Thursday, September 6, 2007

"Kachina History" Lonnie and Patrick

Try and be patient with me as I try to get these things taught to me from head to hand. Mind faster than fingers, thank you. The last 20 years the "Gods" have forced me to set down and study, while others went off to work, I always had enough money to pay the bills. Stories told about how the Kachinas, led the early "Hopi" migration families on there journeys are incredible. There would be this great aerial battles to protect them from, I don't know what? You can find these stories in Thomas E. Mails and Frank Waters books and others. The wood for a Kachina has to be, from the root of a dead cottonwood tree, from the banks of the Verde River. But where on the banks of the Verde River, can't be just any where, the "Hopi" aren't that way. Verde River runs all the way from Paulden Az. to Salt River near Mesa Az. Lonnie and Patrick said the ancestors would make the journeys as part of spiritualism of the "Kachina Doll", that's why the wood could only be from certain location, but where? Lonnie and Patrick didn't know either. Then one day my martian bud called, said I know you have been chasing that "Hopi" thing around and I want to tell you what on found on computer topography map. At a point near where Fossil Creek spills into the Verde River, there's a spot that is one of the darkest spots on the planet, I said that just make sense with all the other secret stuff about the "Hopi". Also I'm sitting on a great "UFO" photo with space craft just above that location in the air.(publish latter) Photo was taken at an old Geronimo look-out post above Childs Az.(Az. 1st. power plant). From the location you can see from Williams Az. all the way to Globe Az. east and west, and to the north, Flagstaff AZ., "Hopi" res., "Navajo"res., Mogion rim, east to New Mexico. The secrets of the "Ant People" and the "Hopi" past, it just fit. Latter I would run into a guy at the Heard Muesum in Phoenix Az. selling cotton wood root from Verde River to the Hopi carvers there selling there ware's. I asked him from where on the river, I wanted to know if he knew what I knew, he said my friend has a farm on the banks, near Camp Verde, a small village, I kept my mouth shut, not wanting him to strip canyon of it's cottonwood root, he was a honkie. Most Hopi Kachina carver don't, if any, go them selves to the river and find wood, they wait for some honkie to bring it by, sad the white way has invaded there culture. Most only think of the money and a way to pay there bills. Now, why do the "Hopi" carve the Kachina's for all these thousands of years. I think that when the "Ant People" lived with them , they started carving what they saw out of respect and to remember where they came from, meaning them selfs the "Hopi". The "White Brother" have lost there' "spirit " and the poor "Hopi " are closing in on them. bye #10

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