Thursday, June 3, 2010

The Secret is Out

All families have secrets. Some are deliberately kept out of embarrassment or shame. Some are kept because someone somewhere along the way decided to hoard the information because it gives them power over other family members still in the dark.

And some, like the one I'm about to divulge, are kept because the knowledge was assumed to be so widespread that there was no need to continue to tell the story.

My older brother Dale has hosted a Memorial Day cookout for the last several years. Our families - mom and dad, aunt Ginger, my other brothers and their spouses, me and Warren, miscellaneous children and grandchildren from very young to mid-20s - make up the core party. Friends - his, mine, ours - are added from year to year.

This year was no exception. I invited a colleague from the courts and his girlfriend to join us. She is from Kentucky, which is where my dad is from, so some time was spent with the two of them determining where each of them hailed from (not too far from one another, as it turns out). In a discussion about the water sources in the various hollers, the guest told how her family hired a dowser who found a natural spring 50 feet down when they moved to the farm.

"It was the best water," she said, and you told tell from her smile and the way her eyes lit up that she was remembering the sweet taste as she spoke.

The discussion turned briefly to dowsing and the art of it. Dowsing is one of those folklore items that I always attributed to the hills culture and had never seen demonstrated. No one has ever come up with any explanations of how and why it apparently works. Small wonder it is called "water witching" in some parts - there is a mystical, magical air to it.

So you can imagine my response when my mom, sitting in front of me, turned around and said "well, you know your dad can dowse for water."

If my mother had announced that she had a full-sized head of Elvis tattooed on her backside, I could have not been more stunned.

"Oh, didn't you know that?"

No, mom, I didn't know that.

I looked across the table at my brother Mark, who was sitting there with his mouth agape.

"Mark, did you know that?"

Mark shook his head. Nope, never heard it.

Mom prattled on. Dad dowsed with straightened coat hangers. If we had a pair, she'd have him demonstrate.

"Oh, and by the way, Dale also dowses."

Now Mark was looking as if mom had said she had Elvis in a rhinestone suit tattooed on her backside and was taking off her shirt to show everyone. He and I both had the "so who was the keeper of this information all these years?" look on our faces.

About that time, my brother Dale walked back in the house from an ice run that he and Warren had just made. We accosted him the moment he entered the kitchen.

"What do you mean, you know how to dowse for water? What's this all about?"

Dale, my most easygoing brother, laughed heartily. It was nothing to him, just something he could do. In short order, he had a pair of wire cutters and was cutting two coat hangers open to make them into dowsing rods (imagine two very tall Ls). Five minutes later, all of us were in the back yard.

Dad lead the demonstration. Hold the rods by the short base (with the long parts on top) in front of you, perpendicular to the ground and parallel to each other. Use an easy grip and don't put your thumbs over the tops of the rods.

He then proceeded to walk into the yard. Four or five steps and the rods started to move towards each other, then crossed. Dad stopped and Dale spoke up.

"Drainage ditch under the ground there."

Dale took the rods and walked in another direction. The rods soon crossed. Another underground drainage line ran near the property line.

Who wanted to try?

My nephew Matt took the rods and started walking towards one of the known sites. Sure enough, the rods starting crossing one another as he neared the unseen ditch. He laughed - a short "HA!" Matt was so delighted he walked away and started again in the same direction with the same result.

"HA!"

Several of us tried the rods. As it turned out, those of us who were related by blood - all the Nelsons - had the touch. My mom didn't. Neither did the guest who brought up dowsing in the first place.

Matt took the rods back and started towards the picnic tables. As he came up to the cooler, holding iced down sodas and beers, the rods started to swing and cross again.

"HA!"

When Sam arrived an hour later, we had him try it, without telling him what to expect or where the ditches were. When the rods started to swing towards one another and cross as he neared one, he reacted just like his cousin Matt did.

"HA!"

The afternoon eventually moved on to the stuff of cookouts - food, storytelling, long conversations, laughter. We flowed from house to yard and back again. Someone kept taking my chair in the ring in the yard, so I sat inside and caught up with another nephew. The mountain of deviled eggs disappeared one by one, as did the hamburgers. My colleague endeared himself to my mother by praising (and consuming) her brownies. My niece Lizzie played with her cousin's two children, ages three and five. Matt secured the dowsing rods in his family's car; we teased him about taking them to college this fall and using them as a pickup line with the coeds.

In short, it was a Memorial Day cookout a lot like any other Memorial Day cookout.

Except for the family secret that is now out in the open.

We're all a bunch of water witches.

8 comments:

Captain's Wife - Jennifer said...

Haha! That is great!!! I wanna be a water witcher...need to go hunt down some hangers and see if I have the touch! :) I found out a couple of years ago, after his death, that while in Mexico every winter to escape from the Midwest, my grandpa started up an AA meeting down there! Every year he'd go back and it was still running strong. Probaby still is today. Neat stuff! :)

Anonymous said...

I didn't think about body dowsed anymore. That is awesome! I used to be fascinated that it as a kid. How could something like that work?

If I am ever stuck on an island and could bring any one thing with me... um... a pair of coat hangers, please. :)

Sharon said...

I had never heard about dowsing..ever! Thanks for sharing, I may have to try that myself! :)

I am the working poor. said...

Do you see the huge potential here? An entire family with the dousing gift? You can go into business together and A&E can create a new show. Just think of the royalties from your new reality show! :)

April said...

As to the huge potential as a family business, my niece already jumped on that one. "We could be Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Nelson..." Sounds like the Monty Python spam routine!

It was a lot of fun seeing who could dowse and who couldn't. And both amazing and bizarre to watch those rods cross!

Lizzie said...

You could actually think of a way to write a whole article about this. It wouldn't come to me. You can't forget about Warren and Liz, they could find the water too. Therefore, we can be Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Nelson, Hyer & Hyer. Haha. Another well written post. Don't worry, I'll get to writing some...eventually :)

Unknown said...

Here a comment from the Netherlands Europe. Not every line is a waterline.There are many differt kinds of lines.The source is the energy distribution from the North Pole from sunenergy.A special kind is a waterline.
You don't measure the water, but minerals. (Iron). They pick up electricity from air and transport along the line. Therefore a waterline is radioactive (collects Radongas from environment) We are very sensitive to electric/magnetic fields. In our research we are now teaching beeholders to find the queen in the hive.

Gr. Ir klaas de Jonge (physics)
Valkenswaard The Netherlands
www.wichelen.nl (translate by google)

Julie Ross said...

I too am a water witch! My dad was as well. He taught me all about it when I was a kid too! Thanks for reminding me.