Until a few years ago, it was the law in New York State that if you were going to sell your property, you had to list any ghosts you had, in the deed. So, I've been a real estate ghost hunter for almost 40 years.....long before it became popular.
I've now reached retirement age and wanted to pass my skills along to people interested in doing this type of ghost hunting. This picture is of Penney G., a girl who is in my group of students. I was teaching Grave Dowsing and just happened to snap this pic as she got a hit. Not by one ghost but by several at the same time. She was going over a family plot that was no longer marked. Although the head stones had been vandalized and stolen, I knew the approximate site as I had done this cemetery about 30 ago. I think they wanted us to know they were still there.
People often ask me how dowsing works. Well, here's a picture of how it works. She kept telling me that she was getting little shocks when she would walk over that area. Now I know why. If you zoom in, on the beginning point of the energy going to her arm, near the main ball of light, you can see a somewhat bald man head and a top torso wearing a suit coat and a neck tie. That's how I determined that this was an actual picture of a grave dowsing hit and not just light reflecting off her dowsing rod.
This entire Hudson River corridor area is full of ghosts, but this area is extremely rich with ghosts (Saratoga/Lake George region). It has seen many many wars: French and Indian (Ft. Wm. Henry and Coopers Cave from the Last of the Mohicans), Revolution (Battle of Saratoga) and many Indian tribal wars. Plus, not far from here a river was dammed up and 15 towns are underwater and the ghosts from the cemeteries line the shores. Votexes abound here.
--Linda N.
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