aarthrj3811
Gold Member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2004
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- 9,256
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- Location
- Northern Nevada
- Detector(s) used
- Dowsing Rods and a Ranger Tell Examiner
- #1
Thread Owner
Please feel free to add your favorite Dowser to this list of Famous people…..Art
Leonardo De Vinci
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
Robert Boyle (father of modern chemistry)
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
Charles Richet (Nobel prize winner)
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
General Rommel of the German Army
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
General Patton "(U.S. Army). General Patton had a complete willow tree flown to Morocco so that a dowser could use branches from it to find water to replace the wells the German Army had blown up. The British army used dowsers on the Falkland Island to remove mines."
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
"General Patten had two young men from Tennessee transferred to his unit. It is said that an Army moves on it's belly, I suggest that it and it's machines need water as well. Without these water wells we would have lost our butts on that front."
http://www.geocities.com/dowser.geo/dowse.html
Hanna Kroeger - "...for years Cal-Tech was teaching the use of the pendulum to especially bright and interested graduate students. ...So let's join the smart and intelligent crowd and use the pendulum."
http://www.zhealthinfo.com/pendulum.html
Louis Matachia - "...in the late 1960's, a dowser named Louis Matachia did demonstrate dowsing at Quantico, on a mock-up of a Vietnamese village. However, I don't believe he ever "trained" the Marines in dowsing, or that dowsing was ever officially sanctioned by any service."
http://forums.randi.org/archive/index.php/t-205.html
"The New York Times reported that the U.S. Marine Corps used dowsing in Vietnam (Baldwin, 1967)"
http://www.tricksterbook.com/ArticlesOnline/Dowsing.htm
"During the Viet Nam conflict ( War for lack of a better term) We used dowsers to locate enemy tunnel systems and weapons cache's. Here our military brought in teams of dowsers, not to simply locate these materials, but to teach the skill to others. Then came the job nobody wanted, the "Tunnel Rat". The poor bastard that armed with a side arm and a satchel charge of c-4; would enter these underground labyrinths to seek and destroy. Not a bad job till you find out that most had to be done by complete darkness in the tunnel in case there was a guard on duty. If that weren't bad enough, our little buddies sometimes left behind a few small pit vipers. Yes no one except for the few volunteered for this job!"
http://www.geocities.com/dowser.geo/dowse.html
Evelyn Penrose - "Noted dowser Evelyn Penrose was retained by British Columbia to locate oil and water resources...during 1931-1932 she also located 392 water wells for homesteaders."
http://www.denverspiritualcommunity.org/Dowsing.htm
John Living - "who was educated at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, and the Royal Military College of Science, Shrivenham. He was commissioned as an officer in the Corps of Royal Engineers, and was taught dowsing at the School of Military Engineering, Chatham - reported to have the world's largest collection of material on dowsing."
http://mypage.direct.ca/j/jliving/landmine.htm
Leonardo De Vinci
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
Robert Boyle (father of modern chemistry)
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
Charles Richet (Nobel prize winner)
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
General Rommel of the German Army
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
General Patton "(U.S. Army). General Patton had a complete willow tree flown to Morocco so that a dowser could use branches from it to find water to replace the wells the German Army had blown up. The British army used dowsers on the Falkland Island to remove mines."
http://www.tamar-dowsers.co.uk/articles/history.htm
"General Patten had two young men from Tennessee transferred to his unit. It is said that an Army moves on it's belly, I suggest that it and it's machines need water as well. Without these water wells we would have lost our butts on that front."
http://www.geocities.com/dowser.geo/dowse.html
Hanna Kroeger - "...for years Cal-Tech was teaching the use of the pendulum to especially bright and interested graduate students. ...So let's join the smart and intelligent crowd and use the pendulum."
http://www.zhealthinfo.com/pendulum.html
Louis Matachia - "...in the late 1960's, a dowser named Louis Matachia did demonstrate dowsing at Quantico, on a mock-up of a Vietnamese village. However, I don't believe he ever "trained" the Marines in dowsing, or that dowsing was ever officially sanctioned by any service."
http://forums.randi.org/archive/index.php/t-205.html
"The New York Times reported that the U.S. Marine Corps used dowsing in Vietnam (Baldwin, 1967)"
http://www.tricksterbook.com/ArticlesOnline/Dowsing.htm
"During the Viet Nam conflict ( War for lack of a better term) We used dowsers to locate enemy tunnel systems and weapons cache's. Here our military brought in teams of dowsers, not to simply locate these materials, but to teach the skill to others. Then came the job nobody wanted, the "Tunnel Rat". The poor bastard that armed with a side arm and a satchel charge of c-4; would enter these underground labyrinths to seek and destroy. Not a bad job till you find out that most had to be done by complete darkness in the tunnel in case there was a guard on duty. If that weren't bad enough, our little buddies sometimes left behind a few small pit vipers. Yes no one except for the few volunteered for this job!"
http://www.geocities.com/dowser.geo/dowse.html
Evelyn Penrose - "Noted dowser Evelyn Penrose was retained by British Columbia to locate oil and water resources...during 1931-1932 she also located 392 water wells for homesteaders."
http://www.denverspiritualcommunity.org/Dowsing.htm
John Living - "who was educated at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, and the Royal Military College of Science, Shrivenham. He was commissioned as an officer in the Corps of Royal Engineers, and was taught dowsing at the School of Military Engineering, Chatham - reported to have the world's largest collection of material on dowsing."
http://mypage.direct.ca/j/jliving/landmine.htm