According to local geomancy, Singapore is the dwelling place of five "hidden dragons," each representing a regional energy line that contributes to the nation's success. The Central Dragon
The grave was unmarked, just a low mound of laterite stones under a angsana tree. Mei Lin placed her grandfather’s journal on the stones. Then she took a small kris he had left her – its blade wavy as a snake’s dream – and drove it into the earth. ley lines singapore
Whether ley lines are objective geophysical realities or subjective psychological projections, they offer a compelling lens to re-see Singapore. Beneath the sterile efficiency of the MRT map lies an older geometry of sacred hills, hot springs, and keramats. The lines may be broken, buried under Orchard Road, or diverted by a HDB block—but the island’s granite heart still hums. As one local geomancer put it: “The dragon is not gone. It just learned to live in the shadow of cranes.” According to local geomancy, Singapore is the dwelling
Dowsers claim that between Fort Siloso and Mount Faber (connected by the cable car), the line is hot—causing electromagnetic anomalies. At the peak of Mount Faber, which offers a sweeping view of the southern islands, dowsing rods reportedly spin wildly. Paranormal investigators flock to the old railway tracks near Keppel Hill Reservoir (off this line) believing the energy fuels ghost sightings. Then she took a small kris he had