Home Diary Events Articles Questions Photos Links
Here are a few words about my first meeting
with the people in the Tamar dowsers group. It couldn't come around quick
enough, I was really looking forward to meeting the dowsers and going to my
first dowsing site ever. Having been dowsing (although not seriously) for
3-4 years I have been reading and collecting dowsing related books for 2 years
and the interest never wains.
This was real field work, Boyton just above Launceston is a quiet rural village,
the site was an iron age fort within a wooded area and built on a slight incline.
Having met the members of the group we walked up to the site, at this point
I must confess, if in the future we have to walk through any fields which
contain cows then I will find an alternative root! weird and unusual but I
can't stand our four hoofed friends,must have been a past life or something!.
The trees were mainly scrub oak, common on previously occupied land, the dimensions
to the site were unusual as instead of the usual circular fortified ditch
and rampart the external shape appeared oval.
The dowsers all shot off in different directions pendulums and rods cutting
swathes like machetes through the undergrowth, I then decided to concentrate
on the entrance to the fort, I figured that all things in the fort while under
occupation would either enter or exit this area, and from this point most
dimensions and information maybe gleaned. The results are as follows, the
entrance had gates large enough for a wide cart approximately 3 mtrs.(note-must
take tapemeasure) ,it was hinged on either side for accessabillity ,and stood
2.75mtrs high.about 9 mtrs towards the centre of the fort there was a large
circular building in which up to 10 people lived, I never located the position
of the other 13 buildings I dowsed, some were storage some dwellings. The
first time the entrance track was used was 1900 yrs ago about the time Hadrian
started his wall, the settlements water supply was 59 mtrs away down the hill
in a south/east direction, on average the population was 38-39 persons.
We all met up again and walked down to the lower footpath at the bottom of
the hill and discovered an unusual square well shaped cut-out in the rock,
it was about 4mtrs square and 6mtrs deep many ideas were batted about as to
its use but I know of another site just above Truro that is almost identical
with a fort above the square cut-out and intern above a stream, I am awaiting
an answer as to its use.
After a few dowsers left, the remaining went to a location a few miles away,
Sitcot near St Giles on the Heath, it was a cross roads with a wooded area
around the road edges, the first place we dowsed was interesting in that we
all felt a little uneasy.
I'm not sure but we dowsed a lot of dead people, and unsettled spiritual energies,
possibly unconsicrated ground with gallows and burials of witches, we left
fairly quickly.
Across the road we checked another area which had very strong readings especially
over a geopathic stress line (another first for me), a couple of buildings
were surveyed but with different time periods, we came up with monestrys,leprosy,
mad monks and incarceration, but if you felt the negative power of that stress
line you would understand why.
We all said goodbye until the next time - my first impressions? brilliant,
I was not disappointed, everyone was very kind and open-minded, and the wealth
of knowledge equal to any Archaeologist or Historian.