SIGNAL HILL
MUSINGS
February, 2004
By
Richard D. Seifried
The following musing was written in November, 2003.
I’m sitting on a bench at the rock
overhang, located at the Blue Spring National Heritage Center, just
a few miles west of Eureka Springs, Arkansas.
Above me a jet intrudes upon my
contemplations. Now it is gone. Only the splashing of
water, flowing from the great spring to the White River, assails my
ears. Thirty eight million gallons of clear, cold water flow
from the spring every day.
Heat
from the slanted late autumn sun strikes my bare head and naked
arms. The experience, so unusual for November, makes me aware
of the reason why the shallow cave was so often used as a
campsite. Even in winter, if the sky is clear, there is
warmth. Too, the rock wall behind me absorbs heat and will
radiate it outward far into the night. When the heat of summer
comes, the sun is further north and shadows keep the shelter cool as
does the coolness emanating from the stone wall.
This past summer John Twohawks,
Bill Twohorses, the owners of The Cherokee Store and many others
held a spiritual healing ceremony, right here where I sit.
Flute Music. Chanting. Drumming. Rattles.
John honored me by having me carry an eagle wing down the hill to
this sacred place. Of course, my Jean was with us.
The ceremony was a spiritual
healing one. Some of the Cherokee who participated in the
Trail of Tears march, the awful journey from Tennessee to Eastern
Oklahoma, came to this very spot.
The great Blue Spring emitted curative waters, as many other area
springs once did. It had always been a very special place, a
holy one, sacred for thousands of years.
Archaeologists have determined
that where I now sit was occupied sporadically, between 8,000 BC and
AD 1500. Very possibly, unknown to us, my place for
contemplation had also been visited by The Little People of
not-so-long-ago. Too, it seems certain that the giant ones,
those that we jokingly ridicule and call Bigfoot or Sasquatch, came
here and perhaps still do. Sightings by very credible people
persist in this part of the Ozarks.
Between 500 BC and AD 900 the
culture we call, Woodland, inhabited this region. We do know a
little about them. Much of their time was spent tending small
gardens, learning how to harvest seeds for flour and other food
items. Locally, here in the Ozarks, the Woodland people
domesticated little barley, maygrass, lamb’s quarter, knotweed,
swampweed, sunflowers and squash. All were developed by local
people living in the Ozarks, during the Archaic Period.
Corn, such an essential crop, came from
Mexico, but was also raised here that far back in time.
During the Mississippi Era, AD
900 to AD 1541, most inhabitants were agricultural people.
They grew the Three Sisters; corn, squash, and beans. As
always an abundance of wild animals made up a major portion of their
diet.
After AD 1500, this stone
shelter became just a temporary campsite, used by hunters and people
traveling through the area.
Being
here reminds me of my boyhood days. I spent many days walking
along the Great Miami River, in Ohio. Like now, here, only
natural sounds could be heard.
Sometimes I would stare in wonder at the rotting, log-stockade, that
was then sliding downhill, into the remnants of what was once the
important Miami Erie Canal. The stockade was called, Fort
Piqua. Settlers, at least once, sought protection from Indians
within its tiny fortification.
There I was, looking at history rotting away, possibly the only
person who knew that the ruins still remained. Could be that
no one else cared.
I also knew
where the much older Fort Pickawillany, once stood, an imposing
bastion against the enemy during what we know as The French and
Indian War. I believe that the modern archaeologists are
incorrect. They put the site in an adjacent field to where I
thought it had been located.
Across Ohio State Highway 66, to the west, up on a high field, I
used to walk amid a huge pre-historic fortification. Rocks
marked where palisades stood. The fortified city had been
closed on three sides. On the north it was secured, not by a
gate (gates were not yet invented) but by staggered log walls, thus
enabling occupants to easily enter and leave but preventing spears
and darts from being hurtled into the town proper.
Now, that is gone, too. The
rocks have been collected and hauled away. The land has been
plowed sixty times since I was last there. All possible
artifacts have been broken or turned beneath the black soil.
Just south of the old fortress of
prehistoric man one can still see a cut, a tiny lane blasted out of
the hillside, going uphill to the same field where the town once
stood. General Harmar’s engineers did that, just before the
Indians drove them back to Kentucky. The lane is the only
remnant of what was known as Harmar’s Trace.
All of the above was, and still
is, exciting to me, possibly the only person yet alive who knows
that history.
So, I sit here at
Blue Spring. A fox squirrel chucks away in some distant
tree. A crow calls. Just one crow. Then,
silence. Blue sky. Cirrus clouds and the great Blue
Spring’s lovely pool, laying in a man-made circle, just a few yards
away.
I wish that you could
be here. Alone. Absorbing such a beautiful experience,
engrossed in your own, special personal contemplation.
Perhaps some day----
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A WORD FROM JEAN
You can join Richard Seifried’s “Fans & Friends” in receiving
Signal Hill Musings each Month absolutely FREE. Get the inside
scoop on his lectures, personal inspirations, hobbies, philosophies
and interests and activities. Just e-mail me at musings@signalhillenterprises.com and say “Send me
the Signal!” and you will continue to receive yours via e-mail every
month.
For Book Signings at your favorite bookstore or Lectures on Nature,
Ecology, Preservation of our Forests and Wildlife, Indian Lore,
etc., contact Jean Seifried via E-MAIL Me!.
Thanks to everyone for your wonderful support by purchasing Medicine
Grizzly. Thanks for your support, Vol. II, The Warrior Angels
is now available and Richard's book for children, A Voice From The
Forest is now available also. This series has long been a
dream of Richard’s and now, thanks to all of you, it is
materializing. Best wishes to each one of you!
Jean ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~