We can store or possibly lend you a bike, accommodate horses and dry wet kit.Adjacent to Arbor Low stone circle, our friendly Peak District bed & breakfast has en-suite facilities, a dedicated guest lounge and a warm Derbyshire welcome. So pleased to hear you could validate that there actually is such a ley line there, and even better that you could help everyone by being so precise about its location.I took the readings home, quite excited at the prospect of plotting them onto Google Maps and following the result – perhaps this would open up some new avenues of sites to explore along the lines, or new centres of spirituality to visit and dowse this year? It lies on a carboniferous limestone plateau known as the White Peak area. National Park best short walk, "to Arbor Low, where you can also stay". The double room has en-suite facilities and the twin has private bathroom.Winner of Channel 4`s "Three in a Bed". Its not on old maps as they weren’t considered important, and property developmemt wiped it from modern maps. We can help with routes, maps, packed lunches and advice. I’ll do the details later, but for now, let’s just compare those cardinal hits and near misses.I came across this site while snooping around the web to find out if Tyldesley/Shakerley are located on ley lines.Just wondering if the Pagan Healing Spring ‘St Ann’s Well’ in Nottingham is on the layline going roughly through the city that you show.I was snooping around Tarporley last night with my dowsing rods and phone, checking reception and dowsing response along the High Street. We were asked for our postcode which was entered into the shop computer. As Herman’s group left, they looked back and were pleased to see the town being burnt up by a dragon in revenge for the insult to their Lady of Laon.Sure. The henge is located at 373 metres above sea level and commands impressive views over the surrounding Derbyshire and Staffordshire countryside. We do suffer from really bad mobile and TV reception here.
Arbor Low is the finest Stone Age ‘henge’ monument in the North of England. How could the circle builders have managed to position the circle with such precision over such a wide area? It’s a bit old now, but still has some background info that might help you form a picture of how Kal and I categorise the different frequencies of subtle energy.I found this in Paul Devereux’s book ‘The New Ley Hunter’s Guide’:Let’s compare that now with the lines that I found emerging from the Arbor Low stone circle. No black streams at all.
Arbor Low est un henge néolithique situé dans le Peak District, Derbyshire, Angleterre. How do I investigate this further?Possibly travels through the Barbrook series of stone circles. Over the course of the next few years I aim to see whether there is any dowsing evidence, or local custom that would back up these suppositions.As a relative beginner at dowsing,(ie I’ve had little tuition) I cannot yet tell the difference between different typse of energy(M,F,N).
Some qualities of the energies that might help you confirm the findings are given below, but they are by no means exclusive or definitive, only tendencies:-I am also concerned that we may be living on, near a black ley line. Strangely this was exactly the High Street and reception up to the High Street from all directions was fine. Traditional dowsers would say you might expect to find a water line or hydrostat in the area. Arbor Low, a Henge monument (stone circle), near Hartington, Derbyshire Peak District The Peak District covers much of Derbyshire and parts of Staffordshire, Cheshire and Yorkshire. As I reported in my previous Arbor Low post Kal and I were inside the stone circle taking dowsing readings. I live on the High Street.Hi, when dowsing my garden i found three paralel lines not sure what lies East but West leads to Gatley. It lies on a carboniferous limestone plateau known as the White Peak area.
Herman came here with a group touring SW England to raise funds to rebuild their home church, but got an unwelcome reception here. This is the problem with most of the lines that extend over the eastern side of the country – the geology of the area does not encourage the building of stone monuments. I’m with O2 and the reception all the way along the street and beyond it was excellent. The BSD will have all the right definitions for water dowsing!Again, I’m not sure if this line really constitutes being called a ley line. Looking at an old map (and only on one year’s edition) shows Stonepail Close which used to be Stonepail Stone Circle. No-one seems to know why it is dedicated to Elen, but I can hazard a guess – it is Elen of the Roads – the spirit who shows the seeker the way, who makes visible the invisible paths of energy, the ley lines, and here stands this summit: due West of Arbor Low, on a ley line, and dedicated to Elen. With magnificent views over the Derbyshire countryside, proximity to Bakewell and Buxton, Monyash and Youlgrave, Chatsworth House and Haddon Hall, Arbor Low bed & breakfast makes an ideal base for visitors to The Peak District National Park.If you are looking for a more active break in the Peak District then you have definitely come to the right place.