Want to try Dowsing?

If I signal with water, any connection dowsed is water. I can also use a frequency like 3392 Hz.
I'm doing a study where I have 10 glasses, but only one covering a small capped bottle of water. Obviously, those glasses can be on either a North/South path, or an East/West path. My question is whether you would be more successful if they were on a North/South path, or on an East West path
 

If I signal with water, any connection dowsed is water. I can also use a frequency like 3392 Hz.
Water isn't a strong dowse. A bottle of water only reaches another bottle 4 ft away, at 10 degrees rod movement..
 

If I signal with water, any connection dowsed is water. I can also use a frequency like 3392 Hz.
I find that I am much more successful following a North/South path. Interestingly, while my success is lower if I follow an East/West path, one of the false hits I will get is that my rods will point to magnetic north at one point along the path
 

I'm doing a study where I have 10 glasses, but only one covering a small capped bottle of water. Obviously, those glasses can be on either a North/South path, or an East/West path. My question is whether you would be more successful if they were on a North/South path, or on an East West path
No, no difference.. Cardinal direction dowsing preference is not any different., for me!
 

Water isn't a strong dowse. A bottle of water only reaches another bottle 4 ft away, at 10 degrees rod movement..
I'm not signaling! I simply walk a predefined path trying to find a bottle of water that has been randomly placed along the path. The bottle might be right next to me or as far away as 5 feet
 

No, no difference.. Cardinal direction dowsing preference is not any different..
Better to seek moving water. Or You can set up a row of water glasses/bottles and add some salt to one of them.
 

No, no difference.. Cardinal direction dowsing preference is not any different., for me!
Interesting! For me, given ten trials, I get 10 out of 10 sucessful find if the path is North/South, and zero or not better than chance if the path is East/West
 

Better to seek moving water. Or You can set up a row of water glasses/bottles and add some salt to one of them.
I find that I can achieve success on every trial with still, unsalted water. I don't want to over-complicate the study. Every unnecessary complication risks bringing in criticism. My goal is to conduct and publish a carefully designed controlled study that scientists will accept as evidence that water dowsing can be verified and gets scientists to accept it as being something that science can study as well as try and find out why it works, and for whom.
 

Better to seek moving water. Or You can set up a row of water glasses/bottles and add some salt to one of them.
Walking east/west you cross the target line which tends to follow the magnetic lines.
 

Walking east/west you cross the target line which tends to follow the magnetic lines.
Christopher Hills in his book “Supersensonics” said he could detect by crossing the path between the sun and the object.
 

Walking east/west you cross the target line which tends to follow the magnetic lines.
Please explain what you mean by "target line". I've never heard of that before. And, as for L-shaped rods, they work for me and, if I can show this in a controlled study then the world might, finally, stop thinking of (at least water dowsing) as something more than hocus-pocus stuff
 

Christopher Hills in his book “Supersensonics” said he could detect by crossing the path between the sun and the object.
You may be onto the info I was seeking! I live in Pickering, ON Canada. We're on Eastern time here and the sun has already set here. Now when I walk through my house my L-shaped rods won't locate North/South and East/West
 

I'm thinking he did use a north/south direction for dowsing with L-rods. Then if the target (if metal or mineral) might be off from his left or right side. Art would switch to a single rod to get a direction.
 

Better to seek moving water. Or You can set up a row of water glasses/bottles and add some salt to one of them.
I have to read Hills' book. As it turns out, my successful north/south and unsuccessful east/west water dowsing experience only holds before sundown. After sundown, I'm equally successful with both north/south and east/west dowsing. Additionally, I can only identify north/south and east/west directions before sunset
 

I'm thinking he did use a north/south direction for dowsing with L-rods. Then if the target (if metal or mineral) might be off from his left or right side. Art would switch to a single rod to get a direction.
If you read my last reply to this thread you will see that, thanks to everyone on this board, I as able to figure out the north/south east/west issue .. and more! As for your signature (or comment if it was at the bottom of your post. I, too, am fascinated by interesting things and find this topic particularly interesting. I don't recall if I mentioned it, but I'm more a scientist than a treasure seeker (I have a PhD from Michigan State University). And, given what I've discovered over the last couple of days, I think I can design a controlled study that will get scientists to reconsider their thoughts about calling dowsing an example of pseudoscience
 

Maybe I can find it for you, a museum survey done using dowsing at a French historical site in southern Ohio. The archaeologist on the museum board contacted me. It started with remote viewing using satellite images and later the archaeologist learning to use L-rods.
 

Here is my question: I think that it only works for me if I use a north/south search route. It doesn't work for me if I walk an east/west route. Have others discovered that same success/failure rate depending upon the direction they were walking?
One of the most consistent things about dowsing is... there is no consistency. Everyone seems to have their own peculiarities, requirements, or limitations. I'll bet there's a dowser out there who can only do it in an east/west route, but for most dowsers direction makes no difference.

If you're a psychologist then you are surely familiar with scientific test protocols, such as double-blind clinical trials used in, say, psychiatric studies. The same sort of thing can be applied to dowsing. In the past, I've designed and applied such methods to willing participants and, in every single case, their dowsing ability completely disappeared. You might want to apply some rigor to your self-evaluation before you go too far down the rabbit hole.
 

I was hoping for copper or silver?
I try to use only pure Elements to signal with, and it doesn't take much. Usually my dowsed target is bigger than my signal, so it's connecting most of the distance, back to me.
I've found that multiple frequencies resonate specific targets.. They all seem to resonate the same strength individually.. 13575 Copper, 13563 Silver.. or 3323 Hz Silver..
 

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