Greg Storozuk
Sue Russo
Slim Spurling
Hank Innerfeld - Bio
Downsing
Course Free - In English, German, Spanish, French and
English PDF file.

Greg Storozuk, Founder of the Mile High Dowsers, and professional Dowser, specializes in locating minerals, gas, oil, water wells and geopathic zones. Greg also gives lectures and classes. Call him at 303-274-4158 or send an e-mail coloradodowser@yahoo.com.
Listen to a one hour interview of Greg discussing geopathic stresses: http://www.ecstreams.com/HealthyLife/wma/hh0719_wma.asx
Sue Russo
was an officer of the Mile-Hi Dowsers Club of Denver and teaches
dowsing. She is available to give public classes and lectures.
You may call her at 303-423-1722 or send an e-mail to lifelight@bigplanet.com.
Slim Spurling, PO Box 179, Frederick, CO 80530, 303-833-1905
Slim Spurling was in born in Aberdeen, South Dakota, settling
on a small ranch near Morrison, Colorado, following
World War II; attended rural schools, Colorado Military Academy
and Mullen H.S. He obtained a Bachelor of Science degree at Colorado
State University, majoring in Forestry and Botany, minoring in
Mycology, Biochemistry and Microbiology. He was Honorably Discharged
from the U.S. Naval Air Reserve.
His life experiences include a twenty-year career as an artist-blacksmith and founder of the largest school of blacksmithing in the USA in the 1970's. His first student is the Founder and Curator of the National Blacksmiths Museum in Memphis, Tennessee.
A keen interest in metaphysics developed with an out-of-body-experience during college years and two near-death-experiences.
Slim began practicing the ancient art of dowsing in 1970 and invented a very simple and inexpensive method of neutralizing geopathic stress. He is an internationally recognized expert in the art; currently giving seminars several times annually in the U.S., Canada, Europe, South America and South Africa.
He co-founded the Geobiology Research Association in 1993. The Association is a network of student-associates who practice the art of dowsing for and diverting geopathic stress to alleviate various physical, mental or emotional symptoms for members of households or business enterprises. Field reports from full and part-time practitioners form a body of evidence for the reality of geopathic stress and the fact that it can be eliminated.
Slim began research in subtle energy phenomena and technologies in 1985. In 1992 he invented a device now known as the Light-Life-Ring (P). Further inventions based on this technology are the Acu-Vac Coil, the Feedback Loop and the Harmonizer. These Light-Life-Tools, which are room temperature super-conductors, produce positive subtle energy effects in areas as diverse as pain relief; enhanced healing ability of the body in injury or illness; improving water quality; air pollution abatement; certain types of insect control, and increased plant growth.
The techniques and technologies for personal and environmental health are now recognized and put into practice by a small but growing network of associate researchers worldwide who are keenly interested in these issues of health and environment. Seminars and products are available through Slim's website - www.SlimSpurling.com. Slim can also be emailed - Acuvacset@aol.com.
Hank Innerfeld
is currently serving as the Vice President of the Mile-High
Dowsing Society. Hank routinely
receives
calls to use his dowsing abilities to find lost items, lost animals,
and for assistance in decisions affecting peoples daily
lives. He is a gifted healer who both practices and teaches alternative
forms of healing throughout the US. All who attend his Spiritual
Response Therapy (SRT) classes also leave with effective dowsing
abilities which are applicable for use in their daily lives. Hank
is available to give public lectures and classes, and can be reached
at 303/679-6200 or by e-mail to hank@hankinnerfeld.com.
(www.hankinnerfeld.com)
Introduction to Dowsing By Hank Innerfeld
Dowsing is a natural and integral tool of man. Its history is as old as humanity itself. The phenomenon of dowsing has been accessible throughout the ages to individuals (both male and female) who chose to pursue and develop this innate aspect of self.
Dowsing is simply the ability to connect to ones higher state of guidance... ask questions and get answers. From a simplistic scientific perspective, it is the ability to access information available through the right-side of our brain (in the Western world most individuals operate almost exclusively through the left-side of their brain). So by expanding our abilities to utilize a greater proportion of our brain... whole new possibilities are now available to us in our lives.
Every language spoken on planet Earth has at least one word to describe dowsing. The French called the dowser sourcier - one who locates water sources. The Swiss called the dowser brunnenschoncher, or water seeker and the dowsing dueten, meaning to point the stick. The Danes name for dowsing was finklerut, the Swedes, dalkarl. In Mexico, dowsers are called burros because the latter are also known for their ability to find water in the desert.
The early Chinese called dowsing talking to or seeking the "dragon flow" with the "claw of the dragon", or dowsing rod. Dowsing was also called fungshui or fing, meaning wind, and chi meaning water witching. Similarly, here (in the US) and abroad, dowsers have variously been called "water devils", "rod wielders", "doodle buggers" and "water diviners".
More modern labels for dowsers include motorscopists, psychoscopists, psychogenic water locators, psychometrist geomancers, radionics and radiesthesics. Dowsing has also been called scanning and rhabdomancy, the latter derived from the Greek words rhabdos (rod) and manteia (prophet). In recent times, the phenomenon has come to be called dowsing almost universally. In the British army, those who practiced dowsing have come to be called "first-class well diggers".
The tools used by dowsers over the ages have variously been
called Jacobs rods, divining rods, shining rods, leaping
rods, trembling rods, rotating rods, dipping rods, transcending
rods, superior rods, sticks, wands, forked sticks, pencils, L-rods,
pendulums, motorscopes, and medicine sticks. Also used as dowsing
tools have been scissors, Spanish needles, pliers, crowbars, shotguns,
whale bones, barbed wire, clothes, welding rods, rings and other
jewelry, feathers, candles (both lit and unlit), conch shells,
medicine bones, aurameters, a Chinese diagram called "the
Pakoua" and last but not least... fingers and hands!
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Historical Roots of Dowsing By Hank Innerfeld
In 1949, in the Atlas Mountains of North Africa, the French discovered cave paintings of ancient peoples... which scientists using radiocarbon dated at 9,000 years old... one of these cave paintings showed a man using a dowsing rod. Similarly, a rock carving in Peru found (also dated 9,000 years old) depicts a man holding a forked dowsing stick.
The writings of Confucius (2500 B.C.) mention dowsing. A statue of Chinese Emperor Kwang Yu (2200 B.C.) portrays him holding a forked stick (commonly used for dowsing). Similarly, the oldest Egyptian stone drawings and carvings show men in exotic headdresses holding forked sticks or pendulums. The Romans, Celts and Teutons also evidenced interest in dowsing. Various books produced in Germany from the 12th to 14th century examined the phenomenon of dowsing. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth (1558-1603), English landowners brought dowsers from Saxon Germany who obliged them by locating the rich tin fields of Cornwall (which are still producing tin today).
German scientist Georg Agricola, a pioneer in scientific classification of minerals, authored De re Metallica published in 1556. This classic work examines dowsing and its applications. Dowsers played a vital role in the construction of the early castles on the Rhine. Before the castles could be built, water had to be located beneath the stone mountain tops which they were to occupy. Dowsing was used universally to locate these underground water sources.
Visitors to the early Spanish mines in Southwestern United States can observe that each mine features only one hole instead of many. The reason for that is, that prior to drilling, the Spanish used a dowsing tool called "Spanish needles" to locate these rich ores -- with impressive accuracy. The early Sioux used feathered medicine sticks for dowsing. Sulu witch doctors used bones for dowsing to locate "evildoers" in their tribe. Dowsing was particularly popular among the New England colonists... a PA newspaper Oil City Register in 1865 profiles one of them, "Doodle Bug" Smith.
The rod, the reed, and the staff - all symbols of dowsing
- are mentioned many times in the scriptures. The ancient mystery
schools, which pre-date the dawn of Christianity, taught and trained
their followers in dowsing. The dowser was regarded as a highly
intuitive or illuminated being, who achieved this level of awareness
through dedicated study and practice of the mysteries.
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Dowsing in Recent Times By Hank Innerfeld
The American Society of Dowsers (ASD) was founded in Danville, VT in 1958. Today its membership is growing throughout the United States and around the world. Many dowsing organizations far older than the ASD are active in other countries. Most are dedicated to furthering human knowledge in this field. There are active dowsing societies in Great Britain, Kenya, Israel, New Zealand, Argentina, Austria, Sweden, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Spain, the West Indies, Switzerland, Rhodesia, South Africa, and Vietnam. Germany has two active dowsing organizations, both of which require that members serve a period of apprenticeship before they can call themselves "dowsers". In India, the principal dowsing organization, Raj Yoga, consists of divisions representing applications of dowsing in the agriculture, engineering, and medical arenas.
In France the first dowsing society (of radiesthesistes) was organized between World Wars I and II. Since then, dowsing has become a full-time profession for many. In 1954, Frances dowsers organized a national union in which annual dues (of $250/member) are paid to the French Ministry of Labor. The French dowsing society publishes a journal quarterly, like the ASD in the USA. Dowsers in France largely concentrate on finding missing persons, and even more importantly, on healing. Nearly 50% of all practicing doctors in France (weve been told) use some form of dowsing in their treatments.
Also significant is that virtually every major water pipeline and public utility both here and abroad had a "diviner" on its payroll. The Southern California Edison Company is said to employ a dowser who, over his more than 20 years with the company, claims to have found some 8,000 wells. The Puget Sound Power and Light Company in Washington State is reported to have a dowser formally on it staff, as does the Canadian Ministry of Agriculture. Noted dowser Evelyn Penrose was retained by British Columbia to locate oil and water resources...during 1931-1932 she also located 392 water wells for homesteaders.
In Russia it is reported that 150 Soviet geologists are using dowsing in their work and have vigorously defended its value. Both Moscow State University and the University of Leningrad have established training schools in dowsing in cooperation with the Russian Army. The use of dowsing in the military extends to the Chinese Army, which for years has used dowsers as advance troops to scout the terrain and locate enemy sites as well as to determine optimum areas for advancing forces to encamp each night. The Czechoslovakian Army maintains a permanent corps of dowsers. The Canadian Army Engineers also rely on dowsing.
During World War II, the British and Australian navies discovered
that with dowsing they could successfully locate German submarine
"wolfpacks". Dowsing was used by the US Marine Corps
in both Korea and Vietnam. Dowsers have been used to detect booby-traps
and message drops as well as to locate tunnels and buried telephone
lines and supplies. They proved able to locate tunnels of sappers
at Khesan when the electronic detectors were inoperable. A member
of the ASD proved the value of dowsing to the Marines at a USMC
training center in Virginia by successfully locating all of the
concealed underground installations, much to the amazement of
camp officials. He did this by dowsing a map of the training center
the night before the actual "run". At USMC Camp Pendleton
on Southern California, young enlistees have been screened for
their dowsing ability. A reported one out of five was found to
be able to dowse
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Modern Applications of Dowsing By Hank Innerfeld
Dowsing has been successfully used in many different applications. The most common use is to seek and find water. But dowsers are often able to determine more than just location of water. They frequently can report its volume, depth, flow direction and potability. Dowsing can also be used to locate existing water pipelines and buried septic tanks. Dowsing has been used successfully to locate oil. Unknown to most people, a number of oil companies and speculators rely on dowsers. Some members of the Southern California Chapter of the American Society of Dowsers (ASD) receive regular royalty checks for the wells they have located.
Dowsing has been used to successfully been used to track down wanted criminals, and used to effectively to locate hidden drugs in Connecticut. Fireman in Springfield, MA have reportedly used it to determine whether victims are trapped inside burning buildings. This not only saves them critical time in rescuing fire victims, but it makes such rescues safer and more successful.
A chiropractor reports having used dowsing to locate subluxations in the bodies of his patients and prefers it over x-rays. A dentist has reported using dowsing to find hidden cavities in the teeth of his patients with great success. Dowsing has even been used by the victim of a rare, little known ailment to find the name of the right medical specialist to treat it... using a telephone directory! It has also been used to detect pregnancy, to describe personality, to measure intelligence, and to analyze character... as discussed in the book Psychometric Analysis by Max Freedom Long.
Others have reported using dowsing to find ghosts, and more scientific uses of dowsing have been applied to detecting energy points, such as acupuncture points on the body, and energetic fields of all types - emancircuitry, polarity healing, and numerous kinds of energy measurements. In a variety of law enforcement searches in recent years, dowsers have determined the heights, weights, and ages of wanted kidnappers and rapists. They have also found which of a series of suspects is the guilty one. Dowsers have also located stolen goods and lost items.
The Norwegian Red Cross is reported to use dowsing in conjunction with its avalanche patrols to find victims buried in deep snow. An English engineer reports that he uses dowsing to identify potential hazards at prospective building sites. The exact location of an Andes plane crash was pinpointed by an elderly dowser just hours before the rescue team found the survivors.
Dowsing has been used to find ancient drainage systems of "buried" cities, obliterated by time. Similarly, archeologists have used dowsing to find Megalithic sites as well as Indian artifacts. An East Coast taxi driver/dowser was hired by a well-known anthropologist in a successful effort to locate the long-houses of the Iroquois nation.
Dowsing has been used to detect energy fields, increased gamma ray counts, sources of contamination, underground outlets to lakes, radio towers and frequencies, magnetic fields, human auras, bad employees, worthless checks, shorts in electrical wiring, broken pipelines, to diagnose mechanical problems in cars and locate lost graves.
An article in Fate magazine describes the activities of a car-theft ring in Arizona. The ring members baffled the authorities by stripping the cars they stole and burying the remains in the desert. No one could identify the thieves because they left no traces. However, a dowser heard about the case and located the buried auto-graveyard of the gang. Clues found there enabled the police to apprehend the thieves and bring the operation to a halt.
Dowsers have successfully located obscure boundaries and markers, both in the field and while dowsing maps. With map dowsing, they have delineated sources of oil and mineral deposits. The rich iron deposits today known as the Kennebec iron ore range in Wisconsin was located by dowser Mary Hays Chenowith using this approach. Map dowsing also located the famed Gibbs whaler, abandoned in the Arctic during a bitter storm, and sunken beneath eight feet of ice.
A skillful dowser need never be lost. He can tell time, distance, and directions (east, west, north, south). One popular account is about an Arctic bush pilot who was downed in a snowstorm. He used his pendulum to dowse which direction to go and how far. Following the directions he took 65 steps northwest and found a cave. He then dowsed that he would be safe for the night and found by rescue teams the following day. The heavy snows stopped that night and the rescue teams found him the following afternoon. In another true account, a dowser lost in the wilderness proved that dowsing can be used to distinguish between those wild berries that are safely edible and those that are poisonous.
One of the most impressive uses of dowsing was by Floyd Benkins (a member of the Southern California ASD) while viewing the landing of the first American Astronauts on the moon on television. He not only determined the composition of the moon rocks as the astronauts gathered them - long before they were brought back to earth - but accurately assessed the physical conditions of each of the astronauts, as confirmed by later newspaper accounts.
Countless lost objects ranging from keys to embroidery hoops to diamonds, have been located using dowsing. A member of the ASD who is a professional realtor, uses dowsing to locate suitable houses for his clients and to check out the condition of each house in advance. Dowsing has also been used to locate "healing" earth and minerals, to find the nearest good campsite, game and fish, whether there are poisonous snakes in the area. One nurseryman uses dowsing to determine whether the plants are "happy" or needing nutrients, sunlight, water, etc.
Dowsing has often been used to locate buried treasure, usually by means of map dowsing. It is important to first determine whether the treasure us there now, since most treasures have been hidden and found long before people ever learn about it. For this reason, people often dowse and find an indication of treasure, then assume it is still there... they dig and expend much heavy labor only to be disappointed when they find no treasure.
Some of the most satisfying uses of dowsing are the simplest.
Many people enjoy the sweetest watermelon by dowsing which fruit
is best at the supermarket. I have used it many times to determine
which foods most honor my body and which nutritional supplements
and dosages are best for me. I also use dowsing to choose the
best route to travel when taking a long trip... many times I have
avoided heavy traffic/accident areas using this approach. When
teaching a class in Charleston a few years ago my hostess took
me to a local restaurant to eat... and while I love crab cakes,
through dowsing I was guided not to order them that day... my
hostess did order them and left the restaurant with food poisoning.
Once someone develops their dowsing abilities there is no limit
to how it can creatively be applied to simplify and assist in
ones life experience
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Almost All of Us Can Do It By Hank Innerfeld
I have taught Spiritual Response Therapy classes throughout this country over the past eight years. In the each class I share techniques with people so they can connect with their higher state of guidance, to effectively utilize a pendulum and to learn a methodology by which we can resolve many unresolved and discordant emotional patterns which have been interfering with our lives, our relationships, our careers, our personalities, and our health. In the class setting each individual learns to comfortably dowse, to formulate questions and to get accurate answers as well as to considerably expand their understanding of life. People ranging in age from their late teens through early eighties have all learned this skill in these classes. There have been nurses, housewives, high school/college students, healers, realtors, business owners, florists, teachers, chiropractors, occasional doctors, and even some born-again Christians who have attended and expanded into these new skill-sets. I have yet to meet someone who had the desire to learn dowsing skills, who was not able to.
The easiest way to understand how dowsing works is through the Huna teachings that have been reported by Max Freedom Long. His descriptions of the early Polynesian beliefs provide understanding that each human is operating through three parts (or spirits in the Huna tradition):
The Polynesians believe that the high self (or high spirit) is interconnected with the two other selves (spirits) in the individual. They describe the attributes of these two other selves using the descriptions of how they function. They say that the middle self can think but cannot remember. (How many times have we been in deep conversation only to discover that we cannot remember something we wanted to say. Through hypnosis many times we can access that which has been forgotten and can unlock the storehouse of memory which seems to be suppressed by te subconscious mind). They say that the lower self can remember but cannot think. (Again, through hypnosis we can command the subconscious mind to act independently of the conscious minds control mechanisms... and a command to the subconscious mind will be automatically be carried out).
The way dowsing works and the way the seemingly "magical" responses/answers occur, is that dowsers learn to get their conscious mind out of the way so that they can program their subconscious mind to receive responses from the superconscious mind. Once the programming has been implemented it is just a matter of developing the skill-set as to how to ask the questions and allow the answers to flow forward. With practice, the responses become more rapid, and in some cases almost instantaneous, and can be creatively applied to almost any aspect of life.
As we become more proficient in our dowsing abilities, we
learn that attention must be paid in asking the questions... because
if we ask the "wrong" question we will get the correct
answer to the "wrong" question and walk away not much
wiser. For example, if we ask "will this action serve my
best interests?" as a yes/no question... many times well
be frustrated after taking the "yes" action. Why?...
because 2% of a yes is still a yes. If we asked on a scale of
1-100 what percent will this action serve my best interests...
Id suggest that anything over 80% is worth doing, under
80% might be worth exploring other options. As we develop our
dowsing abilities, whole new aspects of life present themselves
to us which allow for expanded growth potential in many facets
of our lives.
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Dowsing in Our Daily Lives By Hank Innerfeld
Dowsing is a skill which can be applied in so many forms to assist us in our daily lives. Finding lost items, determining which foods best honor us, determining what serves our nutritional needs, the benefits of taking/not-taking an action, getting better understanding of a choice, selecting the best route to travel, picking the best greeting/birthday cards in moments, determining if were being told the truth, finding the ripest fruit, locating underground water, etc.
I recently had a phone call from a frantic dog owner... her dog got outside their fence on Monday... it was now Thursday and the dog hadnt returned home. Could I help? I told her I didnt know, but lets see what we could find out. I asked her the dogs name, basically connected to the dog energetically and asked some questions. Was it still alive? (yes). Had the dogs soul chosen to leave the body? (no). Was it just lost? (yes). When could they expect the dog to return home? (within 1.2 days). She e-mailed me overjoyed the following day to let me know that the dog was returned that next morning.
A client called regarding acquiring an attorney for assistance with a legal matter involving her son. There were four possible attorneys on her list. We dowsed (on a scale of 1-100) what the benefit was for her to work with each one (the answers ranged from 42% to 91%). She selected the one with a greater than 90% benefit and was very happy with both the attorney and the outcome.
A friend, who sells gold nuggets, called me in a panic... he had 3 nuggets which were purchased by a client and were supposed to have been shipped the week previously... he had lost/misplaced the nuggets, could I help him find them? I had him mentally visualize the lost nuggets and started asking questions. Were the nuggets still in his home? (yes). I asked him where he was calling me from in his home... he told me the basement. Were the nuggets on the same level with him? (yes). In the room with him? (no). I asked him to go to the center of the other room in his basement. Were the nuggets in that room? (yes). Were the nuggets in front (of him), behind him, left, right? (left). I asked him what was to his left... a folding table. Were the nuggets on/under the table? (on). Were they in the open or in something? (in something). He found the nuggets almost immediately in an envelope on that table.
The key to success with dowsing (after developing your initial
dowsing abilities) is learning how to ask the questions which
will provide the answers were actually seeking... for we
will get accurate answers to all questions... the trick is to
ask the appropriate question. For example, there are many treasure
hunters who will ask if there is treasure? After getting a yes,
theyll spend much time and effort digging and searching...
with limited success. They really need to further research with
questions like: Has this treasure already been found? Has it been
moved from this location? Is it still in this location? How deep?
To my left, right, front, back? How many feet? With this understanding/expanded-questioning
you will have both greater success and widen your understanding
of how to apply your dowsing skills to assist in specific life-situations.
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