
1.
Wealth or riches stored or accumulated, especially in the form of precious metals, money, jewels, or plate.
2.
Wealth, rich materials, or valuable things.
3.
Anything or person greatly valued or highly prized: "This book was his chief treasure".

Verb (used with object)
4.
To retain carefully or keep in store, as in the mind.
5.
To regard or treat as precious; cherish.
6.
To put away for security or future use, as money.
 

OP
OP
lesjcbs

lesjcbs

Hero Member
Jul 14, 2011
880
338
Detector(s) used
Pocket dowsing L- Rods shown above. Whites Beach Comber, Bounty Hunter Sharp Shooter II, Whites TM 808, Canon 350D EOS Digital Rebel XT DSLR Camera.
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
Hey Gang: Greetings from Grantsville Utah. I will be here for the next three days. Along the way (350 miles), I took some fantastic pictures of places that would make a dowsers perfect play ground, but would be a SCREAMING NIGHTMARE to a skeptic trying to completely and thoroughly cover the same vast areas with a small detector coil.

I will post those pictures and more this coming Thursday or Friday at the latest. Dowsers are going to love them, skeptics are going to hate them with a passion.
 

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
~lesjcbs~
Hey Gang: Greetings from Grantsville Utah. I will be here for the next three days. Along the way (350 miles), I took some fantastic pictures of places that would make a dowsers perfect play ground, but would be a SCREAMING NIGHTMARE to a skeptic trying to completely and thoroughly cover the same vast areas with a small detector coil.
~SWR~~
Check "this guy" out! Proving once again the dowsers motto: Found it... but, didn't dig it up.

Dowsers seem to claim victory... regardless if they actually find anything or not. (wishful thinking at work)
Either your reading comprehension is bad or you can not except he truth...Art
 

10claw

Sr. Member
Aug 16, 2009
495
140
scuse me art, did you say accept the truth? let me butt in for a few seconds. swr has already proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that he does not accept nor know the truth if he is looking directly at John 17:17. :laughing9: :laughing9: :o ::) :icon_scratch: :read2:
 

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
There is a big difference between Florida and Utah
Utah
Approximately 80% of Utah's 2,763,885 people live along the Wasatch Front, centering on Salt Lake City.
It covers an area of 84,899 sq mi
The highest point in the state, Kings Peak, at 13,528 feet (4,123 m),[3] lies within the Uinta Mountains.
32 people per square mile
Florida
With a 2010 estimated population of 18,801,310
With an area of 65,755 square miles
At 345 feet (105 m) above mean sea level, Britton Hill is the highest point in Florida and the lowest highpoint of any U.S. state.[
286 people per square mile
 

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner

EddieR

Hero Member
Mar 1, 2005
914
26
Madisonville, TN
Detector(s) used
Whites XLT, MXT,..Tesoro Vaquero, Silver UMax, Compadre, Tejon,..BH LandRanger..Pioneer 505.. GC1023..Teknetics Delta 4000, Gamma 6000, Eurotek Pro..Fisher F2, F4, F5, F70
Hmmm.....according to resident skeptics, they are on the LRL forum to "protect" people from being "scammed" by LRL manufacturers. They don't want to see people lose their money to unscrupulous individuals making wild claims about devices using "non-functioning" electronics.

Okay.


So what the hey are they trying to "protect" people from on THIS forum? Coat hangers?


Methinks there is a troll under yon bridge.
 

EddieR

Hero Member
Mar 1, 2005
914
26
Madisonville, TN
Detector(s) used
Whites XLT, MXT,..Tesoro Vaquero, Silver UMax, Compadre, Tejon,..BH LandRanger..Pioneer 505.. GC1023..Teknetics Delta 4000, Gamma 6000, Eurotek Pro..Fisher F2, F4, F5, F70
SWR said:
EddieR said:
Hmmm.....according to resident skeptics, they are on the LRL forum to "protect" people from being "scammed" by LRL manufacturers. They don't want to see people lose their money to unscrupulous individuals making wild claims about devices using "non-functioning" electronics.

Okay.


So what the hey are they trying to "protect" people from on THIS forum? Coat hangers?


Methinks there is a troll under yon bridge.

Yeah... and methinks there is a sore looser named Eddie belching nonsense on this forum. :dontknow:

Yep.

Nonsense.

Ya know....the part about the skeptics protecting others.

Total BS. Of course, we all knew that, didn't we? But thanks for the reminder!



So....how deep is the water under there?


:laughing7: :laughing7: :laughing7:
 

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
`swr`
Yeah... and methinks there is a sore looser named Eddie belching nonsense on this forum.
Wonder what he means by that Eddie..I thought you found your wedding ring that you lost in a hayfield...did you lose something else?...Art
 

tinpan

Silver Member
Sep 4, 2004
4,664
1,586
Eaglehawk
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
GPX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
aarthrj3811 said:
~ tinpan~
I can start digging anywhere for 3 minutes and find a piece of junk. You have proved nothing.besides you cannot find anything called treasure, you cannot even post a clear pic. I can find 10th of a gram of gold in the hardest mineralized ground in the world. Thats more than any dowser has ever found. Theres no easy way of finding treasure and takes years to learn.You think can you pick up a couple of rods and way them around and your onto something. Well stop talking rubbish.

Typical skeptic reply...With over 57 million square miles of land in the world I know your first statement is just B/S...A lot of this land man has not been there so there will be no junk. You may be able to find a 10th of a gram of gold in mineralized soil but the odds of you seeing it when it come out of the shovel are close to zero. The time it takes to learn and develop his treasure finding skills may take years or months..
He has found a proven way to look treasure...8,000 years of history is hard to beat..If you do not want to read about what he finds you don’t have to...Art
So in 1788 first white settlement so where does the 8000 years of history come from. I,m Australian no an englishman .

tinpan
 

tinpan

Silver Member
Sep 4, 2004
4,664
1,586
Eaglehawk
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
GPX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
lesjcbs said:
tinpan: You are so mistaken it's unreal. Come with me and lets see if junk is everywhere to be dug up. :laughing9:

As for it taking forever to find treasure as you define it, SPEAK FOR AND ABOUT YOURSELF. When using JUST a metal detector with a very small diameter coil on it that's say from 8" to 12" to thouroughly cover and search an area four 4 square miles in size, yes it's going to take forever, and everyone knows that. Since when did you discover that? Unless you have dowsed successfully, you will never know what it's like to go over a vast area in the middle of no mans land to within inches of an unseen target, then dig it up. For some dowsers, 4 square miles is nothing.

Since when did you become the definer of what treasure is and is not and why? Some people consider glass bottles as treasure, railroad date nails is treasure to some, still others consider old rusty shovels as treasure, some look for relics like old guns, knives, cannon balls, buttons etc. I have a freind who donated such items he found in a cave in southern Utah. I got news for you, treasure in in the eye of the beholder.

As for my picture being out of focus, yes I know that. I never was much with cameras but I will learn and eventually get it right. What will you say then, more low blows? You're real quality aren't you.

So HOWL ON BUDDY and I will keep posting pictures of things I hopefully will find while dowsing.

You assume alot and no nothing , i don,t just use a Md i use recorded history and many other methods

Explain this tinpan
 

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tinpan

Silver Member
Sep 4, 2004
4,664
1,586
Eaglehawk
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
GPX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
aarthrj3811 said:
There is a big difference between Florida and Utah
Utah
Approximately 80% of Utah's 2,763,885 people live along the Wasatch Front, centering on Salt Lake City.
It covers an area of 84,899 sq mi
The highest point in the state, Kings Peak, at 13,528 feet (4,123 m),[3] lies within the Uinta Mountains.
32 people per square mile
Florida
With a 2010 estimated population of 18,801,310
With an area of 65,755 square miles
At 345 feet (105 m) above mean sea level, Britton Hill is the highest point in Florida and the lowest highpoint of any U.S. state.[
286 people per square mile
Your not very smart either I live inland side of the mountains so how many miles per person in place like Australia. My advice is go do some checking before you post anymore rubbish.

tinpan
 

tinpan

Silver Member
Sep 4, 2004
4,664
1,586
Eaglehawk
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
GPX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
lesjcbs said:
Lots of junk there and that's ok.

Hey tinpn: William Shakespeare has a message for you and all other skeptics like you. "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio (tinpan), than are dreamt of in your philosophy (science)."

__________________________________________________________________


Practicing Medicine and dowsing has one very important thing in common, they are both an art, not a science.

Great friction is required to polish a jewel, to become a good treasure hunter needs Trials

"theres no easy way"

tinpan
 

tinpan

Silver Member
Sep 4, 2004
4,664
1,586
Eaglehawk
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
GPX
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
lesjcbs said:
Hey Gang: Greetings from Grantsville Utah. I will be here for the next three days. Along the way (350 miles), I took some fantastic pictures of places that would make a dowsers perfect play ground, but would be a SCREAMING NIGHTMARE to a skeptic trying to completely and thoroughly cover the same vast areas with a small detector coil.

I will post those pictures and more this coming Thursday or Friday at the latest. Dowsers are going to love them, skeptics are going to hate them with a passion.

let me quess ??? ??? looking for the ancient gold plates that the founder of the Mormon Church once found ?????????? Do the plates really exist or are like dowsing just a fable.

tinpan
 

Saturna

Bronze Member
May 24, 2008
1,373
10
Nanaimo, B.C. Canada
Detector(s) used
White's 4900 DL Max, Tesoro Deleon
EddieR said:
Hmmm.....according to resident skeptics, they are on the LRL forum to "protect" people from being "scammed" by LRL manufacturers. They don't want to see people lose their money to unscrupulous individuals making wild claims about devices using "non-functioning" electronics.


I've never claimed that. I just get a kick from challenging nonsense. That's all, no deeper motive.
 

aarthrj3811

Gold Member
Apr 1, 2004
9,256
1,169
Northern Nevada
Detector(s) used
Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
http://www.talewins.com/help/dowsing.htm
Dowsing success has been recorded since the time of Moses, for the story of Aaron producing water from the rock (Exodus chapter 17, verse 6) is often quoted as the first written evidence. Even if we dismiss the Biblical claim, dowsers appear engraved on ancient Egyptian stonework and on the statue of a Chinese emperor dating circa 2200 BC. Little else of dowsing is recorded until Agricola, in 1556, wrote De Re Metallica, a composition on mining, which included an illustration of a German dowser at work.

http://www.neholistic.com/articles/0008.htm
In this vein, in 1949, a party of French explorers (while searching for evidence of lost civilizations in the Atlas Mts. of North Africa) stumbled upon a massive system of caverns known as the Tassili Caves, wherein many of the walls were covered with marvelous pre-historic paintings. Among the many fascinating wall murals, not only did they locate an art gallery devoted exclusively to the depictions of spacecraft and ET's, they also found a remarkable huge wall painting of a dowser, holding a forked branch in his hand searching for water, surrounded by a group of admiring tribesmen. These wall murals were carbon dated and found to be a least 8000 years old.
 

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