Saturday, November 28, 2015

Elder's Meditation of the Day November 27


Elder's Meditation of the Day November 27
"The Natural Law is a spiritual law. Its powers are both light and dark."
--Oren R. Lyons, Spokesman Traditional Circle of Elders
There are some characteristics that are evident in the system which the Creator made. He made balance, harmony, and polarity. In other words, every (+) plus has a (-) minus. Every positive has a negative; every up has a down; every problem has a solution. The Spiritual Law is the same - it has light and dark. Both are good, so both need to be honored. Lessons can be learned on both sides.
Great Spirit, teach me the powers of the Natural Laws.

Extraordinary Efforts by BCHW Western Washington Long Ears Chapter to help Extract an Injured Hiker Posted by BCHA on November 16th, 2015

Extraordinary Efforts by BCHW Western Washington Long Ears Chapter to help Extract an Injured Hiker

Posted by BCHA on November 16th, 2015

When mules and horses are golden! - BCHW Western Washington Long Ears Chapter

In July of this year as Sue and I were packing in a team of Biologists to survey the fish population on the North Fork of the Skokomish River in the Olympic National Park I had a field change thrown at us. My park issued radio cracked on as the Hoodsport District Ranger asked me to drop our cargo where I was and return to the Staircase trail head and pack up a big wheeled litter and carry it into the Nine Stream Camp for them. They needed our assistance in getting a hiker out with the litter we to were carry. A hiker that had fallen and broken her knee cap, the rangers hot footed it in to administer aid for the injury and we supported them by getting the litter to them.
Darla and Lizzy packing the disassembled big wheeled litter: Note the round lump in the center of Lizzy's tarp covered garbage cans; it is the big fat tire of the litter. It is suspended on the top inner lips of the garbage cans because the axel had to still remain in place. It did not touch her but to insure for protection of her back I padded the area between it and her with a folded up coffee sack.
We were in on the trail about 2 miles when we had to turn around. The location where we had to stop was not the best it was very narrow causing us to completely block the trail. This was a very busy Saturday and before we had completed off loading and turned around we had more than twenty five hikers coming up hill waiting and another fifteen waiting to come down hill. We had it blocked good but as soon as the hikers learned what we were doing they were more than willing to wait! Once we got back to the trailhead we hurriedly disassembled the litter and loaded it up securely on two of the pack mules. We brought the two extra mules (we would not leave them unattended in a very busy parking lot) with us as we got going in on the eleven and half mile trip. This is a slow trail with no place to make up any time on, so it was a case of when we got there, we got there. One does not want to be in such a rush that you become a problem not the solution!
Loading up the injured hikers and rescue parties packs to haul out on the pack gang!
We had a couple of downed trees on the trail to contend with but we got there in reasonable time. On arrival and after the litter was delivered we were next asked to haul out the injured hiker and her rescue parties packs to free them up to assist in the carry out. We jumped to it and repacked the mules with all of their camp and gear. We were now digging deep into the pre-night time and I wanted to be as far down the trail as I could get before it got too dark. As it turned out we had made it out all but to travel six miles before someone turned out the lights. "Goodness, what a long day!" At the end of the job we had put in a total of twenty two and a half hours and ridden twenty six miles, one job done and one abandoned to a higher priority.
Staircase Ranger Ken Davis and his crew reassembling the big wheel litter. They accomplished it three times as fast as it took us to take apart!
The normal kind of work I do for the Olympic National Park is scheduled during the work week, not on a weekend (less impact on visitors). However, because the normal schedule was going to put me in conflict with another needed pack job we were able to shift days around. But now there was a higher exposure to hiker traffic. In fact on that day we came in contact with well over one hundred and fifty hikers alone or in groups. 
It seems like the first question a hiker meeting a pack string on the trail asks is "where are you going or where have you been?" When they find out we are headed in with the pack string to assist an injured hiker or to supply the needs of a trail crew working to maintain the trails they are currently using we are often applauded and thanked for our efforts. This kind of public relations in the effort to keep stock use on these trails could not be handled better by a high price New York advertising agency! At that moment and in their memory "our mules and horses are golden!"
Ed Haefliger
Coauthor: “The Mountain Canary Company Packers Guide Book” and 
“The Mountain Canary Company Trail Skills and More”
www.mtcanaryco.com E: mail mtcanary@msn.com 360-427-4297
Volunteer Packer: Olympic National Park, Olympic National Forest, Washington State Department of Natural Resources 
Member: Back Country Horsemen of Washington, Western Washington Long Ears Club
- See more at: http://www.bcha.org/blog/2015/11/16/extraordinary-efforts-bchw-western-washington-long/#sthash.1nzyfxiT.dpuf

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Elder's Meditation of the Day November 3


Elder's Meditation of the Day November 3
"A sundance woman is like the morning star, filled with spiritual beauty, wisdom and knowledge. Men and women are the most powerful of the polarities. We walk beside men as equal partners. It takes men and women who have respect and love for one another to live within the embrace of Father Sky and Mother Earth."
--Dr. Henrietta Mann, SOUTHERN CHEYENNE
Our ceremonies bring out the best in us. It's in the ceremony that we find the place of honor and respect for each other. The place where the men honor the women and the women honor the men. We dance for each other. The ceremony helps us remember our responsibility toward each other. Men and women need to be strong, to love one another and be faithful. Only by doing this can we give our children knowledge of good relationships.
Great Spirit, today I will notice the power of the women; today I will notice the power of the men.

Fake People

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Buffalo Calf Road, Heroic Cheyenne Warrior Woman

Buffalo Calf Road, Heroic Cheyenne Warrior Woman

Buffalo Calf Road Woman
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The remarkable story of a young Cheyenne warrior woman in her early twenties, Buffalo Calf Road, spans a period of 3 years from 1876 until her death in 1879. During this time the Cheyenne were caught in the westward expansion of pioneers, miners and the army, all determined to colonize the land on the great plains occupied by native peoples. The Cheyenne and other native tribes endured attacks, massacres and forced removals to reservations.
It is not known how she acquired her skill with a gun, but Buffalo Calf Road first rose to prominence among her people at the Battle of the Rosebud. Since General Crook and his men were seen advancing toward their village, warriors prepared to ride out to stop them. Determined to help save her people, Buffalo Calf Road decided to ride with the warriors despite some opposition to a woman doing so. As the battle raged, she fought bravely. At one point she spotted her brother, Comes In Sight, in a gully below, trapped by soldiers closing in. Immediately, Calf rode down into the gully amidst the flying bullets and, in an amazing rescue, pulled her brother onto her horse and out of the gully to safety. Those warriors observing the scene were greatly impressed, since they themselves had hesitated, thinking the situation too impossible to save Comes In Sight. Victorious, her people named the battle for her, The Battle Where the Girl Saved Her Brother, and called her Brave Woman.
A week later, General George Armstrong Custer led his troops against an encampment of Cheyenne, Lakota and other tribes camped along the Little Bighorn River. Buffalo Calf Road again joined the warriors and fought bravely for her people, the only woman to do so. During the battle, she rescued a young warrior who lost his horse. Again victorious, the tribes regrouped, each going their own way.
Five months later, the Cheyenne village was viciously attacked again by soldiers in the early morning hours. When it was over, more than 40 Cheyenne lay dead, many wounded, and the village burned to the ground. Forced to flee again, this time without blankets, adequate clothing or food, Buffalo Calf Road and her people made their way through a freezing, blinding snowstorm that descended on them. That first night in the icy cold, eleven babies froze to death.
The Indians were relentlessly pursued. Slowly, most of the Cheyenne surrendered. But despite being pregnant, Buffalo Calf Road refused to surrender, holding out with a small group of about 30 Cheyenne “hostiles,” including some children. During this difficult period of extreme hardship, she had a second child. Eventually, with deteriorating conditions and the army’s promise of land of their own, the small band surrendered, only to learn they would be sent south to what is now Oklahoma.
After a long forced march, they arrived in Indian Territory, to an inhospitable land, an unfamiliar climate, unknown diseases, and a circumscribed life. Conditions were so bad, a group of about 300 Cheyenne, including Buffalo Calf Road and her family, determined to return home.
Escaping during the night, mostly on foot, the band began the harsh journey north. Pursued the whole way by the army, they managed to keep going despite numerous battles with the soldiers dogging them. Again, Buffalo Calf Road fought bravely in defense of her people. Exhausted, hungry much of the time, Calf and her people continued on foot for about 1,500 miles.
After arriving north, the group split in two over a disagreement about how to proceed. One group under Dull Knife headed to Red Cloud’s Lakota village, believing they would be sheltered there. But the army captured and imprisoned them at Fort Robinson, demanding they return south. In despair, deprived of food and water, they broke out of prison on a bitterly cold day, only to be massacred. Over 65 Cheyenne men, women and children were killed by the soldiers.
The other group, under Chief Little Wolf, included Buffalo Calf Road. They were able to hide for a period in the Sand Hills of Nebraska. Buffalo Calf Road’s husband, meanwhile, had been slowly descending into a kind of madness and killed Black Crane during an argument. After he was banished, Calf, her children, and a handful of relatives left with him. A short time later, the army captured Little Wolf’s group. Eventually, Buffalo Calf Road’s party was also captured and imprisoned at Fort Keogh, where she died of diphtheria. She did not live to see her beloved Cheyennes settled on land of their own in 1884 in southeastern Montana, a place known as Lame Deer Reservation.

Sources

Since the Cheyenne were a pre-literate people, there are no diaries or records, only oral accounts of those present at these events. So Buffalo Calf Road is known only through oral history accounts of Cheyenne contemporaries, especially two women, Kate Big Head and Iron Teeth who tell of her exploits in interviews. We also have the work of Mari Sandoz who writes of the flight north from Indian Territory based on her interviews of women who were present, especially Old Cheyenne Woman. Most of the men who fought with Buffalo Calf Road failed to mention her exploits with the notable exception of Wooden Leg, a warrior who fought with her. He told of her heroic acts, providing a detailed account of her in battle and during the period when she gave birth, before the small band of 30 surrendered. There are no photos of her, but there are two ledger book sketches: Yellow Nose depicts her saving her brother in battle and Amos Bad Heart Bull draws her riding into battle with her brother.

Buffalo Calf Road Woman: The Book

Buffalo Calf Road Woman: The Story of a Warrior of the Little Bighorn, by Rosemary Agonito and researched by Joseph Agonito, won the prestigious 2006 Western Heritage Award for Best Western Novel.

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Elder's Meditation of the Day October 13


Elder's Meditation of the Day October 13
"So unbelievable things like that happen. But you have to believe it first. Not wait until you see it first, then touch it, then believe it... You have to say it from the heart."
--Wallace Black Elk, LAKOTA
The power of our belief system is incredible. The power of faith is a very natural power. How do we have faith? Inside of our minds we form a mental picture with our self talk. Self talk is recorded in our minds in three dimensions - words that trigger a picture, which has a feeling or an emotion attached to it. Once we get the words and the picture, it is the emotion that makes the idea turn into a belief. You get the right emotion by saying things from the heart. The heart is the source of emotions which can cause unbelievable things to happen.
Great Spirit, with You everything is possible.