Local Dowsing Group News:  No. 54

"The Girl Water Dowser"

How Pathe News brought dowsing to the masses in 1954. This film shows Catherine Bent demonstrating full-body divination.




Sunday
August 23rd,

10.30am
Leonardslee Gardens
Brighton Road, Lower Beeding
RH13 6PP


£12.50 card only (no cash)
EnergyViewing@gmail.com
The
Fosse
Dionne
In the heart of France’s idyllic Burgundy region, surrounded by manicured vineyards, fortified Renaissance chateaux and medieval hill towns, sits one of the bucolic area’s most mysterious attractions: a seemingly bottomless spring-fed pit in the small town of Tonnarre known as the Fosse Dionne.

A torrential 311 litres of water gush from this gaping well every second, but despite countless explorers venturing into its depths over the centuries, no-one has ever been able to find its true origin.

The Romans harnessed the karst spring for drinking water; the Celts considered it sacred; and the French enclosed its ever-changing turquoise, blue and brown pool in a circular stone rim with an amphitheatre and used it as a public wash house in the 1700s. It was at this time that the women who peered down into Fosse Dionne’s depths while washing began to wonder what lurked at the bottom. According to one legend, a deadly serpent patrolled the well’s base. According to others, the spring was a portal to new worlds.

In an effort to solve this age-old mystery, two professional divers descended into the limestone rocks’ tight passages in hopes of reaching its source in 1974. While navigating the spring’s twisting, tapering chasms, they perished. In 1996, the town hired another diver to attempt the descent. He also died.

Then, last October, after deeming the spring too dangerous to dive for years, Tonnarre’s mayor hired professional diver Pierre-Éric Deseigne. Remarkably, he descended more than 70m underground, venturing 370 total metres from the cavity’s entrance – all while filming his expedition. While Deseigne explored territory that no-one had ever seen before, he still was unable to locate the spring’s source, leaving France’s ancient underground mystery unsolved.



Anne & Steve Dawson ~ Dowsing Anglia
Ann Dawson, a retired probation officer, is married to Steve and they live in Bury St Edmunds Suffolk. She has been involved with the Earth Energies for many years. Ann is a Reiki Master plus Geomancer, healing people, horses and the land. She specialises in Home Healing and has undertaken may successful healings both in the U.K and abroad.

Ann & Steve both help run the Dowsing Anglia Group from Yoxford in Suffolk and the Dowsing Anglia Facebook page which contains hundreds of dowsing stories from around the world.

Steve Dawson was a Royal Marine for 12 years then Commercial Diver & Rig worker for the Oil companies, has worked all over the world for 40+ years and was very fortunate to come across dowsing when working in the desert whilst searching for water, buried oil-lines and ordinance. Always intrigued with the Pyramids and ancient Churches Steve came across their unique relationship with the worldwide Hartmann & Curry Grid Lines.

Other separate dowsing projects have been locating King John’s Lost Treasure, The Battle of Hastings, Gorlestone’s Stonehenge and unravelling the mystery of Rennes le Chateaux, southern France.


Water Dowsing UK

What was the water Dowsing Special Interest Group is now Water Dowsing UK, a stand-alone group and open to everyone.

Water is about the most important aspect of dowsing, locating good Potable Waters quickly and accurately plus advising for the optimum locations of water wells, production and storage.

I hope to re-build the infrastructure of this Group and start giving Talks and Workshops for other Dowsing Group around the UK
Steve Dawson
skad7@hotmail.com


John Baker
I've been a professional water diviner for a number of years now, and I'm going to explain the 'relaxed concentration ' that is needed to settle myself down, after all, someone is paying good money for my services.

After what is usually a car journey of 50 something miles, I need to unwind.

I always ask the client if I could have a cup of tea, it relaxes us and allows a general conversation to take place.
The only information I want is what is actually known and can be physically seen.   You ignore old maps, plans of pipes hearsay and tittle tattle are complications as much of it can be wrong and I have plenty of proof about that.

When you go outside, you ignore the topography completely. You don't want your thinking brain to start creating patterns of one sort or another.

In other words, like an artist, the canvas you are working on needs to be as blank as possible.

One of the best jobs I ever did was over two snow covered fields searching for pipe runs.

Now that really was a blank canvass and mentally that is what you want to achieve.

John Baker
Email : j.baker864@btinternet.com