John Havelock Fidler

J. Havelock Fidler read Zoology and Botany at Cambridge before studying Agricultural Entomology for hist doctorate at Reading University. He has spent over thirty years in agricultural research and became interested in dowsing in 970. Since then he has devised a number of quantitative methods in relation to dowsing and has published several articles on the subject in specialist journals.

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Ley Lines: Their Nature and Properties - A Dowser's Investigation

Ley Lines

Dowsing is best known as ‘water divining’ or ‘water witching’: the location of underground sources of water by a little- understood sensory process that is better developed in some individuals than in others. In some parts of rural Britain this activity is a normal part of life when drought conditions prevail. The earliest written reference to dowsing in the West is probably in Agricola’s De Re Metallica (1556), where, in fact, it's described as being used as a means of prospecting for mineral lodes. Today, the Russians use dowsing (or the ‘Bio-Physical Method’, as they call it) for geological purposes and find it at least as effective as more traditional methods.

But the term ‘dowsing’ covers a wide spectrum of subtle human sensibilities. We can perhaps accept without too much difficulty that it could be possible for a person standing on a particular site to be able to respond to minute changes in the electromagnetic (EM) environment caused by the presence of moving water or mineral deposits underground. Slight muscular responses are amplified in the motions of various types of dowsing devices — pendulums, spring rods, angle rods and so on — that are in a state of tension or delicate balance. Dowsing, however, is applied to other forms of information-gathering that are perhaps best described as ‘divination’.

By studying a map or a photograph some dowsers can locate water, oil, lost objects and even murder victims at a distance. I know of one instance where a dowser was able accurately to pinpoint the sunken wreck of a ship on a map at the request of a salvage company that had failed to locate it after a fortnight using sonar and electronic detection systems! This form of remote sensing must employ some type of Extra Sensory Perception that is...

Earth Energy: A Dowser's Investigation of Ley Lines

Earth Energy

To those who read Ley Lines, the first edition of this book, and have any recall of what was said, I would suggest that they skip Chapter 1, This is simply a repeat of the original Chapters 1 and 2 and is here included as an introduction for new readers. The chapter on Ley Hunting has been greatly extended, correcting some of the original errors and sorting out previously unsolved problems. The many lines on the Shieldaig Peninsula are dealt with in fuller detail in Chapter 9.

The next three chapters have been largely rewritten, in order to remove the mathematics which apparently proved such a stumbling block to many readers. They were included so that any of my fellow scientists who should read this book might find that there was some truth in it, and that I was not basing my conclusions on a lot of wild and unsupported assumptions. That this was not entirely without success was proved by many of the letters I received. These mathematics are now banished to the various appendices, where they are available for anyone wishing to see this supporting evidence. 

The effects of dowsable energy on plant growth, a subject which was barely touched on in the first edition, are now considered in much fuller detail in Chapter 6, while Chapters 7 and 8 deal with the many other properties of dowsable energy lines which I have investigated. The conclusions discussed in Chapter 10 have been completely reconsidered in the light of all I have discovered since writing Ley Lines. For the Gaelic names of places, I have adhered strictly to the spelling on the Ordnance Survey maps, however erroneous this may appear to be, so that readers may more readily find these places. The translations are based on the versions considered...

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