Water Dowsing With My Crazy Husband

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  • čas přidán 30. 12. 2009
  • Matt and his dad can both take a stick, walk around and find underground water. This sounds insane, and it is, but I've seen it, and here is a video to prove it.
    Update 2022: This was the first CZcams video we ever made. It was just for fun and we are still in shock how popular it is. It's completely real and he can do this at any time with any dowsing device!

Komentáře • 396

  • @trahtrebor
    @trahtrebor Před 6 lety +30

    Laugh all you want, I've found underground water pipes and wires using the bent wire method all my life. Can't explain it, but it works.

    • @drewbooFPV
      @drewbooFPV Před 5 lety +2

      How can someone be so dumb

    • @dans4270
      @dans4270 Před 4 lety +4

      My grandparents found thier well this way.

    • @teekotrain6845
      @teekotrain6845 Před 3 lety +4

      @@drewbooFPV that's what we're asking ab you

    • @guywittamic
      @guywittamic Před 3 lety +3

      I don’t think it’s worth laughing at people, no reason to strive to destroy another persons dignity for humor.

    • @Noscams00
      @Noscams00 Před 3 lety +1

      I've done this myself and it works. I don't understand how but it does. I was a sceptic before.

  • @cjb6678
    @cjb6678 Před 6 lety +3

    I saw it. My dad saw it. The well digger who was using it handed the stick to my dad who was laughing, telling the fellow he was fill of shit. He tried it. It worked. White knuckles and using all his considerable strength, couldn't prevent the stick from twisting in his hands. Looked like he'd seen a ghost. That was over 50 years ago. Well is still there.

  • @esethuntloko3288
    @esethuntloko3288 Před 4 lety +2

    Wow this is so fascinating. I'd love to see more tricks that were used back in the day to survive

  • @RassBrass
    @RassBrass Před 7 lety +3

    My grandfather used it in the Atlas Mountains to look for water. He didn't use oak branche, he used one from almond or olive tree

  • @fuzzmew
    @fuzzmew Před 8 lety +10

    If something like this happened to me, I think I'd scream and drop the stick and run away.

    • @Abrower223
      @Abrower223 Před 6 lety

      fuzzmew 😂🤣 yes.

    • @Grazetech
      @Grazetech Před 3 lety +1

      That's exactly what my father did when I taught him to devine.

  • @Eagle1538
    @Eagle1538 Před 11 lety

    Greatest video description of all time

  • @filibertogarciasi
    @filibertogarciasi Před 6 lety +31

    I must have a lot of energy. I tried it in my backyard and all of a sudden the rod smacked me in the crotch hard. Does that mean there's a lot of water?

    • @stevenpersoon
      @stevenpersoon Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, you probably have Hydrocole. Go see a doctor.

  • @EbenezarGold
    @EbenezarGold Před 9 lety +7

    A guy who used to witch wells for oil companies in Oklahoma came over one day and showed me how he did it,then he had me try it and when I did it, he smiled real big. "That's it," he said, and he went on his way. I didn't realize until a few years later that not everybody could do it. I think that provides a lot of the skepticism from folks who can't or won't work with dowsing rods, but not everybody can play the fiddle either.

    • @FreeSpokenOne
      @FreeSpokenOne Před 9 lety +5

      My father wasn't sure he could do it either until he tried! He kept going over and over the same area to prove to himself it was for real, and when convinced he'd found the right spot, that's where he set up and dug, figuring it was no worse than making a guess. One man in the same area didn't dowse and found no water after 3 attempts to drill. Naturally everyone felt bad for him, but nobody called my dad a kook for doing things his way. If anything he was admired by those who met him, a true mans man, kindhearted, intelligent, and interesting to talk with.

    • @feztoys
      @feztoys Před 9 lety +2

      FreeSpokenOne When I was 6 years old I use to do it back in Mexico. I would get happy when the stick would go down as I tryed to pull it up because I knew water was down there. But it didn't seem to work with the other childern. Only with a few of us.

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 9 lety +5

      Ya sure. The stick pulled down. Funny, but trees don't break branches off from water pulling down on them but a miracle happens when a human touches a stick. All of a sudden the water pulls so hard you can only " try" to hold the stick up. Now ain't that just something?

    • @michaelbranin2836
      @michaelbranin2836 Před 5 lety

      ANARX BROS. Z

    • @michaelbranin2836
      @michaelbranin2836 Před 5 lety

      ANARX BROS

  • @charlesgage3578
    @charlesgage3578 Před 10 lety +6

    I know it works. I have done it before. actually a peach or willow limb works the best. my dad watched a guy witch a water well for my sister's new house and the guy showed my dad how to do it, then my dad showed me. The stick will actually turn in your hand and it hurts if there is a knot in the stick.

  • @dannyxander5021
    @dannyxander5021 Před 10 lety +4

    My grandfather located over 300 spots for wells in his town. Never missed. If he did his reputation was gone because they would pay to dig a well for nothing. He would measure how deep by how many times the Y spinned. I saw him do it when I was a kid.

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 9 lety

      Childhood fantasy.

    • @ryanfarthing8434
      @ryanfarthing8434 Před 6 lety +1

      Same my grandpa did it for a side living and he’s witched over thirty and to this day they still have water in them. That’s been over 50 years ago

  • @blainenelson3279
    @blainenelson3279 Před 3 lety +1

    Years ago I worked with a group of rough, unsophisticated men in the underground utility business. One of my co-workers taught me how to find water lines using two bent pieces of galvanized wire. I would have never believed it unless I had seen it but, I have done this many times since.

  • @alo300wsmsako7
    @alo300wsmsako7 Před 5 lety +1

    Nice, brings back memories my grandfather used to to this in Mexico. He was very well known sadly he passed away last week.

  • @LusciousTwinkle
    @LusciousTwinkle Před 5 lety +3

    I have dowsed. I didn't know where the well was but my friend who owned the land did know and he gave me two coat hanger rods to loosely hold.... When they crossed I was so shocked I SCREAMED. I'm a total science head and skeptic and I couldn't believe it worked. It was like magnets. I stepped back the rods uncrossed... I stepped back over the hidden well, they crossed again. It blew my MIND. In the UK dowsers use Ash sticks not oak.

  • @jackteff2773
    @jackteff2773 Před 10 lety +2

    Works like a charm, I'm a linemen and use it everytime to locate underground utilities. I didn't watch the vid, just thought I'd confirm it works.

  • @carriemacgregor2601
    @carriemacgregor2601 Před 7 lety +7

    This method has been around for decades! So amazing!

  • @oddreyrose_
    @oddreyrose_ Před 11 lety

    Thanks for sending me here Adam Young :)

  • @papalevies
    @papalevies Před 10 lety +4

    Right. Cause if you drilled 2m to the left you wouldn't find water.

  • @tomahawk7665
    @tomahawk7665 Před 6 lety +4

    This works, I saw an old farmer pinpoint a well for a house being built,he was spot on,he then asked if I'd like to try it,I was so sceptical but gave it a go,to my amazement it pulled me down strongly instantly!! And it was not my sub conscious as some here say, weird but amazing 😃

  • @luckyzert
    @luckyzert Před 8 lety +7

    It's interesting that your lineage is from Nebraska. So is mine - and my Uncle would divine water for farmers. He made a good side business doing it. He had me try it when I was around 10 years old - I am in my 60's now - and it was extremely strong. I didn't believe. I still don't. But I personally witnessed and successfully did it. Like you, I tried to pull the Y branch back up but could not do it. It felt like an invisible hand had come out of the ground, grabbed the end of the stick and pulled it downwards. I don't call it "witching" because I (and my Uncle) are strongly religious.

    • @japhethedlington7297
      @japhethedlington7297 Před 7 lety +1

      Cyclone Productions
      I feel the same way, I'm not convinced it's demonic. It feels like fluid dynamics plus static electro-magnetism plus some kind of frequency-based harmonics.
      I've been told stories as well as seen it, and tried myself.
      It finds water lines as easily as the locator companies can.

  • @n_o_
    @n_o_ Před 8 lety +2

    i learned how to wellwitching from this video thank you

  • @theronwalker2167
    @theronwalker2167 Před 5 lety +3

    It works my grandfather found his well by this way

  • @GuyPyro87
    @GuyPyro87 Před 14 lety +1

    Everyone can say what they want, but I know for a fact that this works. It's how my grandpa for the location for his well too. I've never tried it myself, but I think i might have to give it a shot one of these days. It would be a neat and somewhat usefull skill for if I guy ever needed to find water in a hurry. cool video! thanx for posting it here.

  • @jayman10189
    @jayman10189 Před 6 lety +2

    My grandpa was able to do this. He could find wells and tell how deep to dig to find it. He did this for years and was only wrong once in how many feet to go down. I held one of his y stocks to try it and not until he grabbed my arm did it work, but it pulled the stick down with so much pressure I could move it at all

  • @LarrysLeatherWork
    @LarrysLeatherWork Před 10 lety +1

    I had an uncle that could do this, well witching. I seen him do it then my dad and he marked the spot. The following week they started digging and they had a well with water. I have never tried it but found it fascinating to watch him do it.

  • @fromra8569
    @fromra8569 Před 10 lety +2

    I grew up in a semi desert cattle ranch, 50 acres maybe? ,,it rains in the summer for 2 months out of the year, and i remember this dowser my dad hired and i remember the sticks,, i dont know the science behind it but it works. The dowser marked the spot and left an upsidedown glass over a light cotton towel overnight,, and the glass condensed droplets inside, which means ur on the spot. Anyways we tried digging it by hand and no water... a few years later my dad hired a geologist and or water well expert with instruments and out of the whole ranch he chose a spot right next to the old dry well,, but the geologist said we would need to drill really deep, 300 feet i think. So we hired a well driller and it hit a water vain. One of the most prolific water wells the driller ever saw

    • @ollieburtonuk
      @ollieburtonuk Před 10 lety

      It gets cold at night, so the glass gets cold. Water vapour in the air condenses on cold glass.

    • @unambitious
      @unambitious Před 9 lety

      Ollie Burton There needs to be moisture in the first place. Still on the fence about dowsing though...

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 9 lety

      Putting an upside down glass over a spot and because condensation forms you are on the correct spot? My God! This is will happen over any ground! LOL. Reading this is getting more humorous all the time. You can do this with a piece of plastic with a rock in the center, in the desert and collect a small amount of drinking water in a container.

    • @fromra8569
      @fromra8569 Před 9 lety

      Its easy to make fun of dowsing,, dont know how works,,all i can tell you is that ive seen it done. Maybe it wQas luck, but out of a huge deserty ranch both the dowser and this geologist came to the same spot where to drill....

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 9 lety

      You are not seeing it done. People seem to think seeing it done is when there happens to be water below the spot that some dowser indicates but there is no control group. The control group IS what proves that dowsing works. The fact that water happens to be there is NOT proof by itself. If a dowser can find water in a buried hose then bury hoses, some with water and some without water, in a line. If the dowser finds the hoses with water in them and not the dry ones you HAVE proof. The dry hoses are the control group. Dowsers fail this test every time. Other dowsers claim the wooden stick pulled down so hard they can't hold it. So why not put some device on the stick and measure the pull of the stick in front of scientists. Certainly seeing a measured pull in front of the scientific comunity seeing minimal human contact with the stick would prove it works. None of the dowsers even experiment with their " abilities " by trying less and less contact with the stick to see the point at which it won't pull. If wood naturally pulls towards water as hard as some dowsers say then why don't tree limbs obviously bend and break more over spots where there known water spots and not on others? The really funny statement was this guy that thinks an upside down glass would prove there is water below where he dowsed. Condensation in that glass happens naturally under heating cooling cycles etc. and he thought it was proof? You people that believe in dowsing really need to take a second look at yourselves and your statements. They are utter foolishness but it would certainly be great if this did work. As yet, only anecdotal evidence has been provided, nothing more.

  • @BirnbacherTributes
    @BirnbacherTributes Před 11 lety

    Adam Randal Young brought me here! Fascinating!

  • @proetnova
    @proetnova Před 8 lety +3

    My great grandfathers brother was a water witcher in South Eastern Nebraska. Apparently he was one of the best in the region. This concept sounds 100% fake but its 100% true. He also had a method of figuring how deep the water was below the surface once he located where its at in the first place. He had like a 9/16 nut tied to a string a couple feet long. He would slowly and steadily move the hanging nut and string over to the top of the area where he determined the water was then hold completely still. The nut would begin to start swinging in a circle. Depending how many circles it made before stopping somehow told him how deep the well was gonna have to be to reach water. Again sound ludicrous, But he was almost always dead on.

    • @Acadian.FrenchFry
      @Acadian.FrenchFry Před 7 lety +1

      Yes we found our well this way. It's 100% real. So surprised so many think this is fake.

  • @dawnbaines8539
    @dawnbaines8539 Před 5 lety

    the branch wants the water!

  • @pauly51
    @pauly51 Před 4 měsíci

    Depth? Cool video. I’d love to learn this.

  • @firebass4
    @firebass4 Před 5 lety +1

    I have done it with coat-hanger wires bent at 90% angles. It is weird, and it works! Try it yourself. Hold the wires shoulder width apart pointing forward. Instead of pointing down, the wires cross over the water.

  • @narkatameister
    @narkatameister Před 6 lety +2

    It worked for me. I don't know if because I found water but stick did go down every time I was next to well or on top of bridge over the small creek. I tried to hold stick as hard as I could but it still go down and bark cracked up because of that.

  • @ishblake720
    @ishblake720 Před 12 lety +1

    I have actually seen this done in person--I saw it though with two one foot long pieces of wire. We actually tiled (underground water draining lines) for a farmer and had a gps map of where the lines were. The reason is we were trying to split two of the tile lines, cause they were less than 15 ft. apart, without hitting them. And this was the method we used in finding the tile lines. I was rendered speechless because I had never even heard of it!

  • @ann-sofienilsson9400
    @ann-sofienilsson9400 Před 10 lety

    My grandmother's father Emil was a builder and he used the same technique as you do then to place the walls of the house and to dig wells.
    Yes, you are right the psychic qualities are often inherited, which may not always be equal possitivt in all contexts although indigenous it can be very helpful sometimes. :)

  • @Rainaman-
    @Rainaman- Před 10 lety

    What confuses me: Every person can find electromagnetic (or was it called differently) lines and their crosspoints with 2 metal rods, but doesn`t wood stick also catch magnetic lines thus I could make mistake and think that it is a water line? I am about to dig a well and nearby houses have about 5 meter deep wells, so not too deep.

  • @NycBeauty
    @NycBeauty Před 3 lety

    A spirit is doing this. Just like a ouija board.

    • @akadina61
      @akadina61 Před 11 měsíci

      Water goddess Tiamat ! *dramatic music*

  • @earthangel428
    @earthangel428 Před 14 lety

    My mom suggested I try, as she thinks my Grandfather and I have some similar characteristics.
    So I'm studying up on it- we'll your video is my beginning.
    thx again

  • @ukindex07
    @ukindex07 Před 7 lety

    just a question does it have to be oak tree or can any tree species do?

  • @RawMamaNature
    @RawMamaNature Před 10 lety

    Super cool!

  • @user-xi1cv4nr4d
    @user-xi1cv4nr4d Před 4 lety

    It’s been suggested that those of a certain lineage may use the power.

  • @simpletruth9977
    @simpletruth9977 Před 6 lety +1

    A man in our area does this totally works. He did it for people and turned it into a career of well drilling. Some people think it's crazy . Everyone is entitled to their opinion though.

  • @shivacharan19
    @shivacharan19 Před 10 lety +1

    Judita Wignall Yes I agree with you... this dowsing technique works. O- And B+ blood group is also suitable for dowsing water.

  • @RonnieTheFish
    @RonnieTheFish Před 10 lety +2

    This is real we used about a 4 foot rod .. and found are water well with it . same with everyone in that area where i used to live in the Dakotas . The tip of the witching rod bounces up and down when you find water ... you can do this with a cloths hanger put it lightly in your hand take it to water like your toilet and watch it start to move . Same with power wires it moves back and forth .. instead of up and down with water .. when i do it with cloths wire hold it lightly with your thumb pointing up and your fist not fully closed with the wire .. We and many others find water all the time with witcherr poles .. thanks for sharing this video bro

  • @sallyanne8815
    @sallyanne8815 Před 7 lety

    props from Nebraska.

  • @ballahable
    @ballahable Před 12 lety +1

    It is 100% real and very easy to do, grandparents have been doing it for many years

  • @daniellemiller7046
    @daniellemiller7046 Před 6 lety

    i was dowsin' back in the 80s and thought i had a gold coin but it was just a dirty sock covered in mold

  • @LarrysLeatherWork
    @LarrysLeatherWork Před 10 lety

    What type of tree does the cutting need to come off of? Can it come off of any tree?

  • @trampolinesmichael
    @trampolinesmichael Před 11 lety

    This actually works! My grandpa did it with my dad when he was a kid to find their well, and I've done it before too!

  • @sajjadshah1409
    @sajjadshah1409 Před 3 lety

    100% right method i am using this to find underground water
    but i think this is God gifted sensitivity in some persons every body has no abality to do this.

  • @smolderingfox4645
    @smolderingfox4645 Před 10 lety +2

    Amazing! We could use it in the desert. We'll that's if we found trees lol, they're a bit rare'er than America Or Europe. I liked the video very much! And hope to try it when I get back home.
    Thank you for the video!

  • @ryanfarthing8434
    @ryanfarthing8434 Před 6 lety +6

    My grandpa did this for over 30 wells in southern Illinois and to this day all the wells still have water in them.

    • @michaelbranin2836
      @michaelbranin2836 Před 5 lety

      Ryan Farthing j

    • @bigblock67camaro
      @bigblock67camaro Před 4 lety

      Pour water in a bucket of sand, you can drill anywhere and get water, go watch a controlled test, it’s the same as chance

  • @JuditaWignall
    @JuditaWignall  Před 10 lety

    Matt is A+. Don't know about his relatives.

  • @grege1091
    @grege1091 Před 7 lety +1

    What type of tree do you use for your dowsing rod?

  • @steff1193
    @steff1193 Před 6 lety +2

    My Momma did this at both of the homes we had.

  • @SleepersAwaken
    @SleepersAwaken Před 10 lety

    Dang! So much for that theory.

  • @wintershock
    @wintershock Před 5 lety

    My class is going to try this one day

  • @kaimikk9898
    @kaimikk9898 Před 4 lety

    I can do that but I've usually used a branch from a weeping willow

  • @ethanluck
    @ethanluck Před 14 lety

    Kalle is gonna come home one day to me walking around our backyard with a stick.

  • @laurabooth9804
    @laurabooth9804 Před 11 lety

    Glad I'm not the only one!

  • @KaressaMareko
    @KaressaMareko Před 5 lety

    Thats amazing!

  • @trevorfichtner3539
    @trevorfichtner3539 Před 5 lety

    That last few seconds

  • @mihretfeleke1163
    @mihretfeleke1163 Před 3 lety

    Please, I try to many times, but not found water, please, How to find water from ground, help me

  • @franzabananza
    @franzabananza Před 8 lety +1

    wow that's so crazy! I wonder if theres something in the oak that's attracted to water or something like a magnet, or it its completely magical!!!

  • @mozitron
    @mozitron Před 10 lety

    Excellent demonstration, but how do you work out how deep you need to dig?

    • @JacksonCarson
      @JacksonCarson Před 10 lety

      ***** That's nutty! I was shown this as a young kid and it blew my mind.. but I don't remember any pulsing. Crazy that it could be used for depth. Makes me want to try it again!

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 10 lety

      Absolute bullshit. I suppose in England the "stick" will use the metric system to tell how deep the well is. Pretty smart stick if you ask me. How about a few hundred years back? Did the"stick" nod for every hand (the measure for horses) the well was deep? Imagine that, all the different types of measuring that incredibly smart "stick" had to let someone know about over the many years! Heck! Maybe that smart "stick" can learn to answer questions with sign language and instead of using a computer you could just Google your "stick". Get a life.

  • @nicolareddwooddforest4481

    Thank you so much for showing this technique. This is amazing. Do you believe that everybody can do this?

  • @MichelleJacobshistoryrepeating

    I've experienced this using a live willow branch. Though it is a seriously freaky feeling, it's a natural (albeit unconscious) response. Isn't nature wonderful!

  • @XrollhaX
    @XrollhaX Před 6 lety +2

    I fucking did it with the water company guys and found exactly where the broken tube was. Can't explain it, Im trying to find explanations online, because in practice it works! How can I fucking understand a stick showing me water... fucked up my logic system...

  • @guyhayashi
    @guyhayashi Před 10 lety +2

    I thought this was bs myself at first. A co worker made same claims. We blindfolded him and ran hoses. Some had water in them and some didnt. Everytime he got near water his wiching rod would point down. He had no idea which had water and wich did not. And there was no way he could see out of the blind fold. Im a very skeptical scientific thinking person and cannot figure out how that happened. The force pulling on the rods were amazing.

  • @PLJR91
    @PLJR91 Před 11 lety +1

    There is a scientific and simple explanation why it works, and you can explain it using quantum physics.
    Albert Einstein
    I know very well that many scientists consider dowsing as they do astrology, as a type of ancient superstition. According to my conviction this is, however, unjustified. The dowsing rod is a simple instrument which shows the reaction of the human nervous system to certain factors which are unknown to us at this time.

  • @NuLiForm
    @NuLiForm Před 11 lety

    we use the exact same kind of stick too..no metal rods or other fancy stuff needed...we find it & then and you can drill there..simple as that

  • @Theo93
    @Theo93 Před 13 lety

    Iv done this before with metal rods at my grandparents and found buried metal. Idk why but it works, doesn't work for everyone for some reason.

  • @RyanSheppard
    @RyanSheppard Před 4 lety

    Water tables are level so one spot is as good as another. This is why if you drill in a spot you will most likely find water.

  • @zzbunch
    @zzbunch Před 13 lety +1

    Its real my mom did it at my aunts house because everywhere they were digging it was dry. she went out there and 13ish feet down there was water.

  • @illustratz
    @illustratz Před 12 lety

    Does it matter what kind of stick you use? I mean, did you choose oak because it's a deep rooted tree that finds its own water, or simply because it had the right shaped branch?

  • @dannyxander5021
    @dannyxander5021 Před 10 lety +15

    Us skeptic city boys always debunk things that challenge our belief system. We tend to not experience much outside the internet and Tell-a-Vision. We talk about the sand in Hawaii but have never stepped in it. We rationalize based on scientific statistics. Which is also useful, in my opinion we aren't there just yet. But I saw this shit (water dowsing) in real life eye balls high definition. Would my relatives be lying to me when I asked about all their well right outside the front door? I'm talking 30 different properties here.

    • @MartyClevenger91
      @MartyClevenger91 Před 10 lety +1

      If they already "know" where the wells are, how is that a fair test of ability? Did you know that I can get two coat hangers and make them cross ANY TIME I want? Over anything. I can also make them stay straight while I walk over enormous electric currents and 12" water mains. There is no force, this is nothing but a "means" to find something that they already know where it is. If a witcher is wrong, they always reason out of it. Water is almost everywhere, if you dig deep enough. Hence, you can never be wrong.

    • @justinb498
      @justinb498 Před 3 lety +1

      @@MartyClevenger91 Real well witchers with decades of experience can tell you exactly how deep the water is by the forced exterted.

  • @nobuntunglogopbonong7586

    Its all about electron fluid ... The upper pressure and the lower pressure balance by electron fluid

  • @TheCanadamerican
    @TheCanadamerican Před 14 lety +1

    Yeah my grandpa could do this! But only certain people have the ability. It's a mystery to me...

  • @JuditaWignall
    @JuditaWignall  Před 13 lety

    @farenht456 no. what else do people dowse for?

  • @dapperdanman1956
    @dapperdanman1956 Před 9 lety +1

    Iv seen it many times, and from
    really honest people. Down home
    It used to be done for hand dug wells
    that's a job you don't want come
    out dry. But there is no way I know
    to look at it except as very sceptical
    At the least.about like spooks,
    Hauntings, spirits, in old houses
    Its plane crapp

  • @googiecru
    @googiecru Před 11 lety +1

    Yeah... He sent me here too! I kinda creep on his tweets and posts on his website! LOL :)

  • @nolatucker1282
    @nolatucker1282 Před 2 lety

    Yes, it's a real thing.
    I recall as a child under 10. My grandfather trying to convince my father how to find the vein of underground water for our new house. My father was almost mocking his father (my grandfather whose grandmother was native American Indian) for suggesting water rod dowsing. Eventually my father gave in. We watched as my grandfather found the spot of the well that is still in use today in that same spot back in the late 1960s. Later, my father tried it himself. It worked and freaked himself out with it. He never did it again after that first time. It's not a joke or fake. It's been around for centuries upon centuries. I do not consider it a witchcraft. It is a blessing from God to human kind to find water sources.

    • @bottmar1
      @bottmar1 Před 11 měsíci

      If it has worked for centuries then why has nobody gotten rich and famous for discovering it during those centuries? You people are sure it works and yet fail to prove it to any authority such as colleges or scientific communities. Go get rich. There is a fortune wating for you believers. So prove it. It should be easy the way you people talk. Even the internet doesn't even find someone that can prove it works. Uh, does the word "fantasy" seem to fit this situation? Yup. It does.

  • @dontaylor2910
    @dontaylor2910 Před 8 lety +6

    My grandpa taught me how to well wishing by finding his well. So, we dug down about 7 feet & made a cement block plumping station. We drove the the pipe down about 30 feet for water. Hold the stick, you will understand.

    • @drewbooFPV
      @drewbooFPV Před 5 lety

      don taylor you are an idiot.

    • @AhmedAbdullah-me5xb
      @AhmedAbdullah-me5xb Před 2 lety

      @@drewbooFPV bro just hold the stick you will understand. I didn't even have to try. Just put some twigs in an empty glass and left it outside. In a few weeks it was filled with water!

    • @drewbooFPV
      @drewbooFPV Před 2 lety +1

      @@AhmedAbdullah-me5xb woah dude it actually works!

  • @sorrellclint
    @sorrellclint Před 11 lety +1

    He's not nuts. @Veronicats100 there is no real explanation for how this works but it truly does. My thoughts are there is an increase in pressure where a water source is abundant. Almost like when you dive deeper into water pressure builds. And @mar504 you can't just drill anywhere and find water. Unless you have millions of dollars at your disposal. Each 10 foot drilled is some thousand of dollars. I suggest taking an intro geology course for both.

  • @ArmyPair2
    @ArmyPair2 Před 11 lety

    I can do this with coat hangers that are about 15 inches long and handles bent at about 90 degrees and find water damn near 99% of the time when the hangers form a X. This really freaks out the wife and daughter that go to church all the time but I think there has to be some kind of science to it. I do have Oak trees on the land maybe one day I will try using some Oak and give it a try.

  • @DAYBROK3
    @DAYBROK3 Před 12 lety

    willow and alder are good too and of course the wire rods. it a gift only some can do.

  • @Nesto74
    @Nesto74 Před 12 lety

    I think that's awesome. I've seen it done before. It seems like it would be a hoax but it really isn't. Great video.

  • @Knosferatu
    @Knosferatu Před 12 lety +1

    ...Amazing. This has been reported around the world from different cultures across time. But for obvious reasons, people on YT tend to think everything they don't understand as being fake.

  • @claudiapilates3961
    @claudiapilates3961 Před 3 lety

    I want to try this!!

  • @phillipstouder1290
    @phillipstouder1290 Před 4 lety

    It's kind of like using a copper wire to find underground lines!

    • @bigblock67camaro
      @bigblock67camaro Před 4 lety

      It doesn’t work period! I’ve been in the utility business for 28 years, you can’t find NOTHING with copper rods!

  • @JuditaWignall
    @JuditaWignall  Před 10 lety

    He used oak in the video but any type of tree branch will work.

  • @electronics3992
    @electronics3992 Před 7 lety

    works !! with stick and with metal on wool rope and with 2 metal antenna!!!!
    I tryed this in school this morning I found wather on 52m

  • @slp1111
    @slp1111 Před 11 lety

    To learn how to dowse a good water well
    go to dowser.org and order some dowsing for water books in the bookstore

  • @n2o4me
    @n2o4me Před 12 lety

    Thats impressive , I can do that too but I've never tried it with a stick , I use two copper wires and when I hit water they cross each other .

  • @elenagisa1318
    @elenagisa1318 Před 6 lety +2

    this is a method used for hundreds of years in Roumania in the villages, nothing new about it

  • @kingstaff4
    @kingstaff4 Před 11 lety

    What kind of sorcery is this?

  • @rickettsreviews
    @rickettsreviews Před 12 lety

    This boy is good, but you gotta watch our cousin SIPPY do her dowser. She don't find just water!
    Raymond Ricketts

  • @mrlagerin
    @mrlagerin Před 3 měsíci

    I can use dowsing rods, whitout problems, but i never makes it with the "stick" but i hope i will learn one day😅

  • @patluvsvettes
    @patluvsvettes Před 11 lety

    I can do it, but I use two metal rods bent at 90% angles. I hold one rod in each hand and walk until they cross each other.

  • @timothyblevins1346
    @timothyblevins1346 Před 4 měsíci

    Ya I used to do watter witching. But found a old poop tank. And said this watter tasted like crap. So I stopped witching.

  • @Loagz_Beatz
    @Loagz_Beatz Před 5 lety +4

    Your husband isn't crazy. This technique is thousands of years old. Modern people are just ignorant of ancient times when we were more connected with nature. I've done this with skepticism but you feel it like a magnet. You can even cut a coat hanger in half and use it and feel people's / pets energies and stuff it's really interesting. It literally feels like a magnet.

  • @scorpion777silvermoon3
    @scorpion777silvermoon3 Před 3 lety +3

    Yes I remember laughing at my father when he was doing that. I thought he was pretending and when I touched the stick it was so powerful and strong. It's like being a Wizard. Only some people can do that. I find it fascinating.