I love the Four Corners region - the deserts, plateaus and mountains - away from cities, traffic and especially people. I love the views, the air and the serenity.
This was FANTASTIC. As a Southern Utah native you did my state justice. I seriously loved all the questions you asked. Because I have asked myself these very same questions. Everyone has a different reason to why they love the desert, but it really is such a magical, spiritual, and special place. It has such a different feeling to anywhere else in the country. And that is why I will live in the Southwest until my last breath! Thank you for creating this masterpiece! 🌵☀️🏜️
Finally sat down and watched your wonderful film. Watching you walk through those spectacular landscapes my mind flashed back to childhood and another (albiet miniscule by comparison) naturally formed area near our grandparent's home you showed us that we referred to simply as "The Erosion". Your work here has brought me back to that same sense of awe I felt then tho on a much grander scale. Truly beautiful and deserving of all its awards. 📽️🏆😎
Thank you, John, for your kind words and for the memory we share of that time in our youth, newly excited by the emotions of discovery and of amazement at the wonderful and often unexpected forms of our beautiful Earth!
To say the truth it's just wonderful places and shapes, 💕💕سبحان الله العظيم الصانع الحكيم خالق الكون كله ربنا ورب آباءنا وأمهاتنا وأجدادنا وجداتنا ورب كل شيء ، الجميل البديع الصانع الحكيم له الحمد وله الملك وله الكمال وله الشكر حتى يرضىسبحانه❤❤،
Thanks to both of you for your comments. In the desert southwest of the United States, the Ancestral Puebloans and the Desert Archaic Peoples who came before them did not typically create purposed circular burial structures. They either cremated their dead or buried them in mounds, caves, or under the floors of their dwellings. The National Park History site says: “The graves were dug in dry, well protected places-refuse mounds in the caves, niches under overhanging rocks in the canyons, or beneath floors of rooms within the cliff houses.” npshistory.com/nature_notes/meve/vol4-2d.htm Later peoples did create round, mostly underground, “kiva” buildings, but these were for group gatherings and spiritual ceremonies, not for singular burials. True “medicine circles,” however, are often associated with Vision Quests, like the one I undertook in the film: “In a vision quest, the person seeking the vision would lay within this feature to await the vision. In addition, a number of the Plains tribes have traditions involving the Little People. During the vision question, stones are arranged in lines as living symbols of the Little People. During the quest, these stones are fed offerings. The Little People are often associated with the Sun, the Moon, and the Stars.” nativeamericannetroots.net/diary/653 I have personally encountered such beings in my shamanic experiences. You can read of my own approach to the Medicine Circle and Vision Quest at this page on my film’s official website: acircleinthedesert.com/AboutTheVisionQuest.html
I love the Four Corners region - the deserts, plateaus and mountains - away from cities, traffic and especially people. I love the views, the air and the serenity.
This was FANTASTIC. As a Southern Utah native you did my state justice. I seriously loved all the questions you asked. Because I have asked myself these very same questions. Everyone has a different reason to why they love the desert, but it really is such a magical, spiritual, and special place. It has such a different feeling to anywhere else in the country. And that is why I will live in the Southwest until my last breath! Thank you for creating this masterpiece! 🌵☀️🏜️
Thank you very much for your kind comments on my film!
Finally sat down and watched your wonderful film.
Watching you walk through those spectacular landscapes my mind flashed back to childhood and another (albiet miniscule by comparison) naturally formed area near our grandparent's home you showed us that we referred to simply as "The Erosion".
Your work here has brought me back to that same sense of awe I felt then tho on a much grander scale.
Truly beautiful and deserving of all its awards. 📽️🏆😎
Thank you, John, for your kind words and for the memory we share of that time in our youth, newly excited by the emotions of discovery and of amazement at the wonderful and often unexpected forms of our beautiful Earth!
David P Crews ❤❤❤😎
Hi) Positive thoughts to all of you and good luck in your affairs) Peace to your home)
Çok güzel filim çekimleri yapmışsınız çok beğendim . Tanrının güzelliklerinden sadece bir noktasını gördük . Sağolun
Thank you!
I really enjoyed your movie 🎉
Awesome! Thank you for commenting!
I enjoyed watching this beautiful film, thank you!
I am very glad you did! Thank you for commenting.
Great video. keep going.👍
Thank you! I shall, indeed! I appreciate your comment.
To say the truth it's just wonderful places and shapes, 💕💕سبحان الله العظيم الصانع الحكيم خالق الكون كله ربنا ورب آباءنا وأمهاتنا وأجدادنا وجداتنا ورب كل شيء ، الجميل البديع الصانع الحكيم له الحمد وله الملك وله الكمال وله الشكر حتى يرضىسبحانه❤❤،
El círculo es una tumba de un gran personaje para los nativos
una tumba de quien ?
Thanks to both of you for your comments.
In the desert southwest of the United States, the Ancestral Puebloans and the Desert Archaic Peoples who came before them did not typically create purposed circular burial structures. They either cremated their dead or buried them in mounds, caves, or under the floors of their dwellings. The National Park History site says:
“The graves were dug in dry, well protected places-refuse mounds in the caves, niches under overhanging rocks in the canyons, or beneath floors of rooms within the cliff houses.”
npshistory.com/nature_notes/meve/vol4-2d.htm
Later peoples did create round, mostly underground, “kiva” buildings, but these were for group gatherings and spiritual ceremonies, not for singular burials.
True “medicine circles,” however, are often associated with Vision Quests, like the one I undertook in the film:
“In a vision quest, the person seeking the vision would lay within this feature to await the vision. In addition, a number of the Plains tribes have traditions involving the Little People. During the vision question, stones are arranged in lines as living symbols of the Little People. During the quest, these stones are fed offerings. The Little People are often associated with the Sun, the Moon, and the Stars.”
nativeamericannetroots.net/diary/653
I have personally encountered such beings in my shamanic experiences.
You can read of my own approach to the Medicine Circle and Vision Quest at this page on my film’s official website:
acircleinthedesert.com/AboutTheVisionQuest.html
@@JaguarFeatherStudios whoa very interesting, thx for sharing