Mountain Witches of Appalachia

A story of the different type of Witches in the Mountains of Appalachia. These are just stories past down about the people in these mountains. They have all been a mystery with the many stories about them from the mountain people long ago and even to this day. Thanks for watching. LINK:: • Signs, Cures, & Witchery NOTE: Picture are just to tell the story and not actual pictures of the events. SUBSCRIBE:: LIKE AND SHARE:: HELP GROW YOUR CHANNEL THIS CHANNEL COVERS 9 DIFFERENT SUBJECTS !!! ( CHECK IT OUT) 1. Metal Detecting 2. Wildlife Videos 3. History & Mountain Culture 4.The Unexplained 5. Home projects 6. Hunting & Fishing 7. Nature Videos 8.Mining History 9. Video Shorts All Videos are Copyrighted and used by permission only.

Пікірлер: 6 900

  • @lindseycockerham8308
    @lindseycockerham83082 жыл бұрын

    I live in the Appalachia mountains and I've been told a few stories about our witches. This man's voice literally sounds like home to me. A lot of people make fun of us for our deep southern accent but, I find it quite warm, welcoming and charmin.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @tiffy3865

    @tiffy3865

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree his voice sounds soothing, like home.

  • @cdd4248

    @cdd4248

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love accents of the South- it is warm and welcoming.

  • @cherierussell4197

    @cherierussell4197

    2 жыл бұрын

    What a great story telling voice ,I agree so very warm. My family is from the Maritimes and although we are Canadian ,to me I hear the same comforting warmth of family . Just a whole diff breed of ppl . God bless

  • @justinecuellar1146

    @justinecuellar1146

    2 жыл бұрын

    I enjoy the southern accent as well, it’s kinda soothing to my ears 🙂

  • @roscoemccoy8383
    @roscoemccoy83832 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning that the Natives/Indigenous people had healing medicine. Much of our ancestors plant healing was taught BY the native people. The Cherokee were and still are MASTERS of plant medicine. Not all of this knowledge came from the "old country" because there's different plants between North America and Europe. My granny learned from her mother and granny and so on, and THEY learned from the Cherokee medicine women way back when!!!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    So true! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @juliamillikin118

    @juliamillikin118

    2 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful 🙏🏼

  • @theravyshow2570

    @theravyshow2570

    2 жыл бұрын

    yes! this!!

  • @ThePatriotParadox

    @ThePatriotParadox

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are so right.... I'm from the Tennessee Georgia line. Around lookout mountain, signal mountain, pigeon mountain.. And my grandma was part Cherokee

  • @user-bk7gi4kh8n

    @user-bk7gi4kh8n

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've seen my Seminole Indian grandmother buy warts and moles from people . You had to bring her 50cents tho. She Said everything in life and nature has to have a trade . She read me and my other 2 female cousins the whole edition (encyclopedias) of man myth & magic 🎩 ✨️ . This was way before computers or phones. The people she wud buy the moles and so forth from would come back the next day to get their 50cents back if it didn't work....Well let's just say her coin jar was so full all the time she buried change all in her yard for over 50 years. She would tell us stories that we thought were just that. Um no she was telling the truth . So she taught us about the ways of the world and how to protect ourselves is what she was doing . God rest her sweet soul ❤️

  • @kevincage1641
    @kevincage1641 Жыл бұрын

    My great grandfather was an ex-slave and a famous water witch in Mound Bayou, Mississippi. People would come from all around to ask for his help as well as test him. He was never wrong once. I love this information you provide. Thank you much!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    That's awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @jenhitch5199

    @jenhitch5199

    Жыл бұрын

    A medicine witch moved up North and we use to visit and help out. My brother had terrible asthma and she said drink this. Not only did it help his asthma it was one of the few things he was not allergic to, arrowroot.

  • @sharrylanderson9701

    @sharrylanderson9701

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow my family is from Mound Bayou Mississippi and I grow up there .

  • @kevincage1641

    @kevincage1641

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sharrylanderson9701 My great grandfather was Augustus Simmons. He was friends with Isaiah Montgomery, Ben Davis, and was property of Jefferson Davis. Are you related to any Thompson's, Simmon' s, Lambert's, Holmes?

  • @sharrylanderson9701

    @sharrylanderson9701

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kevincage1641 no I’m not related to any. But you really have history there. How wonderful. My great great grandfather was a exslave to the a family outside of Mound Bayou and once freed he relocated there and started a family.

  • @dnews9519
    @dnews9519 Жыл бұрын

    I remember my grandmother quoting that verse in Ezekiel when I was a child. She said it would stop bleeding. She was definitely not a witch in fact she was probably the most godly woman I've ever known. She died many years ago and I'm well up in my 50snow. I count my blessings that I'm old enough to remember what real human beings once were bcause people today are absolutely nothing like them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. God bless you.

  • @johnpelley8127

    @johnpelley8127

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, even as somone not fom Apalachia, this was the thing that perked my ears up. My granny--like yours--the most Godly woman I've ever known, firmly not a witch, she taught me this as a kid. Her mother and father had come over to Oklahoma from Arkansas in a covered wagon. The generation before that we'd been Natives and immigrants from Germany and Ireland. As far as I know we were never from Apalachia. I wonder if there's an Old World tradition this all ties back to where the knowledge originates from. There has to be a common thread that goes back to some kind of folkloric root. As to its efficacy, Ezekiel 16:6 certainly seemed to work when I was a kid. Enough that I believe it even now, in my 30s.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this my friend. God bless you.

  • @ornerydyke

    @ornerydyke

    Жыл бұрын

    This sounds like Pennsylvania Dutch powwow

  • @troubleinmind369

    @troubleinmind369

    11 ай бұрын

    Having these abilities doesn't mean you are not Godley. Some of my ancestors came from Southeastern Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, West Virginia and Virginia. My great grandpa was a water diviner. They didn't have electricity. They were farmers and lived off the land. They read the bible by candlelight at night. There were church going folk. My mom said that he used to take all the grandkids when a new well had to be dug. He always found the water.😊❤

  • @pamcollins2207
    @pamcollins22072 жыл бұрын

    My mawmaw was from Floyd County, Kentucky. She cured me when I was little. I was covered in warts on my arms and legs. She just did the "laying of the hands " on my warts and praying to the Lord. It worked. I've been wart free almost 50 years.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @steveo7116

    @steveo7116

    2 жыл бұрын

    My people are from Floyd County as well. Specifically, Hi Hat. My great-grandmother was a healer. Folks would come from all around to have her lay hands on them.

  • @Houndini

    @Houndini

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is something about it that can't be explained. This must has happen in other parts of the country, They has the same type of stories we have. That we never heard about. All I heard about been in Appalachian Mt. ranges. I am originally from Logan County WV area. I don't have even close to the fingers & toes to count the times I should been dead after 37 years as a Coal Miner. Joke but true. I been trapped in coal mine saved myself after 12 hours of being trapped. Caught in the great 1963 flood & sweep away. Talk guy saved me I was blue & 2 years old. Thank God I wasn't in the area on Buffalo Creek for 72 flood. My Great Grandmother & both my Grandmother's all believed in this.

  • @Houndini

    @Houndini

    2 жыл бұрын

    Collins? Ever had any kin. 2 brothers 1 was nicknamed I think it was a family nickname Peanut I know his daughter was kind of sickly he told me little about her, Other brother his name has slip my mind worked on Surface Mine in Mingo County. I worked with them boys. Both was great people. Very extra nice to myself when I worked with them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Houndini WOW! good stories my friend. Thanks for sharing. I agree!

  • @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757
    @katiesiouxlamoureaux77572 жыл бұрын

    My daddy could somehow always find the spot in our or someone's yard where the pipes froze and he would take coals from the wood stove and put them on that spot and sure enough the pipes would thaw and not bust. Our community on the reservation thought he was crazy when they saw him do it in his yard one winter but soon as their pipes froze, they called my daddy❤️ I sure miss him and his magic. Lol when he did something awesome, he told us it was an ' ol Indian trick'😍

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @LilyGazou

    @LilyGazou

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’ve met one such person. Only one with that skill.

  • @opybrook7766

    @opybrook7766

    2 жыл бұрын

    It sounds more like a "gift" not magic😊

  • @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757

    @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@opybrook7766 to a little girl it's daddy's magic that spark will never die😉💪😊☺️ Hopefully all daughter's see magic in the things that their daddy can do

  • @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757

    @katiesiouxlamoureaux7757

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@whosoeverwill-ky I'm native American so the bible has nothing to do with me . Enough of my people were murdered over it. 😁😉 Have a good day, apparently it doesn't make you a happier or friendlier person 🤣😁😆🙄🤔😬

  • @Hannah-h.k
    @Hannah-h.k Жыл бұрын

    As someone born and raised in east TN, this was strangely comforting. There are far too few videos on Appalachia and it’s unique and fascinating features. Keep up the good work my friend

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. God bless you.

  • @zackearl3200

    @zackearl3200

    8 ай бұрын

    TN gang rise up

  • @sublime7617

    @sublime7617

    3 ай бұрын

    Bristol gang

  • @glenndavis1868
    @glenndavis1868 Жыл бұрын

    My great grandfather on my grandfather's side was a healer. My grandmother told us stories of when she was still dating my grandfather how people would come to him for healing. The most amazing one was a man who was thrown from his horse had a compound fracture in his arm. My great grandfather sent my grandmother to get a couple of bath towels and wrapped his arm with them. He told everybody else to leave the room. As my grandmother was leaving she looked back as she closed the door behind her and saw him put his hands on the injured area and began chanting in a strange language. About 1 hour later my great grandfather opened the door to let everybody else in and they all reveled in the fact that the injured man had full use of his arm and there was no scab or scar from where the bone was protruding (only redness which was probably leftover blood stains). My grandfather said that his father was supposed to teach him how to do the healing, but died in a car accident before he ever taught him.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing this story my friend.

  • @glenndavis1868

    @glenndavis1868

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnielaws7020 Forgot to mention that I am from PA Appalachains

  • @N2Mtns2

    @N2Mtns2

    Жыл бұрын

    My Grammaw Daisy Bell from Bell County was a Medicine Healer - very busy woman that was called counties over. The 2 Doctors depended on “Miss Hill” and her leather bag too. I went with her on several midwife calls and boy did she change once the men were scooted outside. She Glowed & I’m not kidding. First time I ever Heard Her get called a “White Witch” ii offended me because she was so highly respected. She giggled & put her hand on my shoulder and simply said, “It’s a Good thing, child. It’s a Good thing”. She taught me a Lot. My 83 yr young Momma calls me a Seer. And a Medic. Momma’s a Dreamer and people say she’s got a direct line to God. 🙏🏼💕. Thank you for this Mr. Laws. I recognize hearing your family’s name. “The Laws”. No specific story but ‘Good People’. Thank you for the precious memories and truths. God bless you and yours. (edit) another thing Grammaw took me & taught me is (where are we going Grammaw?) ‘Oh we’re gonna go run off that Ol’ Devil’. Oh my gosh her stomping & loud prayers of Rebuking the ‘ol’ serpent’. I’ve been called upon by Southerners up here north for that too. I don’t know *what people called/ call that but Wow. God *ALWAYS* Wins. Always. 🙏🏼⚡️🙏🏼 Ephesians 6

  • @bonniewilliamson110
    @bonniewilliamson1102 жыл бұрын

    The legends come from the “grannies” many of Cherokee heritage. They healed with natural cures, delivered babies, taught young wives how to plant gardens make simple medicine and care for children, even cook. Elder women passing their knowledge and being valuable members of the community.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's so true! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @gypsylove4291

    @gypsylove4291

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh how I miss my grannie.Im told she was a strict Christian. And certainly had some gifts of the holy spirit. She read tea leaves.She would tell me exactly why I couldn't go somewhere with her. For instance I wanted to go to the grocery store with her. Why can't I ? I whined. She finally said you can't go because you'll stand on the back of the cart. If you do that the glass milk bottles will fall out and cut you. Guess what? That's exactly what happened. She was from Holland or the Netherlands. The old days are the good old ways. To live plant and nourish the Earth. The Earth is a living biological being,like us.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gypsylove4291 Awesome story my friend. Thanks so much for sharing this story. God bless you.

  • @southernsassy4453

    @southernsassy4453

    Жыл бұрын

    That is very much true, my heritage is Cherokee/Scottish Irish. I come from a long line of ladies that are skilled in healing, gardening, herbs, dowsing, tea readings and etc.,. We are from the deep hills of Southeastern Kentucky. My granny, aunts, great grandma, great aunts, mom and cousins would never call themselves witches even though the things that they done and do is what others call’s witchcraft.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@southernsassy4453 Thanks my friend for sharing this with me.

  • @robertmassie3452
    @robertmassie34522 жыл бұрын

    I had a witch-doctor took a some sort of tree limb, cut it to my exact height and chanted a saying or chant like. Said when I out grew it, my asthma would end. They placed it above my mamaws door frame. My mother and mamaw both witnessed it, and as I outgrew it all my asthma left. As a baby I was in and out of hospital for not be able to breathe and ever since I grew taller than that stick I’ve never had issues with it. I’m 53 now and my stick is still above my door frame to date. It would worry me if it wasn’t!!!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @MIZZdarkerPerspective

    @MIZZdarkerPerspective

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Old Ways are The BEST Ways. make no mistake.

  • @ishtarkimmycraigasyouare8320

    @ishtarkimmycraigasyouare8320

    2 жыл бұрын

    #beakimmy

  • @genkiferal7178

    @genkiferal7178

    2 жыл бұрын

    most people outgrow their asthma. me and my brother did.

  • @robertmassie3452

    @robertmassie3452

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@genkiferal7178 yes true but I outgrew mine before age of 3 , hospital atleast once a month. Either way I am glad it left so that I was lucky enough to enjoy playing like most back in the early 70’s

  • @AuntieCreed
    @AuntieCreed Жыл бұрын

    I loved this video. My Mother would be right at home among these stories. She can find water with dowsing sticks, she can stop bleeding with prayer and heal sunburns. She can nurse just about any animal back to health and loves to go out in the woods to look for arrowheads and ginseng. I've shared your video to her so she can watch it too.

  • @kimella1320

    @kimella1320

    10 ай бұрын

    I hope you're able to follow in her footsteps.

  • @mountainmama4133
    @mountainmama4133 Жыл бұрын

    I'm in S. West Virginia. They called my great grandma a medicine witch. She helped a lot of people but I don't recall her being anything but God fearing. Everything handed down is Scripture based. Thank you. Love how you talk. Reminds me of - me.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @nazgullo

    @nazgullo

    Жыл бұрын

    Same with my great grandmother over near Big Stone Gap. She was always called a witch cause she healed and such.

  • @AO-ir6ec

    @AO-ir6ec

    Жыл бұрын

    Same with my Maw in VA. I remember we were visiting her once and a man ran in with a baby. The woman followed him screaming and crying. My aunt tended to the woman and Maw took the man and baby into the parlor. Wasn’t long until she brought the baby out on her shoulder and the man started comforting the woman. A few minutes later she was thanking Maw profusely. I asked later that night what happened and was told that she saved the baby’s life. She could take away warts, soothe toothaches, and stop bleeding with the Bible verse mentioned. I’m sure there was lots more that she could do, AND she was one of the Godliest women I have ever known.

  • @lalaisis5126

    @lalaisis5126

    Жыл бұрын

    Christians learned from the Pagans. Pagans were using teaching & passing these traditions decades BEFORE there were Christians.

  • @angeladavis9254

    @angeladavis9254

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@lalaisis5126 Yep...

  • @egyptcat4301
    @egyptcat43012 жыл бұрын

    Like a lot of poor kids in Appalachia, I grew up in the woods. I remember when I was very small, there was an old old woman who lived farther up into the woods. I remember her name was Lizzie. She wore ragged dresses down to her feet, and had grey frizzy hair and a permanent scowl. We kids were told to stay away from her because she was a witch. Looking back, I think she was just a poor old woman, living alone, trying to survive. It sure made for a colorful childhood!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome Thanks for sharing.

  • @sielukettu

    @sielukettu

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's like a real life story from Terry Pratchetts book Wee Free Men. Awesome books 🙏🏼

  • @Mrzeee999

    @Mrzeee999

    2 жыл бұрын

    colorful but damaging and destructive childhood....................

  • @freddheckman7144

    @freddheckman7144

    2 жыл бұрын

    Would that be Lizzie Rankins?

  • @alexandersizemore1493

    @alexandersizemore1493

    2 жыл бұрын

    We had one who lived less than one hundred yards from my home. Her name was Violet and she delved too deep and became tormented until her death. Her shack and her "church" were finally torn down Perhaps thirteen or fourteen years ago. She wanted to be free from whatever had attached itself to her and strived to embrace Christianity in her later years, asking my father often to preach to her. I was never allowed into her shack, not that I ever wanted too despite my childish curiosity.

  • @francisjohnson665
    @francisjohnson6652 жыл бұрын

    I grew up , and still live 75 years later, in Southern Kentucky. There was a woman in our community that could " draw" out fire . She really could. A neighbor child burned the whole palm of his hand on an iron stove . She just blew on his hand. He immediately stopped crying and it was never sore . I think that she was a healer , not a witch .

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @thegreatselkie6009

    @thegreatselkie6009

    Жыл бұрын

    Witches ARE healers.

  • @joydurham5437

    @joydurham5437

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m from the South and know/knew someone who can do this too. She also told me she couldn’t tell another woman how to do it, only a man, but he could tell a woman.

  • @linaulnes8821

    @linaulnes8821

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes. Witchs are healers. Thats why the church wanted them gone. Because why would they get followers if people knew their own power and could seek help with the women and men in contact with their feminin side. So they killed as many as they could and installed fear and called it devils work. Because fear is powerful way of controlling people.

  • @thegreatselkie6009

    @thegreatselkie6009

    Жыл бұрын

    @@linaulnes8821 you hit the nail on the head!

  • @ghostdeluxxe
    @ghostdeluxxe Жыл бұрын

    My family in East Tennessee had a lot of connection to the Appalachian Mysteries. I grew up close to the TN NC border on a 400 acre farm and spent most of my young life out in the woods, just playing in the Nolichuckey River and watching cattle. One day when I was around 12 years old I found an old 2 story house out by the river, and my grandparents told me there was no house back there, when I gathered up the nerve to back, they were right. There wasn't anything there. My granddad could use dowsing rods too, he told me that's why he built his house where he did, he had a well that pulled from an underground spring. He worked often but had collected a lot of folk medicine from his grandmother and shared it with me on occasion, my granny didn't like it though, she said it was the devil's work. The one I remember the most clear was I had a planters wart on my foot, he made me rub a kidney bean on it, wrap it up like a present and leave it at a forked road. The next day it was gone. I cut the tip of my finger off once too, he made me soak it in diesel fuel and just taped it back on, I was little so I don't remember much else, I still have the top of thumb though, and no scars. Now on my father's fathers side, they always told me the family was Cherokee faith healers, my aunt is a healer witch but I don't know her well. My Dad told me the women could pass down the miracles, women and men both could use them, but if a man passed down the gift he would loose the ability. My father was given the gift to 'remove the fire' from a burn, and I saw him do that often when I was younger. If you had a burn he'd say a bible verse to himself and touch the burn, it would stop hurting but it didn't heal it, just 'take the fire out'. I personally haven't been taught anything, I lived with my religious grandmother and again, she thought it evil. Last bit of story, it was only at the end of my granddad's life did he tell me the secret of his farm. When he bought the property, he didn't know much about it, and when he began tilling the land, back where I played at as a child, he hit a mass burial site for the Natives. He told me he was afraid he'd lose the land or not be able to farm it, so they relocated the bodies they dug up down to the very spot I spent so much time at down by the river. Still to this day I have such strong urges to go back that spot, it was always so peaceful and serene. I like to think the Natives' spirits watch over that place, and watched over me when I was younger.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    WOW that's awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing your story. God bless you.

  • @lizziesangi1602

    @lizziesangi1602

    Жыл бұрын

    @ Heart of Arsene Thanks for the stories. My mom is from Appalachia and never forgot her "roots". We were raised practicing Roman Catholics and this is the good that fights the bad.

  • @xxkissmeketutxx

    @xxkissmeketutxx

    11 ай бұрын

    Wow!! You could tell stories all day long and never be boring! Thanks for sharing

  • @DANIGAL101
    @DANIGAL101 Жыл бұрын

    I’m not from Appalachia, but my family is Irish. My Grandmother and Great Grandmother were both considered “witches”. They were healers who were able to tap into an energy. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Your very welcome my friend. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @heartofthunder1440

    @heartofthunder1440

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve always heard that earth at one time was a very magical place.

  • @rebeccagilstrap3507

    @rebeccagilstrap3507

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here but I’m a redhead of Scottish /Irish decent from upstate SC.

  • @lockandloadlikehell

    @lockandloadlikehell

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rebeccagilstrap3507 Scots-Irish, more likely

  • @thegreencat9947

    @thegreencat9947

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rebeccagilstrap3507 as myself...red head...my mom and her grandma...she never questioned me when I said take care.

  • @maitreyaisthebeast
    @maitreyaisthebeast Жыл бұрын

    I've lived in the Appalachian Mountains my entire 48 years and yes, these mountains are mysterious. I've heard so many stories from my grandparents and great-parents and i will treasure them till the day I die. He is right, we are a superstitious bunch, but we also love and fear the Lord. I have used dowsing rods looking for things myself. I've also used willow branches (best when looking for water) when hunting. I don't know how it works but it does. I'm very proud to be from the mountains and feel very fortunate that God placed me here and gave me the wonderful mountain parents that have. To me the mountains of Kentucky are heaven on earth and I'm one lucky girl to have grown up here.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing that my friend. God bless you.

  • @witchy-wonderland1416

    @witchy-wonderland1416

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you use the willow branches like you do the dowsing rods?

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@witchy-wonderland1416 No they are a little different because of how you hold them.

  • @kharakessler1390

    @kharakessler1390

    Жыл бұрын

    Right! Im not very "religious" per se as my experience with religion has been traumatizing, but there is a great divine, and so i include that great divine and acknowledge it in my spiritual practices because.... Well i didnt CREATE "magic", and no one did. We didnt make any of this, it just is. So hiw can it be "bad?" It can be used for negative purposes like he said, but i refuse to believe that it just IS evil and demonic off the break like my religious family likes to believe. How can i be bad or wrong when i just know things or can make things happen with my words? Gtfoh. It took me a long time to realize that i can be quite powerful and i had to make my magic my own.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kharakessler1390 Thanks my friend. This depends on the person using it. The Bible forbids the dark arts. I don't consider dowsing for water or using plants for curing the sick witchcraft. It's just the old mountain saying for them. Don't get me wrong there is evil out there my friend. I'm just telling the history of these mountains. Thanks for sharing. God bless you.

  • @leslieross8708
    @leslieross87082 жыл бұрын

    My Scottish ancestors settled in the mountains of NC because they said it reminded them of the Scottish Highlands. Many of the females in the family have what we call "the Sight" - just super strong intuition. I also had a neighbor "blow" the burn out of my arm when I was young. He waved his hands above the wound, said a prayer, then gently blew on the burn. The pain was instantly gone and within a week it was completely healed like it never happened. Thank you for the upload. Super great video 😊

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @deadrabbitstraining7018

    @deadrabbitstraining7018

    2 жыл бұрын

    We still blow on injuries Ms Ross, the old ways have not left us. Love from Scotland.

  • @leslieross8708

    @leslieross8708

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deadrabbitstraining7018 that is wonderful to hear. I wish my ancestors had never left your beautiful country. I've never been but I always say my heart lives in Scotland and her blood flows through my veins. Best of wishes to you from NC 💗

  • @robinbanks9691

    @robinbanks9691

    2 жыл бұрын

    My mom passed that gift, "blowing out fire" to me. She said her father passed it to her and told her she could pass it to only one child and that child had to be of the opposite sex. I can tell you it works.

  • @robinbanks9691

    @robinbanks9691

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deadrabbitstraining7018 lived in drumnadrochit 68-69. Had several inspiring experiences including my first out of body. Love scotland!

  • @MayPhoenix
    @MayPhoenix9 ай бұрын

    My mamaw was a witch. She was a devout Christian woman who had prophetic dreams, special communication with animals, and a number of other special talents. Everyone loved her. She passed her gifts on to her son (my grandpa, a water witch), who in turn passed them down to a few of his children (my uncle, who could control weather) and grandchildren -- including me, the first-born, and my cousin, both of us being healers, death doulas, and receiving messages from the spirit world.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    9 ай бұрын

    WOW Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @Melancholy1966
    @Melancholy1966 Жыл бұрын

    I read the Foxfire Books in the 70's. They were a series of books that told stories from the Appalachian Mountains. The students of Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School in Northeast Georgia went out to interview the old mountain folks and learn about things like butchering a hog, wildcrafting, making a banjo, woodcarving, making soap, etc. Thank you for posting these videos and preserving the history of these people.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing. Your very welcome.

  • @dnews9519

    @dnews9519

    Жыл бұрын

    Those were incredible books.

  • @sunnydaze1

    @sunnydaze1

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for that book set recommendation. I just ordered them as my Christmas present to myself. My mom was born in Smyth County, Virginia (RIP) and her mom's family was generational Appalachia. My maternal grandpa (RIP) was from Hardin County, Kentucky. He was a coal miner before enlisting in the Army and retiring as a Master Sergeant. Thanks for the excellent history in this video presentation.

  • @susansowers5909

    @susansowers5909

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome books, amazing resources lovingly recorded in those Foxfire Books ❤️‍🔥.

  • @sunnydaze1

    @sunnydaze1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@susansowers5909 Indeed. I'm on the second book and I LOVE THEM!

  • @bwktlcn
    @bwktlcn2 жыл бұрын

    When I miss my family members that are gone, I listen to your videos and hear their voices again. I hear the wind in the trees, see that magnificent green of the mountains in the spring, hear my great aunts and grandma in the kitchen making wonderful food, my Dad and uncles under the hood of a truck, once more bringing that old Ford back to life. Thank you for letting me hear the sounds of home again. My great granny was a granny woman, and half the kids in the county, she touched them first as she brought them into the world. What I would give to sit down at the table, shelling peas and listening to the swirl of their conversation around me. You never miss home until it’s gone forever, because the people who made it home are gone. I miss them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @Bobby-mg1uj

    @Bobby-mg1uj

    2 жыл бұрын

    Beautifully expressed, and so many of your memories mirror my own. My people were from hill country KY and the northern Texas prairies. I miss my grandparents. Would give 'most everything to have another conversation with them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Bobby-mg1uj I know the felling my friend.

  • @Cristobels-Green-Boots

    @Cristobels-Green-Boots

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Nellie Olsen - thank you Nellie, for your beautiful writing ❤️ I grew up in East London, & my parents/grandparents were all from a place called Hoxton, meaning that they spoke with an accent known as Cockney (you know, like Liza Doolittle). We are world’s apart, but your fond reminiscences of your Grandmother - of those quiet times spent with her - sound so familiar.... These wonderful posts, & the sincerity of the comments, give me so much hope...we’re all more alike than we are different, & we can choose to live in a world of our own creation! From Brighton 🌈 UK, take care & be well y’all! 🙏🏽❤️🙏🏻

  • @alexandersizemore1493

    @alexandersizemore1493

    2 жыл бұрын

    I still reside in Southern West Virginia. The hills and hollers still hold the same secrets just a bit past the edge of sight. Yet, even though I still linger here, it is no longer the home of my childhood. As you say, the ones who made it home are gone. There are times I believe it would have been the better choice if I had moved away. Then I could recall my youth and still get to visit home, if only in my memory. Too late for that now I suppose. My memories have already become corrupted by the way things are now.

  • @lavenabaxter6504
    @lavenabaxter65042 жыл бұрын

    My granny was from Indiana and was half Blackfoot Indian, my papaw was from Tennessee and was full blood Cherokee Indian. They both knew how to live off the land & were able to cure sickness, fever, & other ailments by using herbs,roots, berries and whatnot from the wild. Granny was a midwife in Indiana & I guess you could have called her a medicine doctor because she set my arm when I fell out of a tree & broke it, she sewed my leg up when I had a deep cut on it. She also placed a poltis made from a root of some sort on my leg to ward off infection from setting in. I never ever was attended by a real doctor until I was age 12 & that was only because I kept having a severe sore throat that granny could never get it completely healed. Turns out I needed my tonsils removed! My grandparents were the best in my world! And oh yes my granny would tell me witch stories that would scare me so bad but would take a hickry to anyone else who told me a scary story. Thank you so much for sharing these old Appalachia stories, I charish each & every one of them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @pamelaburks8695

    @pamelaburks8695

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure why but I can feel that your story is truthful.

  • @robertayoder2063

    @robertayoder2063

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not blackfoot territory

  • @ms.beasly8871

    @ms.beasly8871

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like wonderful memories

  • @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe

    @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@robertayoder2063 she said he moved there

  • @marcusfreire7349
    @marcusfreire7349 Жыл бұрын

    It's interesting to see cultural links between areas of the states that were settled by the scots/Irish... I'm Scottish born and bred and several of these tails share direct parallels with our own stories. Same theme different place. Live from Alba

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @shepberryhill4912

    @shepberryhill4912

    Жыл бұрын

    You can see the same thing in music. I've seen performances where the same tune was done in three versions, the original Scottish or Irish tune, the old-time version, and the bluegrass version, strung together.

  • @skylerstemper4627

    @skylerstemper4627

    7 ай бұрын

    While it is definitely a different place the Scottish Highlands and Appalachia and parts of whales are actually all the same mountain range and a lot of people from here descend from Scott's Northern English Irish and Welsh people

  • @MWah747
    @MWah747 Жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad I came across this video. This was amazing to watch. I believe many people were falsely accused of being witches when in reality they were strong people of faith. Intelligent people who knew and know how to survive. Special people and misunderstood by many in the cities. When you brought up the scripture out of Ezekiel, it just blew my mind because I know someone who did this when my cousin accidentally slit his wrist with a machete. The blood stopped immediately. Thank you so much for making this video.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, Welcome friend. Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @deborahdanhauer8525
    @deborahdanhauer85252 жыл бұрын

    I love this one. I’m a water witch too, but I use a tree branch. I was told there is always at least one person in each family that can do it, so that every family can find water. If the witch dies, another will be born or someone in the family will inherit the gift. 🤗🐝❤️

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @colinkillian9265

    @colinkillian9265

    2 жыл бұрын

    You're not a "water witch" you have just been told a bunch of superstition and your confirmation bias is strong so you believe it. You have no magical powers, you can't do anything paranormal or supernatural, you would we wise to sober up to reality..

  • @deborahdanhauer8525

    @deborahdanhauer8525

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@colinkillian9265 Go away troll. You’re not wanted here. I will not argue with a fool.

  • @deborahdanhauer8525

    @deborahdanhauer8525

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@donnielaws7020 You’re welcome🐝❤️🤗

  • @colinkillian9265

    @colinkillian9265

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deborahdanhauer8525 I'm sorry the truth can be upsetting, removing the confirmation bias is something many people who suffer under lower mental acuity are simply unable to do. Perhaps one day you'll realize the mundane reasons for your supposed "powers" as the subconscious need to feel special and unique.

  • @eledatowle7128
    @eledatowle71282 жыл бұрын

    I remember the first time I was shown by my dad how to water-witch (it's a verb here in Maine, never heard it used as a noun before. We'd call the person a dowser, but say they were dowsing or water-witching). My cousin needed a new well dug, and I was probably about 5 or 6. I followed my dad while he sought out a forked alder branch and cut it. He said he preferred apple, but there weren't any around, so alder was the next best. Its roots always look for water, so it's branches would, too. I watched as he walked through the woods between our house and my cousin's, and that forked stick went from pointing straight up to straight down in no time flat when he got to one spot. He walked to it from a couple of directions to pinpoint it, and marked it for the new well. Then he asked if I wanted to try. It felt like any old stick to me, but as I walked through the woods back toward our house, the thing suddenly twisted in my hand so hard and unexpectedly that it left red marks! I nearly dropped it, half amazed and half afraid. He smiled, pointed it back up and told me to do it again. I walked some more and then it happened again. It turned out, it was pivoting to the ground every time I crossed over the water line from our own well to our house. When we built our own home in a different town twenty years ago, the local building inspector offered to dowse a well for us. He did, and it was a full Artesian - Spouted water right out of the ground so strongly they had to provide it a run-off pipe down the hill. I assure anyone who's skeptical that water-witching is very real.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW, Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @tomrobards7753

    @tomrobards7753

    2 жыл бұрын

    It was the same here in Kentucky .

  • @tomrobards7753

    @tomrobards7753

    2 жыл бұрын

    It ran in my family, one family member even dowsed the water and dug the well , that was Dad's side of the family , mom's side did the medicine part even as a girl she could rub warts and with in a week they were gone .

  • @gretchenohnstad7054

    @gretchenohnstad7054

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for connecting the tree branch to the tree's root system searching for water . That makes a lot of sense to me. Yet, I guess the wire hanger works too, not sure why. Maybe frequency or vibrations in the water attract the metal? Hmm...

  • @eledatowle7128

    @eledatowle7128

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gretchenohnstad7054 I've never understood the metal wire tools... I have to assume their just a visual aid to a person's internal senses, moved subconsciously. While most would argue the same is true for the tree branches, I can say for certain I've never felt anything pull in my hands like that forked stick did. I still remember the red marks like rope burn, where it twisted unexpectedly. Dad told me to hold it more loosely after that - a lesson I took to immediately!

  • @EpicHighFive321
    @EpicHighFive321 Жыл бұрын

    I was born in Missouri near the Mississippi but now live in southwestern virginia in the mountains. And i find all this culture fascinating. You can feel the secrets the mountains hide when you travel through them.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @kimella1320

    @kimella1320

    10 ай бұрын

    Maybe that's why I'm drawn to be there...

  • @agneslong2323

    @agneslong2323

    4 ай бұрын

    Welcome!

  • @TaylorBennett2000
    @TaylorBennett200011 ай бұрын

    My family is from southwest VA, and I grew up there right next to the Appalachian trail. My great great grandmother was called “the blood stopper”. She passed it down and taught it to every woman in the family but she passed several years before I was born. My mom told me stories of her doing it for her and my grandmother when they got hurt, got nose bleeds, etc. and it really worked. It was never passed to me so it was interesting hearing about it in the video. First time I’ve heard it talked about outside of the stories my mom told me. ❤️

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    11 ай бұрын

    WOW Thanks for sharing your memories and story with us my friend.

  • @SeraBurris-np9gm

    @SeraBurris-np9gm

    5 ай бұрын

    It's strong unwavering faith through the Holy Spirit, while reciting a certain Bible verse... I knew someone that could. ❤

  • @appalachianhomegrown9207
    @appalachianhomegrown92072 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much brother, for these videos. I was born in the mountains of SW Virginia & as a young girl, all I wanted to do was to get out of here. Now, at 51 years old, I’ve traveled to all the continental US states & can find nothing more gorgeous than these southern Appalachian mountains!! I’m proud of my accent & proud of all the family that came before me. This is my home & I will die in these hills ♥️♥️♥️

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @morecm3322

    @morecm3322

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is no place like home. I am so glad you went back to your roots.

  • @ishtarkimmycraigasyouare8320

    @ishtarkimmycraigasyouare8320

    2 жыл бұрын

    #BEAKIMMY

  • @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe

    @AmericanPatriot-cw9xe

    2 жыл бұрын

    I lived in wayne County w va and what a great place to live, i love the good people of wva

  • @appalachianhomegrown9207

    @appalachianhomegrown9207

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@AmericanPatriot-cw9xe Husband’s Mother is from West Virginia 😊👍🏼

  • @confusedpotato5535
    @confusedpotato55352 жыл бұрын

    I have happy tears streaming down my face right now. I lost my maternal grandmother, my favorite grandmother 22 years ago this year. Mom's side of the family is from Appalachia. Tennessee mountains. Grandma was born in Kentucky. She always professed to be a white witch and I always believed her. Now I know she was a Mountain Witch. I watched your video on superstitions too and I just had to come back to leave a comment. You have brought my grandma back to life for me in so many ways. Her spirit is out there right now. Ashes thrown over the mountains as she wished. Now I understand why I believe the things I do, and why she blessed me with her abilities and where I get my born gifts for the supernatural. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for making these videos. Now I can fully understand why she believed what she did. Many, many blessings to you. These videos are gems and I'm sending them to my mother.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @Pottawattamie

    @Pottawattamie

    2 жыл бұрын

    My grandad was from Kentucky I am from UK he never met my mum she was born in 1945 her name was Carol Ann sadly passed away in 2014.

  • @kimberlybutler1155

    @kimberlybutler1155

    2 жыл бұрын

    I pray you are using your gifts from the one who gave it to you and that's the God in the heavens.

  • @Alexandra_Wolf

    @Alexandra_Wolf

    2 жыл бұрын

    This was beautiful. I lost all my grandparents early but my grandmother was very special to me. I’m not from the south but this also made me cry. It’s just beautiful to hear these stories of people having experiences with real powerful witches. It’s beautiful.

  • @angierobertson1368

    @angierobertson1368

    Жыл бұрын

    My grandparents where very special to me and well.... They pretty much raised me. Me grandpa was the one that truly held my heart though. I lost him in 2001 and he could witch water.... alot of these abilitys run in my family too and is something I was blessed w/ and watching his video and hearing his voice does feel like home. I read your comment and I can honestly say I can completely relate to how you feel... My heart goes out to you, sending love and healing prayers.... I know how hard it is to miss someone so special.❤️🙏🏻 Prayers for you and your family sweetheart.

  • @bbqbros3648
    @bbqbros3648 Жыл бұрын

    My paternal line came from the Orkney Islands of Scotland and fought in the Revolutionary war. His line went through NC to TN to AL to TN again. Even though I grew up on the other side of the south, I hope to return to east TN someday. Love learning all the history of my people- truly appalachian folk (and southerners in general) are some of the most misunderstood and disenfranchised in this country.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @jacobparson7534

    @jacobparson7534

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s because we lost the war.

  • @brianpulstsr8680
    @brianpulstsr8680 Жыл бұрын

    I could sit and listen to you tell stories all day! You have a real talent for it! Thanks again for documenting and passing these stories down to future generations. I really believe this is very important.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. Your very welcome. God bless you.

  • @jacktribble5253
    @jacktribble52532 жыл бұрын

    My Mom grew up "Way up the holler" in a place called Tiger Creek, near Roan Mountain on the Tennessee side. She was a very strong and confident Woman and she was thought by many to be a Witch. Things just always seemed to go her way but I think it was more that she knew what needed to be done and stepped up to do it than any supernatural power. Still, even members of the local biker gang feared her. And this was just back in the 70s.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @ianworcester4640

    @ianworcester4640

    2 жыл бұрын

    Local biker gangs afraid of yourn mom , ppffffffh , ....that's a bit funny . Did she lay a spell on their riding ability??

  • @jacktribble5253

    @jacktribble5253

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ianworcester4640 Gang. Singular. And I'm guessing you didn't live through the 70s.

  • @aarondigby9859

    @aarondigby9859

    2 жыл бұрын

    People knew home remedies, understood the medicinal use of plants and herbs: hoe hound plants, catnip, lemon plants, garlic, sassafras, ginger, cherry bark and other tree barks, mullin plants, they were just women who didn't have easy access to hospitals and took care of their own.

  • @aarondigby9859

    @aarondigby9859

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ianworcester4640 those people were spiritualist and had knowledge of things that are still mystifying today, could tell and predict the weather accurately by the movement of insects, birds and bugs. They were really mystifying.

  • @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead
    @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead2 жыл бұрын

    I had a really bad allergic reaction to strawberries when I was about 3 or 4 years old. I stayed with my great grandmother a lot on Heaton Creek in Roan Mountain TN. She took me to a friend of hers because if she hadn't, I was going to die. I was going into anaphylactic shock. It really tore my stomach apart. This friend of hers said she knew exactly what would cure me. She made a drink of coal and milk and made me drink it. It was terrible, but within minutes it worked. This friend that I cannot remember the name of anymore knew all sorts of tinctures and remedies for this or that. When he mentioned people lived so hard, they most certainly did. I'm 45 years old and I can remember working in the fields by the time I was about 6 years old. We would climb up onto the back of an old pickup truck and go from field to field to hoe the fields, harvest the fields, stake the tobacco, fertilize, or whatever was needed. My family occasionally did not have electricity, we occasionally went hungry, and occasionally, there wasn't a dollar to my Dad's name. It was later that my family became better off because they began traveling and playing Appalachian music.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @prestonsmith9824

    @prestonsmith9824

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Cheyenne! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead

    @MissouriCrookedBarnHomestead

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@prestonsmith9824 I am doing pretty well and always safe. Just making my way through life.

  • @ericasimonson8737

    @ericasimonson8737

    2 жыл бұрын

    Coal absorbs toxins.

  • @nicolawatson3051

    @nicolawatson3051

    2 жыл бұрын

    Was your allergic reaction in the belly ? My daughter had it in her throat airways being squeezed she would have lost consciousness within minutes I can't imagine anything but adrenaline epi pen working at that point . But iam interested in the earth and mother nature has to offer in health benefits. Really interesting

  • @Karatandstone
    @Karatandstone Жыл бұрын

    Donnie, my Mimi was from Spruce Pine, NC, and her daddy was Auby Harrison, a descendant of Benjamin Harrison. She told me a million stories about growing up in the mountains, and I wish I’d had the foresight as a young woman to write them down. The history of the Appalachian Trail and those who lived along it are American gold. I just love listening to your stories.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. Thank you. God bless you.

  • @jerrymcfaddin7719

    @jerrymcfaddin7719

    Жыл бұрын

    I am strong in studies of the Bible. And getting a witch doctor to come and investigate the actions of another witch is totally against the biblical advice given by the lord's profits. How can Satan cast out Satan???? Don't call a suth sayer to get rid of a tarot card witch. If you see this and have issues with inside your house contact me I have had trouble get on KZread all Evening long.

  • @margaret9198
    @margaret9198 Жыл бұрын

    My family comes from The Appalachian mountains! Descendants of the Linville’s. Unfortunately never heard any of the stories but I would’ve loved to hear them! Thank you for mentioning the Cherokee Nation. Thank you for sharing!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. Your very welcome.

  • @omegadubois6619
    @omegadubois66192 жыл бұрын

    Oh my goodness. You bring back so many of my childhood memories! Where I grew up, a ways out in the country, we had a Granny Woman, a yarb doctor. Her son, who looked about 70, did our plowing and helped with butchering time. He'd bring her down when one of us were ailing. She knew a great deal about natural medicine, plants that could help and heal, and what could kill. She was incredible!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @lindadamisi9302

    @lindadamisi9302

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love it

  • @brookenebergall4171

    @brookenebergall4171

    2 жыл бұрын

    How did they use yarn? Do you know?

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@brookenebergall4171 Not really sure my friend. I know how they made it and made cloths from it.

  • @omegadubois6619

    @omegadubois6619

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@brookenebergall4171 thank you for pointing that out. I had meant yarb but autocorrect changed it. I should have looked it over lol.

  • @LVXMagick
    @LVXMagick2 жыл бұрын

    Proud Appalachian Witch. These videos are really great. I didn't realize the world cared about what we do in these mountains lol cool to know people are interested. Appreciate you sharing all this Brother. Blessings.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @carmaterra2275

    @carmaterra2275

    2 жыл бұрын

    I would love to meet as many Appalachian witches as possible ☺️ hear about what they do . Beliefs . And so on

  • @chrysallis2735

    @chrysallis2735

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bless’d Be, sister!

  • @nunnallyai

    @nunnallyai

    Жыл бұрын

    I love how you’re a technologically inclined witch pretty cool 😎

  • @sethcarter8385

    @sethcarter8385

    Жыл бұрын

    Come to Jesus Christ 💗 time is running out.

  • @monicacall7532
    @monicacall7532 Жыл бұрын

    I fell in love with the Southern Appalachian mountain culture with its music, dancing, stories, crafts, etc. as a 13 year old girl living in the West. Everyone thought that it was a strange thing for me to be interested in. After I married my husband I learned that his dad’s side of the family came from the mountains of Western NC where his 3rd great-grandparents had been among the first settlers. Was I ever excited to learn more about this family! We’ve visited there and it felt like we’d come home. The new relatives were pretty surprised when I told them about my “strange obsession” (according to my own family and friends) with their mountains and culture. I’m now my husband’s family’s resident expert on their family history. I’m wondering now if I was somehow meant to marry into that family. Who knows? Your channel is such a marvelous place to visit and to use to help the family appreciate their amazing Appalachian heritage.

  • @heathlowery3806
    @heathlowery3806 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Donnie, had this pop up in my recommendations and I'm glad it did, definitely enjoyed watching it and your narration. I've been a lifelong resident of southeast TN myself and you're definitely not kidding when you talk about how beautiful this region in. I absolutely loved a lot of the scenery around here and in the mountains of NC as well. Thanks for the great content, definitely subbed and I'll be watching more!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Welcome friend. Thank you.

  • @chasbee
    @chasbee2 жыл бұрын

    Many years ago I worked in a civil engineering company. Sometimes on a work site they needed to find a water line that they knew was there, but the location of which had been lost to the records. We had an older engineer who was the son of the company's founder, and he would go out and find the water for them every time using the same method as you do. Always was very impressed that he hadn't let his engineering degree and book learning get in the way of some old-time methodology.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @rebeccalynn3092

    @rebeccalynn3092

    Жыл бұрын

    I know it was amazing to witness. It opened my mind to a different way ... like a sensitivity to the natural ebb and flow of our world that I found to be fascinating. I often wonder, "so how did God put that together now, or how did He balance this out?"

  • @denverbevins4052
    @denverbevins40522 жыл бұрын

    Great Grandmaw, Thelma Richards, was a travelling midwife in the mountains around Williamson, WV. She told me a story about a demon-possessed woman who was kept in a basement room of an old mansion. The first time she visited the old mansion, the owner answered the door saying, "You must be Thelma." "How did you know my name?" Mam-maw asked. "My daughter has been yelling your name for the past 20 minutes." Creepy. Would be interesting to watch a show about the more extreme parts of the Christian faith in those mountains. The pentacostal mountain religions are an interesting mix of faith, superstitions, and fear but like everything else, there's truths to be told.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @downrighthorizontal9931

    @downrighthorizontal9931

    Жыл бұрын

    woah. reading this- my grandma is named Thelma Richmond, she's lived in souther WV for ages (just east of the New River Gorge)- honestly potentially could've been her, she's done a lot of odd jobs & travel & knows a thing or two about having kids cuz she had 7 of them. I'll have to ask her about this whole thing next time I visit her :)

  • @dianeyoung8068

    @dianeyoung8068

    Жыл бұрын

    Keeping someone in a basement because they have abilities that most don't have is so sad and cruel.

  • @jjreddickowns

    @jjreddickowns

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dianeyoung8068 no it’s not, it’s keeping a dangerous compromised entity relatively contained. She should have been killed or burned alive in the basement to finish it.

  • @coffee-xg6my
    @coffee-xg6my Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather who I never knew because he was very, very old and died shortly after I was born, was a water-witch in rural Louisiana according to my dad (who is also no longer living). He said the people around that neck of the woods, (and that's exactly where they lived, out in the woods) would call on him to find where to dig water wells. And yes, apparently he would use a stick.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @coffee-xg6my

    @coffee-xg6my

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donnielaws7020 Thank you for the video! By the way, my grandfather was born in the late 1870's. So, he grew up to adulthood in the 1880s and 1890s. My dad was born very late in my grandfather's marriage which is why I had a grandfather that lived a generation earlier than most people's grandparents today.. His father (my great grandfather) was a Civil War veteran.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@coffee-xg6my Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend. God bless you.

  • @teresakeck7978

    @teresakeck7978

    Жыл бұрын

    Divining rods are used to find water

  • @sunshinesandy3265
    @sunshinesandy32653 ай бұрын

    Hi Donnie, watching & liking more of your videos. Praying for God to bless you with a full recovery soon. Love your videos and accent so relaxing and soothing. God bless you and take care🙏🙏🙏

  • @waynecribb4922
    @waynecribb49222 жыл бұрын

    My grandfather used to walk me through the mountains of N.C. and show me all kinds of plants and tell me what they were used for as medicine . It was amazing. He also showed me plants that were food. He made some strange concoctions in his day and they did exactly what he told me they would do. My family is mixed English and native American on one side and German English and Scottish on my grandfather 's side I'm speaking of. My mother had an old book that was passed down from my grandfather that showed my family pictures . The people all looked like native Americans to me and my Mom assured me that was so. The hills are amazing but my Mom could not wait to get out of those hills. She left at the age of 17 and moved to Fort Mill, S.C. ,met my Dad and that's where I was born. Thank you for this video, I can testify that it is very factual. I too can detect water with divining rods. I did it to find my well after a well drilling company could not find water on my land. I found the "spot and told them to drill here. That's where my well is today.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend. God bless.

  • @carolb6141

    @carolb6141

    Жыл бұрын

    my uncle could also find water with a "dowsing'" rod, as he called it. He could also "talk the fire out" if a person had been burned badly by repeating a Bible verse over them, but he never told anyone what Bible verse it was.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@carolb6141 Awesome my friend.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@trinatrina5811Amen my friend. God bless you Thanks for sharing.

  • @angielovelace888

    @angielovelace888

    Жыл бұрын

    I used a witching rod when I did land surveying. My boss told me, then taught me how to do it. It works and blew my mind! Amazing old dying breed full of knowledge. Will be sorely missed very soon

  • @clay1883
    @clay18832 жыл бұрын

    Another fine video story. My Great Aunt was from Duff, a little coal town in Campbell Co. TN. Oldest child of a large family and times were lean. She knew wild herbs, medicines, edibles, poultices, and man could she cook. She'd cook anything I could kill and it was fine! And make wine! Several people below mention removing warts. My Great Uncle could do this. People from all around would bring their children and get him to remove the warts. It was in the Knoxville News Sentinel back in the '60's. I think the reporter was Don Whitehead. I never knew how he did it as it was done in private. I know he NEVER took any pay for it. Both of them taught me gardening, hunting, fishing, trapping, the signs and seasons and many things "country". My Great Uncle also showed me "witching" for water, pipes and such. I use it on occasion mostly just to help people locate an old line or keep from digging into a water or gas line. I can't explain how these things work. I don't question it. It is a gift. Just use it for good. Thanks Donnie!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @lisajohnson8707

    @lisajohnson8707

    2 жыл бұрын

    My grandpa removed a wort on my finger bout 40 yrs ago. I hadn't thought bout that in yrs

  • @dawndominick2833
    @dawndominick2833 Жыл бұрын

    Your channel is a delight! I just finished watching several of your videos and was totally enchanted. Frederick Dunn gave a shout out to you and provided a link to your Wild Mountain Bees vid, which was fascinating. Then I watched several of your Unexplained series vids and look forward to exploring them all. You are a wonderful story teller (as Fred said you were). Thank you and God bless you and your family.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Your very welcome. Thank you.

  • @seditious2253
    @seditious2253 Жыл бұрын

    Your voice is so soothing, I'll put on one of your videos when I'm going to sleep. It's like a spooky bedtime story told by a beloved grandad

  • @TS-mq1fj
    @TS-mq1fj2 жыл бұрын

    My Nanny was West Virginia Appalachia and gave me knowledge and wisdom beyond anything available even today. I came across the Foxfire Series as a adult and marveled at the gift she'd given me . She'll forever hold a special place in my heart and soul as do all of the folks of the "Old Ways".

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @kevinklingner3098

    @kevinklingner3098

    2 жыл бұрын

    0000000000

  • @linnymaemullins3319

    @linnymaemullins3319

    2 жыл бұрын

    😊

  • @andeannafarnes4719

    @andeannafarnes4719

    2 жыл бұрын

    My daddy bought the Foxfire Series for our family. It is excellent with a lot of "forgotten" practical knowledge.

  • @lulumoon6942

    @lulumoon6942

    2 жыл бұрын

    Found the Foxfire series at a favorite Aunt& Uncle's home (no running water) in a holler one special summer in WV... Never been the same since that magical time, and lucky enough to live in a log cabin in the country now. Thank You K & C!!! 🪶🙏❤️🌈

  • @Greenwitch385
    @Greenwitch3852 жыл бұрын

    My grandmother was a kitchen witch, as my Mom and myself. My family is from a small town called Rose Hill, Virginia. I enjoy your videos very much.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much my friend.

  • @sallymay3643

    @sallymay3643

    2 жыл бұрын

    A kitchen witch how interesting & vital 4 the family. I was called a witch in another life but I was actually just a herbalist. I grew & sold herbs 4 cooking & medicines soaps lotions rubs all 4 healing people that didnt trust or couldn't aford 2c a doctor.

  • @rvingkeepitrolling8797

    @rvingkeepitrolling8797

    2 жыл бұрын

    Rose Hill is in far from Appalachia same general area.

  • @pinkiesvlogs2

    @pinkiesvlogs2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey there, sister.... from a kitchen witch in the desert hills of n.m!

  • @valerief1231

    @valerief1231

    2 жыл бұрын

    I never knew a Kitchen Witch was real, I remember somewhere in the late 70’s early 80’s a trend going around, Kitchen Witches were a little doll on a tiny broom that was hung in the kitchen. Someone gifted my mother one, and I would be unsettled by it when it was my turn to do the dishes and clean the kitchen lol.

  • @kccain4011
    @kccain40115 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing these stories and this information. Im a blk woman in my mid forties from Alabama. My great grandmother was a former slave and a healer. She was African Anmerican and Native American. She had a light caramel complexion with long dark hair and light blue eyes. I was scared of her when i was a little girl. I remember being around 6 or7 yrs old, i burned my hand on a heater. It was bad. My parents took me to my Big Mama's lil shack. My Mama wanted to go straight to the hospital. My Dad told her, we'd go see big Mama first, and then we'd go to the hospital if she couldn't help us. I absolutely without a doubt in my mind remember Big Mama pulln me to her lap. She put something in her mouth and then she blew on the inside of my hand.....pinched a piece of a plant off of her porch and told my Mama to put itin my sock when i went to bed. I don't remember being in a lot of o pain, but i remember we never went to the hospital. I remember my Mama unwrapping my hand the next day and she called for my Daddy to come and look. I remember him saying, i told you Big Mama could " talk fire( pain) out" of a burn. I remember all of this because i was a curious/nosey child. Back then ..either you didn't ask, or you had to be selective about how you asked about grown folk stuff. Thankfully, my Daddy tried to explain to me that Big Mama was touched by God as he would say. After that incident i wanted to be around Big Mama as much as i was allowed to be. She taught me things i carry on with me to this day. She lived to be well past 100. Her skin grew to be thin and soft like tissue paper. I remember brushing her long hair. When she died i was sad but i understood that in her own words " her work on dis hea side" was done. Rest in Power Big Mama.❤️🙏🏾✌🏾

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    5 ай бұрын

    WOW Thanks so much my friend for sharing your memories and story. God bless you. Thanks so much. Your very welcome.

  • @MrChadillac89
    @MrChadillac89 Жыл бұрын

    I stumbled upon your channel a few days ago and am really enjoying it. My dads moms side of the family has roots in Kentucky, so I feel slightly connected to these stories that you are telling. Thank you.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Welcome to the channel. Thank you. God bless you my friend.

  • @Niccole-oq8wo
    @Niccole-oq8wo2 жыл бұрын

    My one of my great grandmother's were from Culpepper County VA. I was always told she had the gift of "sight". She was forbidden from ever telling anyone as she came from a strong Christian upbringing. They said she could tell you all about a person after meeting them for just a minute.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    She had a gift for sure! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @loraanski7696

    @loraanski7696

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m from Culpeper & I believe this wholeheartedly

  • @KimmieSunshine

    @KimmieSunshine

    Жыл бұрын

    My grandma came from a long line of witches from the mountains of Appalachia. My sister has incredible “sight”, sometimes all it takes is quick hand shake or brush of the hand.

  • @TiffanyBedford

    @TiffanyBedford

    Жыл бұрын

    I have that gift.

  • @n0thersist3r

    @n0thersist3r

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TiffanyBedford I have visions sometimes, that runs in my family

  • @Necron-ez2cc
    @Necron-ez2cc2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Mr. Donnie. I know growing up in the Alabama Canebreak, Dowsers still practiced their art, and just about every rural community had a Spiritual Advisor. My 3rd cousin was an Advisor who taught me how to interpret the cards... Mind you, this is NOT fortune telling or any type of Hoo Doo... It's the art of helping people find their own answer by divination through their own memories and experiences they may have forgotten or not considered. The Evil Eye was also a very real thing, and we were constantly warned against being hateful and swearing curses... We were taught "Do no evil, for it will return upon you threefold."

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @BlanketyBlank9050

    @BlanketyBlank9050

    2 жыл бұрын

    Divination is witchcraft a sin which God hates !

  • @Necron-ez2cc

    @Necron-ez2cc

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BlanketyBlank9050you're using the first definition of the word, as per Webster's I'm using the second definition : unusual insight : intuitive perception... divination, or to devine, means to solve. As in, "My Granddad had no formal education as a mechanic, but he could devine the malfunction just by listening to how the engine ran.' By the way, you any relation to Kenny Blankenship, late of Paducah?

  • @BlanketyBlank9050

    @BlanketyBlank9050

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Necron-ez2cc I do have some people in Paducah. My aunt was married twice once to a Dunn, and then to a Blackburn. I doubt if I’m any kin to Kenny Blankenship but who knows it’s a small world. Thanks

  • @Necron-ez2cc

    @Necron-ez2cc

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BlanketyBlank9050 I worked on towboats running the Ohio, Upper Mississippi, and Illinois with Kenny back in the 90's. He was an assistant engineer back then. He would be about 58 years old now.

  • @BeethovenWasGerman
    @BeethovenWasGerman Жыл бұрын

    Your voice is very warm and comforting. Thank you for sharing your stories on here, it was a real treat!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. Your very welcome.

  • @glitterfilledsoul5238
    @glitterfilledsoul5238 Жыл бұрын

    These are my people. I live in SWVA and grew up with these stories. My grandfather was a faith healer witch. He could heal warts, could heal thrush in babies mouths. My husband is a twin and a 6th son, they blow in the mouths and it heals the thrush or thrash it’s also called. My granny was a kitchen witch, she could can, cook, bake, grow, anything. Her green thumb was ridiculous, her home was blanketed in flowers and vines. Beans and herbs hung to dry on the wall. She grew a garden that fed us all year long. Real good. She would can deer meat, sweets and preserves. Any food u could imagine she canned. We never went hungry. She had a wood stove inside her home and during cold mornings she would start the fire. I would stay under the covers until it got warm, and anytime I got sick she would mix up concoctions that included moonshine. She was a Granny witch. She healed me more than once with her mixes. She lived off the land because she was 75% Cherokee Indian her grandfather was named rainwater Ramsey he was a chieftain. She had the dark skin, jet black hair, high cheekbones. And I say all this because I’m stoned, and she was the most important and magical woman I ever known. She raised me and I lost her a few years back. When I watched this video it reminded me of her and she was amazing enough to be remembered and shared her gift.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Good story! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @agneslong2323

    @agneslong2323

    4 ай бұрын

    I live in SWVA also. I had a couple of GGGrandmothers who delivered a lot of babies on the mountain, which some called the hill. My GGrandmother had 2 sets of twins, of which my MeeMaw was one. The smaller of the two. A little bitty woman who was 'tough as a pine knot'. I loved her to death. She and my other Grandmother blessed me by living into their 98th and 94th years---I was 55 with both my Grandmothers. How many people can claim that? I learned a lot from those two ladies, mainly through participation; but, it was never work when I was with them. When I was in the mood for some history, one question would lead to an afternoon of education. I miss them both terribly.

  • @chasitytaylor8858
    @chasitytaylor88582 жыл бұрын

    I remember as a young child in Mississippi going with my grandmother to an older woman’s house to get my baby brother cured of oral thrush. Mamaw said some people called the lady a witch, but she just thought she was educated in natural ways. It worked, and I hadn’t thought about that in 40 years, until I came across your video. 😊

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @bloozem

    @bloozem

    2 жыл бұрын

    My ex-wifes grandmother took my soon to be adopted son who had thrush to an "old widow woman who never met her father"...apparently it was a requirement. She blew in my sons' mouth so many times a day for 3 days. The thrush went away....according to my ex. This was down the mountain a ways but a lot of locals in the piedmont NC area have family from the hills.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bloozem Awesome, Thanks for sharing this my. God bless you.

  • @dreamsofadaffodil650

    @dreamsofadaffodil650

    2 жыл бұрын

    Educated in Natural Ways....wow!!! Great use 💙💙

  • @JujuBonez

    @JujuBonez

    2 жыл бұрын

    My Mamaw called me a "thrush doctor". I have never met my biological father. Everyone comes to me when their babies get thrush. It's neat that others know of this too!

  • @MsSaudm
    @MsSaudm2 жыл бұрын

    My Dad ( now passed ) also told a tale & swore up & down which he said he saw with his own eyes . As a young man he and his buddies went to taunt a woman who was known as a mountain witch not believing the tales about her. He said that when they started to yell at her house the hedge that ran the length of her yard SHOOK violently and SCREAMS like wild animals shrieking came from it. They were so scared they ran and never went back. This happened when he was a teenager so LONG before any video projectors , sound systems or other modern devices that could have made the event. He never made up tall tales & I believe what he said happened exactly as told.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @samsalamander8147

    @samsalamander8147

    2 жыл бұрын

    My ex who was a stoic man and never once a liar told me he was walking in the woods of Mashpee and he was messing with a girl pinching her bum and chasing her and making out with her when he was 12 and he had a woman walk up to them tap him on the shoulder and pull her hair aside and she had an eye in the middle of her forehead. She is a famous witch named Granny Squanit she was a beautiful native woman who was cursed with an ugly 3 rd eye and she would steal bad children and make them her slave for years then she would release them when they were good again the old chief of the tribe from the 80 said he was abducted and kept because he was bad on her island in the middle of the Mashpee pond. My ex swears granny Squanit was warning him to be good and he is so afraid of her that he made me believe him I had to pull the story out of him like teeth he was afraid to even tell me. His Dad died in the house we were living in so he said that was the only reason he felt comfortable telling me he freaked me all out we lived in the middle of the woods in Mashpee. He was Wampanoag himself he also said she wouldn’t mess with me or my daughter because we are white lol and she always went for little boys. I wanted to put out an offering for her of beach plums and rum because I read that online after doing some research on her but he wouldn’t let me he said he was worried that would encourage her to come around. Creepy though I don’t believe in ghost or the supernatural but that story freaked me out bad at the time.

  • @MamaMac_
    @MamaMac_ Жыл бұрын

    I love deep southern accents. There is a lyrical quality to them that seems stripped from many other accents (including my own Albertan accent). There is an energy to them that is palpable. I get the same feeling from strong Irish accents. Love them. ❤️

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. God bless you.

  • @rickyb6086

    @rickyb6086

    Жыл бұрын

    Moved from CA to the Midwest in 2019. I was talking to a girl that sounded just like Dolly Parton, I couldn't believe my ears! Her voice was so different, I had never heard anything like it, except for on TV.

  • @bfboobie
    @bfboobie Жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful presentation. The sound and pictures are beautiful and intriguing. When I became an adult I started to think most superstitious stuff was just nonsense. But the more I study and learn, the more I realize how much modern people forget or brush aside as nonsense when there is actually far deeper truth and knowledge lost to modern society. Great presentation here I really enjoyed it. I sure wish I knew more of the medicinal plants of my area. Don't know much about dowsing and thought it was nonsense back in the day but now I'd like to give it a shot some day and see if I've got it. Not sure when I'll need to find a water line or dig a well but when I do ima cut me up a wire coat hanger first. Just subscribed and looking forward to exploring more of this channel. This is pure gold. I grew up mainly in the east, although many years on the plains and out in the western mountains, but it is nice to be back east as of recently. Such a rich land of history, people, culture, knowledge, and mystery, and the hills and forests are endless intrigue and beauty. Just keep your eyes peeled for the wild hairy men of the woods.

  • @Pumpkinail
    @Pumpkinail2 жыл бұрын

    I grew up at the end of the Appalachian mountains, I grew up with cautions of what is in the woods or what wasn’t (because if you saw something, no you didn’t). My family could grow anything out of nothing and very well known medicine women of the area. The traditions are still wild and alive! And it can be so beautiful

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @helenvanpatterson-patton

    @helenvanpatterson-patton

    2 жыл бұрын

    My grandpaw was a dowser. I have always wanted to learn from a granny lady.

  • @Pumpkinail

    @Pumpkinail

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@helenvanpatterson-patton go to local libraries and look into natural remedies! There’s a ton of insight on folk magic, just under a different name

  • @helenvanpatterson-patton

    @helenvanpatterson-patton

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Pumpkinail I have looked in my area and copied what I could find. I have gone to flea markets and garage/estate sales too. I have acquired a small group of books about medicinal herbs and some native American herb booklets as well. I am a hands on learner. To be able to pull the plants and do the work for the granny so I could learn would be a dream come true. I am trying to teach myself and have some luck with it. Maybe by the time I am granny aged I will have acquired enough knowledge. My family is from Monroe County, Mississippi by way of South Carolina. My mother was delivered by a granny lady. We had to move to the city for my dad's work. Being born so late to the family I was not exposed to enough knowledge. Funny how all 5 of my older siblings have no interest and could not wait to get out of the sticks. Me? I am going to school to make enough$ to buy land and get back in the sticks:)

  • @maryohare4141

    @maryohare4141

    Жыл бұрын

    I lived in an area of Appalachian trial. Our woods were peaceful, full of sunlight, birdsong. We have Cherokee and Scot- Irish in our paternal family history and Irish in our maternal history. i have always been "in tune" with nature, vibes. I noticed one day that the woods felt different...a sense of danger, foreboding. I looked to weather, to see if storm was rolling in. No...but the woods were silent, no bird or animal noises...which gave me chills! I told my husband and he just laughed. For some reason, I decided to get our digital camera, take his photo by edge of our woods and gravel drive. When we looked at the photo....there was something very dark, not human, standing directly behind him! He thought I had photoshopped it into photo...but it was on digital camera, not computer. I immediately felt evil presense. I told him something was wrong with our woods...that evil had entered. He got mad, said it was nonsense. He was great outdoorsman, loved nature and our land. A couple days later, he told me that in a ravine on our property...he had found a campsite and "kids" had left witch signs spraypainted on rocks. He assured me he had destroyed that. THAT worried me and I sensed he was in danger. I asked him to go to church with me, to get priest to bless him. He wasnt of my faith, so he refused. Within three months...I found him, in our woods on an eerily foggy morning devoid of all nature sounds...crushed beneath a massive fallen tree. I truly felt a sense of evil near and prayed to God to take his spirit safely to heaven...and to protect me from the evil lurking near. I had a minister and a priest come bless our woods. The sounds of nature, the normal lightness of the woods, returned after that.

  • @heathertackett7956
    @heathertackett79562 жыл бұрын

    My grandmother said the bleeding prayer. Thought the bleeding stopping was always coincidence. Until she prayed for my aunt who was gushing and spurting blood (bleeding to death) and it stopped.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @jimmynewsome859

    @jimmynewsome859

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who's ur grandma

  • @jacoblocklear783

    @jacoblocklear783

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same with my grandma an her sister they prayed for my cousin who was bleeding inside and it stopped

  • @karenjarrett8904
    @karenjarrett8904 Жыл бұрын

    I found your upload so very interesting. Thank you for sharing what you have heard and learned. Next I’m going to listen to the link you mentioned. Thank you so very much, have a Blessed Day.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend for sharing this. Your very welcome.

  • @suzanacottam924
    @suzanacottam924 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing a bit of the history of the people of the Appalachia mountains - totally amazing! I have heard similar stories about the different types of witches from Macedonia from my late grandparents. You are also a great storyteller. Hey from Adelaide, South Australia🐨🦘🖐

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for saying this my friend. Your very welcome. God bless you.

  • @Yodie208
    @Yodie2082 жыл бұрын

    My Grandmother was from the"old Country". She had a gift in that she always knew when there was something wrong in the family before it happened. When my dad was a child he started having nightmares involving snakes. my grandmother lit a candle and let the wax drip into a pan of water. The wax formed into the shape of a snake. After that he never had the nightmares again. There are truely forces in nature that simply cannot be explained away. Thank you for sharing your stories on this subject.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @mountainpatriothomestead
    @mountainpatriothomestead2 жыл бұрын

    I certainly appreciate your videos. Over two centuries of my own family history in those mountains. My grandma was a granny doctor, which folks now fancily call natural herbalists. I use a lot of the same remedies today. My grandpa could waterwitch, as could my daddy and myself. But we were also told stories about the bad ones and we stayed away from certain areas, especially at night, even when coon hunting. Again, thank you for sharing and not letting this history pass away.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @donnalabruno7936

    @donnalabruno7936

    2 жыл бұрын

    Share your knowledge. We need to return to natural God given cures. Big Pharma is poisoning us then offering a “remedy” at a profit. It’s criminal. Much good to be said for natural remedies and medicines. I hope you have a student ❤️

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@donnalabruno7936 Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @davidbarnhart5101

    @davidbarnhart5101

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@donnalabruno7936 p

  • @YouTubeSucksMonkeyBalls

    @YouTubeSucksMonkeyBalls

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its been over 40 years last time I ate some coon. My granny would barbeque with sweet potatoes, onions and apples. Some hot water cornbread, poke salad and it was goodnight..yes sir..Burger King cant touch a well roasted coon!

  • @Jeanmarie8406
    @Jeanmarie84066 ай бұрын

    I live not even 10mins from Appalachian Trail in Hot Springs North Carolina Born and Raised. I Love to hear about my old folks and nobody but you to tell it ❤️ thank you so much for all your videos and the time you Devote to them. I really appreciate my Elders and just about all of them are gone on Home, my Daddy was Gene Gentry he'd be around 67 yrs old had he lived. He passed my senior year at high School. He was my best friend but God needed him and I'll see him again someday. Your Voice is very Comforting the way you tell a story of these old mountains. Would you ever do a video about the owls in these Mountains?? God bless you my friend.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    6 ай бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks so much for sharing your memories. God bless you.

  • @glynnphillips9703
    @glynnphillips9703 Жыл бұрын

    I am so grateful that I found your show. I feel like I not only found a super great show but I also found a new friend. Thank you so much Mr Laws

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @joncothranphotography9375
    @joncothranphotography93752 жыл бұрын

    Great stuff Donnie! My uncle was one that could talk out fire and my Grandpa would use a forked limb from a fruit tree to find water. I find it amazing that the old ways are being forgotten so quickly. I try to ask about those things and folks just act like they don't want it to live on. Thanks for sharing!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @ese_rafa6941

    @ese_rafa6941

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thats called water dowsing something that is now being forgotten that is how people used to find water holes or gold underground

  • @eledatowle7128

    @eledatowle7128

    2 жыл бұрын

    I haven't heard of "talking out fire." What is that, please?

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@eledatowle7128 If get burned by something hot by saying the bible verse I showed it should take about the pain of the burn.

  • @eledatowle7128

    @eledatowle7128

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@donnielaws7020 Very interesting! Thanks for the explanation!

  • @hillbillydan4721
    @hillbillydan47212 жыл бұрын

    Mr. Donnie when I get a video in my feed that has your name on it , I am ALWAYS interested in what you got to say...you have a very unique way of telling a story, that kinda takes me back to a kinder gentler time in our nation's history !!!! Mr. Donnie thank you my friend and may God bless !!!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @bertdockery3606

    @bertdockery3606

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most of the males in my family can dowse with bent coat hangers.

  • @wynonabieneman7985

    @wynonabieneman7985

    2 жыл бұрын

    I agree, his voice calms the mind, which in turn helps with the storyline. Thank You Donnie for your stories I find them very interesting 🙏🦋

  • @chinese1181

    @chinese1181

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bertdockery3606 Thanks Bert; that is exactly what came to mind: bent coat hangers. The thought was put into me. Now I know.

  • @juniorhensley9129
    @juniorhensley9129 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video. My grandparents were as honest as the day is long and some of the stories they have told would have been unbelievable to me had it came from anyone else. I turned older and talked to many of my elders, (I love their knowledge), and I relieved they had similar stories, so I ate it up.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    That's awesome my friend. Thanks so much for sharing this story.

  • @bigtitegothbiotch2231
    @bigtitegothbiotch2231 Жыл бұрын

    Ohh my goodness I just love your voice and drawl. Like a cup of hot tea and a warm cozy blanket but for my ears. Well done vid also ! Thanks!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. Your very welcome.

  • @bobbygrisham1469
    @bobbygrisham14692 жыл бұрын

    My Grandma taught me that same verse for stopping bleeds. I asked if she really believed that, she was a very saintly Christian born 1920. She told me she not only believed it but had seen it done more than once. Now for the water-witching, I used coat-hangers too. My Dad was paying a well-rig and we were trying not to waste money and had already dug over 200 feet to only get a slow seep-in. It rises about 20 feet from the top, but too slowly. My neighbor, gone now, was an 80 something year-old, korean veteran and he brought the hangers, said he started this when a little boy. His wires crossed over and over in the same place. He handed them to me and told me to try it, said it works for some and some it don't. I was shocked when it did exactly as it had been doing for him. It was pretty amazing but the water was about the same. We dug nearly 300 feet there. Both wells have plenty of water, the last is only 8 or 10 feet down but both are slow filling. I've always suspected that the wires had more to do with some kind iof electro-magnetic field created by water across certain minerals, but I'm not sure that can explain the wood. I also was taught the Willow for it by my Dad though neither of us had ever tried it till our neighbor that time and I still haven't tried willow or actually done it at all since. Just thought I'd share that, thanks for the vids.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    WOW, Great story my friend. Thanks so much for sharing this story with us. God bless you.

  • @cynthiathibault8775

    @cynthiathibault8775

    Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother from Kentucky swore by that verse too and taught it to me as a child too.

  • @bobbygrisham1469

    @bobbygrisham1469

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cynthiathibault8775 Yes, I think that one was a very well known one. I memorized it when she taught me but never thought to use it. Maybe I should accidentally slice my wife just a tad to try it out, lol. I'm pretty sure in an emergency I would remember it. Though I did see a man stabbed several times and didn't. If you ever have experience with it, please let me know. Thank you.

  • @maryohare4141

    @maryohare4141

    Жыл бұрын

    We were building a home on 35 acres and twice, the drilling of well...came up dry. This was a cost of thousands of dollars...for nothing! My husband was talking about it at work and later, a co-worker of Scot-Irish decent, quietly offered to divine water for us, said his family had "the gift." My husband thought he was being pranked, but I had seen my Appalachian-born Daddy do it. So, the man came, the willow branches bent...we marked spot with spraypaint...and had the drillers try this totally new area. They were very skeptical...but we were desperate. YEP....best underground reservoir source of crystal clean water found EVER! Well drillers asked if the man we used could be hired lol!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maryohare4141 WOW, Thanks for sharing this.

  • @claricec2291
    @claricec22912 жыл бұрын

    My cousin can witch water, I've seen her do it. My Mom come from the Pennsylvania ridges and told us many stories about witches and unexplained happenings with which she had experience. I too have seen things. I believe in most of the old folklore. Thank you for this video

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @cookie244

    @cookie244

    Жыл бұрын

    What's that?

  • @justus8430

    @justus8430

    Жыл бұрын

    My great uncle was a water witch. I come from a long line of healers. My family still makes salve by hand. Same recipe and process for hundreds of years

  • @b_ks
    @b_ks Жыл бұрын

    I haven't lived in the south since the nineteen seventies and your video did indeed take me right back down. You have a pleasent voice, filled with subtleties and you turn a phrase well. I believe I will be listening to more of your tales.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @moritod
    @moritod Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this! My great grandmother was a healer in this tradition. People would travel incredible distances (for the time) to have her lay hands on whatever they suffered from. Her track record is pretty amazing. Perhaps they healed themselves, simply based on their faith in her. perhaps she did it. Maybe a bit of both, who knows? But it's a time honored tradition, definitely not a myth.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks for sharing this. Your very welcome.

  • @joyceleeper7247

    @joyceleeper7247

    11 ай бұрын

    My uncle had a way of getting rid of warts he said he got it from an old witch lady who taught him and it would work when he did it.

  • @jean6061
    @jean60612 жыл бұрын

    A long-past relative in the Allegheny Mountains in New York was an herbalist. She'd collect all sorts of plant material and dry it from the rafters of her home. Folks would visit, tell her their ailments, and she'd select various items, place it in a little bag, and give it to her visitor, usually for a nickel or a dime, I'm told. There is much wisdom in the old medicine, in Native American medicine. As for water dowsing, I've tried it, too - and was surprised when the hanger ends moved on their own! (You know how some hangers come with a cardboard tube over the long metal part? I cut that to use as "sleeves" around the smaller parts of the rods, so the long rods would move freely.) Really enjoy your videos - thank you!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @patmlaw

    @patmlaw

    2 жыл бұрын

    I had an uncle on my dad's side who was a dowser. However, he had some brain damage and, although he was lovable, he was not the sharpest knife in the drawer. He lived with us for a while when I was a kid. We lived in town and paid a water bill. When he found that out, he was indignant about it, because he believed water was God given and should be free. One day, while my dad was at work, he started dowsing on the front lawn. He was determined to dig a well and do away with the water bill. He found water and had the water pipe dug up (4 foot down) by the time my dad got home from work. 😄

  • @CarolAnnHenderson

    @CarolAnnHenderson

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@patmlaw Incredible Patricia. I love this. Thank you.

  • @karyannfontaine8757
    @karyannfontaine87572 жыл бұрын

    Some people are gifted healers. Dowsing does work, we used forked branches. There must be a scientific reason why it works. I was told when my Grandparents built their big house, Grandma dowsed for the place to sink the wells for the barn and for the house. A very elderly lady lived with her daughter across the road from us. My mother and I would bring her lunch and visit. I told her I had nose bleeds every day for no reason. She held the front of my face gently and said a few words I could not understand. She said I was better and would never have another one and to this day, I have not.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @deadwave2738

    @deadwave2738

    2 жыл бұрын

    Being one with the Father and Our Mother Earth we are made up of the same material that the Earth is made up of so naturally you would think that our illnesses and our anger outta wack is the Darkness GOVERNMENT we belong in nature and nature alone and we would prosper with no problems of the one's we have today because of listening to those who we thought was working on our behalf.

  • @todddavis4274

    @todddavis4274

    2 жыл бұрын

    Dowsing does work. It's not witchcraft. Witches are involved in WITCHcraft. Old fashioned doctors and herbalists aren't witches. Unfortunate witch traditions? Lame research and a lot of bla bla. The narrator is really cool and seems modest but the info is doo-doo.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@todddavis4274 Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @gbd-oq1rz

    @gbd-oq1rz

    2 жыл бұрын

    Witches are not heales they curse

  • @sophieb.8115
    @sophieb.8115 Жыл бұрын

    This was so beautiful and fascinating without being over the top. And your voice and accent are so soothing. Thank you!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thank you for saying this. God bless you.

  • @AprilLashon
    @AprilLashon Жыл бұрын

    This video was very informative. Growing up in Louisiana, I knew early on a lot of the paranormal, supernatural things I saw for myself wasn’t just folklore, but the truth! I took my daily walk in nature and I saw a Water Witch dousing rod it looked exactly like what’s depicted in the video. Because I am a healer I know now I was led to this video. Confirmation! I love your voice by the way.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome my friend. Thanks so much for sharing this. God bless you.

  • @amycallais4379

    @amycallais4379

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm from Louisiana too and the second I read your comment about the dousing rods the video right on the subject! I'm not a healer or anything even close but these are the occurrences I encounter daily. Definitely not just a coincidence... Love talking about this ....gives me the free'sons! Cajun word for goosebumps!!! Glad I found this channel.... thanks again!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    @@amycallais4379 Awesome! Welcome friend. Thank you.

  • @summerfi
    @summerfi2 жыл бұрын

    Your narration of these stories has a calming effect, Donnie. I enjoy them very much. Several comments have mentioned healing through prayer. The prayers of a person who is right with God have amazing power. I would like to see you do a video on this as a testament to the unbelievers. I have several examples of my mom's prayers performing true miracles.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @rvingkeepitrolling8797

    @rvingkeepitrolling8797

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh yes and it actually works if it's God's will.

  • @VanessaMallia

    @VanessaMallia

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Donnie I just found your channel! It brings me back home hearing your stories!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@VanessaMallia Welcome friend. Thank you. Make yourself at home.

  • @lisaryherd4685

    @lisaryherd4685

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, please do!!!

  • @Witchofthewoods.
    @Witchofthewoods.2 жыл бұрын

    My Great Great Grandma was a midwife back in the early 1900's and she delivered over 500 babies in our area of WV. Her name was Lula but she had 9 names! ❤️ I never got to meet her, but I wish I could have. She was a healer & we have several nurses in our family. Awesome video as I admire our ancestors and what they went through. I believe witches overall have been given a bad name. #WVWITCH

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @dianaaiello588

    @dianaaiello588

    2 жыл бұрын

    I just bought a book Witches , Midwives and Nurses . I like it !!! Witches got a bad rap back then .

  • @naturalwitch1359

    @naturalwitch1359

    2 жыл бұрын

    I to come from a family that has witches.We have native American and Irish Viking heritage. And my daughter is a nurse.

  • @jeffracer6231

    @jeffracer6231

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lula was my grandmother name from Pineville KY

  • @melonieisham9788

    @melonieisham9788

    2 жыл бұрын

    Omg I have so many stories about my grandmas on both sides just like y’all. My dad’s mom was a midwife, and went around everywhere in the farm community of Western KY birthing babies, and they tell she could blow in the babies mouth to cure oral thrush. That was my Welsh memaw. But my mom’s mom took off warts, made healing salves for burns and cuts, congestion etc and we never went to the hospital for stitches. Just smeared the ointment on and wrapped it up a few days. Then it was all healed. Memaw said even “lockjaw” wouldn’t grow in it. Lol. They were both very praying spiritual God-fearing women. I have never heard anyone call them witches, but that memaw was Cherokee but never told us until we ran our genealogy and asked her. She said you didn’t talk about it bc it wasn’t proper to be considered a half-breed. She was born in 1912. But when we sent our DNA in, we were confused about the Cherokee part. It came back as Iberian peninsula and 73% Welsh Irish Scots. I kept digging and there is some speculation on the Cherokee that maybe they came from there, so there’s that. I know they differed from the other tribes in that they built houses not teepees and had their own written language. So… maybe something to that. But anyway on both sides of my family, most of the girls are nurses. Myself included. And I still use the salve in our family. I love all these stories. Bless everyone of you.

  • @susanurbanczyk9084
    @susanurbanczyk9084 Жыл бұрын

    I loved this video. I learned to dowse. I am now subscribed to your channel. Thank you for sharing these tales with us.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Welcome friend. Your very welcome my friend.

  • @mandyjeanne3124
    @mandyjeanne3124 Жыл бұрын

    I love this so much. my family is east Kentucky Appalachian, and this is a great connection to some of the mysteries of my childhood. I've been researching for a long time. My family kept many secrets. I've gone back home several times, but the mystery only grows deeper.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this my friend.

  • @lakrishamoore1638
    @lakrishamoore16382 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this! My grandpa was a water witch. People would hire him to come out to find water to dig their wells. My great aunt (his sister) showed me all kinds of stuff growing up like how to make protection talismans or her what she called them “her trinkets). As an adult who does practice it’s amazing how much was taught to me from them both. The gifts I have definitely came from that line of family. Btw, your voice is so comforting! You sound like my grandpa!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @billiescott9799

    @billiescott9799

    Жыл бұрын

    You are so fortunate to have this connection.

  • @davebennett7646

    @davebennett7646

    Жыл бұрын

    Great comment, I’m a long long way from the Appellation mountains, way up in North western Ontario. There are Witches here as well…I know them! They’re great people… most of em!

  • @jilleaston1148

    @jilleaston1148

    Жыл бұрын

    You and witch oil gas too. They use dowsing along with companion stones that appear near areas high in the gasses. I've lived in the Appalachian all my life. My great granny was a healer. She'd take collic from a baby by turning it upside down then blowing in its mouth while singing things I didn't understand. Me being epileptic, she called them fits. She said I would be able to take a burn away or stop blood. She wrote words from the Bible n told me to lie still n think on those words. She had 13 kids all at home 3 sets of twins in a row. One set she was picking beans n never left where she was picking had the older girls take the babies inside after she nursed them awhile then back to picking beans. She was never sick a day of her life and born in 1900 died in 1998. My grandaddy passed and she died the same night in her sleep. Ol doc came round and said she'd died healthy as a horse but of a broken 💔 heart. She ne er saw the sun rise again after he passed. She was always my everything.

  • @TheWoodsyintroverts

    @TheWoodsyintroverts

    Жыл бұрын

    My grandpa would have been the medicine witch. He was amazing with a garden and the herbs. ❤️☀️💐

  • @iamauntmeem
    @iamauntmeem2 жыл бұрын

    Back several generations on my mother's side of the family one of my great-grandmothers was a healer. She went from house to house healing people with herbs and her healing gentle touch. She was also, a midwife and delivered the area babies. My grandmother had that healing touch, she just knew what felt good for each of us. Her demeanor adapted to each ill person and could soothe them with her gentle touch and voice. It was not magic, it wasn't witchery it was love for others well being. I believe that is why there are so many nurses in my family.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend

  • @bonniewilliamson110

    @bonniewilliamson110

    2 жыл бұрын

    The people in my family call them the grannies. They knew all the cures they helped everyone and were highly respected

  • @bonniewilliamson110

    @bonniewilliamson110

    2 жыл бұрын

    Funny. I’m a nurse now to❣️

  • @hillbillyHippie
    @hillbillyHippie Жыл бұрын

    This is one of my top favorites videos of yours. Wouldn't mind more like these. Thank you for sharing.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. Thanks for sharing this. Your very welcome.

  • @TheMightyBlackPearl
    @TheMightyBlackPearl Жыл бұрын

    I loved this. Thank you! I found exactly the information I was looking for. I applaud your work, Sir. Thank you, again, truly!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. Your very welcome.

  • @Tea-fg5we
    @Tea-fg5we2 жыл бұрын

    On the American side of my family, my grandmother's folks are from the mountains in NC. She's always been...unnaturally good at growing plants (and she loves doing it. Like I've NEVER seen anybody with that kind of affinity for plants, ever.) Also animals (mostly small animals -- housecats, chipmunks, squirrels, etc.) really love her and are drawn to her, and it's very uncanny. Birds will fly right up to her, squirrels don't seem to mind her existence, and she's always finding injured animals and nursing them back to health...or maybe the injured animals are finding HER lol. Plants that are pretty much on their last legs, too...she can bring them back to life. Bring her your crunchiest, sorriest, most deprived little plant and she'll turn it into the belle of the ball. Her third eye is also wide tf open, because I've never met anyone who was always right in terms of making judgements about people? She can pretty much read someone's vibes and gets what she calls "a gut feeling" or "getting her hackles up" around someone who is bad...and outwardly, you physically couldn't tell. She's the best vibe-checker I've ever met. A guy I was dating came to the house to meet her. My granny had never met/seen him before. He didn't act strangely or do anything out of place, he was chill and we just kinda hung out. But the second he left, she started saying that he was a creep and I should stop seeing him. I didn't really get it at the time and I just thought she was being judgmental. She was REALLY insistent that I stop seeing him, so I did. A few months later, sure enough, the guy turned up on the news convicted of rape -- apparently he had a habit of SA and such. There was NO damn way she could've known that in advance. A time before that, I introduced a friend of mine to her, and granny really seemed to like her. She told me to keep that friend close, because she felt that person was the type of person who would save someone's life at the drop of a hat without being asked to...and years later, that friend helped me get out of a really abusive living situation when pretty much all my other friends had abandoned me. We've been friends for almost 15 years now and continue to keep in touch regularly even when most of my old friends from 10+ years ago have kinda fallen off the bus, so to speak. Additionally, I was told that she took one look at me when was little (when she first saw me) and said she knew I was gonna have a rough time...and I have had a pretty rough life, missing 1 parent to suicide, the other surviving parent suddenly hating me and marrying a stepparent who also hated and abused me, multiple abusive relationships throughout my life, and having to endure some pretty awful medical malpractice.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    She had a gift. Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @cynthiakeller5954

    @cynthiakeller5954

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad she was a part of your life, virtual hugs.

  • @jacoblocklear783

    @jacoblocklear783

    2 жыл бұрын

    My granny was just like the she’s was from nc a town call eunaka

  • @lindaparker6

    @lindaparker6

    Жыл бұрын

    Love to you,and to the blessed people in your life!❤️

  • @1961musiclover

    @1961musiclover

    Жыл бұрын

    💕

  • @gladyskravitzjr825
    @gladyskravitzjr8252 жыл бұрын

    I just found your channel and this is the first video I watched. When you described the medicine witches who could stop nose bleeds with a bible verse the hair on back of my neck stood on end. I watched my own granny do this very thing when I was a child and I have never forgotten that miracle. She lived in the Indian Nations of Oklahoma but her family were Scots that migrated from the Tennessee mountains. She also did other things that scared us to death.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Welcome! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deborahhenning7917 Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @rodneystanger1651

    @rodneystanger1651

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@deborahhenning7917 If you don't mind explaining further, I'm very curious what this gift would be, and would love to hear a deeper explanation. Thanks.

  • @linnymaemullins3319

    @linnymaemullins3319

    2 жыл бұрын

    Scared why?

  • @realcanadiangirl64

    @realcanadiangirl64

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rodneystanger1651 It's a gift from God

  • @rebornlifeandlittlegizmo8991
    @rebornlifeandlittlegizmo8991 Жыл бұрын

    History is fascinating 🙂 thanks Donnie for sharing another wonderful video with us all. I hope your having a blessed day 🙏

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you friend. God bless you.

  • @marinasanford6057
    @marinasanford6057 Жыл бұрын

    I just found you.. 🙌🏽 I’ve had questions about the Appalachian mountains and the people that reside there.. this was an interesting video! I too appreciate that you differentiated between the different types. Not all the same at all.. I love the subjects of the unknown and paranormal .. Thank you

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome, Welcome friend. Thank you. God bless you.

  • @teressa2970
    @teressa29702 жыл бұрын

    Our Granny and Mamaw told us alot of stories about witches. They were God fearing people. They believed in witches. They used old mountain remedies for medicine too. Great great grandparents on both sides are full blooded Cherokee Indians and very proud. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks my friend for sharing.

  • @gotohellenwaite6371

    @gotohellenwaite6371

    2 жыл бұрын

    Granny was from Blackfoot up in West Virginia. My papaw was Irish and won Granny in a poker game. So me being a mutt wasn’t allowed in many of her sides pow wows , but I was Granny’s baby and she was the most strongest , wisest woman I had ever known ( still is to this day and I’m 56 and Granny is long passed on) I got in trouble at school in 4th grade because I was to write a paper on a strong woman in history and I wrote about my Granny. I was told that even though my paper was good I didn’t follow instructions. I argued that she was the strongest woman I knew and would be in my history as part of me. To this day I still feel this in my heart snd am grateful for her being in my life and part of me.

  • @prestonsmith9824

    @prestonsmith9824

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Teresa! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @nancym5341
    @nancym53412 жыл бұрын

    Donnie you brought back an old memory of mine Lordy! When it came time to drill our well at our Chalet in my Dads hometown in New Brunswick Canada I was really young but I remember this! An older man came by with one of my many Uncles. My Daddy told us in English what that man was there for: find drinking water spot to drill well! Our Chalet was in the Bay (salt water). As you said he took out 2 coat hangers and started walking and we were watching!!! I can’t recall if they crossed or split apart but one of the ways indicated FRESH water not SALT. He found the spot said to my Dad in French; “ drill here it’s good!” It cost Dad a bottle of whiskey. By golly they brought in the drill equipment and lo and behold it was the best water we ever tasted!!! I believe that some folks have “gifts” but you have to believe that anything is possible with God! PS: the man’s Granny taught him!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing.

  • @prestonsmith9824

    @prestonsmith9824

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Nancy! How are you doing? I hope you are fine and staying safe?

  • @mikewestwood
    @mikewestwood Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this wonderful storytelling. Also I love your soothing voice and accent.

  • @mistydawn4615
    @mistydawn4615 Жыл бұрын

    I thoroughly enjoyed this video. My meme died before she could give me the verse, and I think the verse you said was it. She always said we could stop blood with a healing touch and a Bible verse. I think my family can continue healing because of you sharing the information. Bless you dearly 🧡 I'm also going to try that water rod thing because my meme always told me about it!!

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    So sorry to hear that my friend. God bless you. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @Inquisitor_Erebus
    @Inquisitor_Erebus2 жыл бұрын

    I love seeing everyone on this page, makes me remember my great grandmother and that culture and tradition will always triumph over modernity.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @TheJohnnyCalifornia
    @TheJohnnyCalifornia2 жыл бұрын

    I’m from Western KY but had plenty of friends and relatives from Eastern KY. My cousin lived there as a kid in the 60’s and when he was a boy he was seriously burned in a kerosene heater explosion. The doctors thought he would die but his parents took him to a local Witcher Man who wrapped him in some foul smelling rags and then said a few prayers over him for a night. He not only lived but today he doesn’t even have scars. I haven’t heard of any witchers anymore but they weren’t uncommon when I was a kid. Probably not that many around since the New Age movement took it all over and packaged it up into a commodity.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @melonieisham9788

    @melonieisham9788

    2 жыл бұрын

    Turpentine, grease and coal oil. It will work on that. We still use it. My memaw’s recipe.

  • @tenessasutton8579

    @tenessasutton8579

    2 жыл бұрын

    there was an old man my gpa told me was a healer. we parked way down at the bottom and walked up 3 miles to see him. no vehicles allowed and you had better been known or u wouldnt have been seen again! i liked it. lol well he was a old man on a porch overhanging that mountain, it looked like the house was going to tip off if he rocked his chair too hard. but i met my cousins and their mom and we played and danced and chased baby ducks till we all fell asleep and i guess pappaw got some peace and shine.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@tenessasutton8579 WOW! Thanks for sharing my friend.

  • @roseredd7895

    @roseredd7895

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m from Appalachian mountains NE region , PA. We still have healers - not called witches anymore dear . Anointed . Yes they still use Ezekiel to heal ! I’m fantastic with plants 🌱 I shop at Walmart for the dead or badly browned ones , bring back to life and have quite a beautiful collection in my yard and kitchen as well as herbal garden all year to cook with . Forage as well - nothing like fresh herbs to cook with and make medicinal cures ! Blessing from God 👍. Loved your video thank you for posting , it’s good to hear something positive about our beautiful area !

  • @CupcakeExplosion
    @CupcakeExplosion Жыл бұрын

    I loved this! Great history and information. Thanks for posting.

  • @donnielaws7020

    @donnielaws7020

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! Your very welcome. Thanks for sharing that my friend.

  • @stoltergeist437
    @stoltergeist437 Жыл бұрын

    I was shown the witching process when I was a boy and use it to this day. My children can do it, but their mother can’t. You gotta have the right heart and mindset. It’s saved me countless times.