Dowsing and
Rural Regeneration

Ced Jackson

Dowsing started life ‘in the field’.  The search for water and minerals was not an urban quest, but undertaken beneath tree and sky.

In the countryside the yearly cycle of life, death and re-birth is plain for all to see. This image of ‘regeneration’ is so strong, and positive, that the government has a plethora of programmes attempting to ‘regenerate’ inner cities and old industrial areas.

Paradoxically, it is now our remaining rural areas which are in dire need of regeneration.  For every Eden project there are great stretches of doomed countryside carved up by motorways, losing people to the cities, pubs to private dwellings, post offices to privatisation, and quiet fields to quarries.

Even tranquillity is lost 1   

Yet the arcadian vision stubbornly remains. The notion that the countryside is a place of relaxation and restoration is hard to dislodge, but even our holy places are under threat.  Across the water Tara is threatened.  Planning battles rage around Stonehenge.  Rural churches teeter on the edge of viability, and in coming years there is likely to be an avalanche of redundant ecclesiastical buildings coming onto the market.

The church is central to the image of the English village, but if the church departs the village will lose its soul.

And what has all this to do with dowsing ?

We are obsessed with the search for water, with earth energies, with health, and the remains and remanances of the past.  Dowsing Today is full of articles featuring old buildings, wells, ley lines and ancient settlements.  The location and physicality of The Church is central to the great majority of these articles.

We believe that the location of ancient sites, wells and tracks is of importance.  The church is located precisely here and not there.  And in some strange way that we are not yet sure of, we also believe that the standing stones and the stone circles and the churches were placed at particular locations for some purpose, perhaps to help keep the land fertile, or to sustain the health of the community.

So the first thing we can do is to stop the situation getting worse…

“Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition…”

…or that the Archbishops’ Council of the Church of England would sign an agreement in June 2002 for the installation of telecommunications masts in churches.

“The deal gives Quintel S4 direct access to some 5,000 Church of England churches which have expressed an interest as potential sites for hidden aerials within a national arrangement” 2

Quintel is a joint venture between QinetiQ (formerly a government Defence organisation) and Rotch Property Group, a very large private company.

The aerials would be hidden within the Church tower or spire, so that’s all right then. In fact, if it prevents the need for a mast elsewhere “…the environment is spared2.”  So let’s not have any worries about the dangers of masts3, or inflammatory stories of the church irradiating great swathes of the countryside.

If there is any value whatsoever in the notion of Churches being special places (due to their location, or what goes on within their walls), this is surely barmy, at best.  

But resistance is not futile, for as Bing told us…

You've got to accentuate the positive
Eliminate the negative
Latch on to the affirmative
Don't mess with Mister In-Between

What is to be done ?

As dowsers, we can develop techniques to Monitor and Assess what is going on in our villages and neighbourhoods.

The same techniques can be applied to urban areas, but initially it may be more fruitful to look at a small defined area, a village, where some key issues can be identified.

Ø       Radiation levels could be monitored

Ø       Ley Lines could be logged

Ø       Illness levels could be ascertained (remember the early German studies of Cancer houses)

And after the monitoring, the …

Intervention

We know a fair amount about how to use dowsing to heal houses, and humans.  The next step is to explore the use of dowsing in the healing of communities, neighbourhoods and wider areas.

Ø       Billy Gawn has told us how very small actions at key locations ~ whether random or deliberate ~ can have very wide-ranging effects, for good or ill.

Ø       Billy has also spoken of the detrimental energies emanating from quarries beaming across the landscape.  At the moment there are hundreds of community groups identifying the detrimental impact of quarries in their area.  Why ?  Because there are grants available for communities suffering such effects.  Dowsers might successfully piggyback such initiatives.4

Ø       Teachers like Peter Dawkins have shown that there are large-scale patterns in the landscape, and that pilgrimage and ceremony can be used to bring about healing5What actions might flow from this understanding?

Ø       Dowsers such as Alanna Moore have written of the importance of site guardians, landscape angels, portal watchers, and the like, who all have an energetic link with ~ and responsibility towards ~ specific geographical areas.  Do we need to give them a ring ?

We should develop, refine and expand these successful forms of intervention at the level of the village and the neighbourhood.

 

References :

  1. www.cpre.org.uk/campaigns/landscape/tranquillity/national-and-regional-tranquillity-maps
  2. http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/church_of_england_signs_aerial_deal_with_quintel.html
  3. http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/masts.asp
  4. www.acre.org.uk/COMMA
  5. www.zoence.co.uk
  6. Ced Jackson is at www.FengShuiFutures.com and 01684 560265

 

 

Go back to the Articles section