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Sunday, November 13, 2022







local circle Fire charcoal with stone, Water, Air and Earth...
Wallkill River
Esopus NY

 


 

∆ ∆ ∆

intersecting ripples

familiar imaginings

repetitive structures

 


greeted with 38˚, Pigeons, Belted Kingfisher, "Male and female Belted Kingfishers give strident, mechanical rattles in response to the slightest disturbance. When threatened they may give screams, which males sometimes combine with harsh calls."

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Belted_Kingfisher/sounds

it flew away South up river screaming stridently while marking...

grounding back with my warm car Pigeons, who shelter with Perrines' covered bridge, had left, Bald Eagle appears, greeting with wing tip and hovering and South up river...


"First page of the 1665 treaty, prohibiting violence between "Christians" and "Indyans"
The Esopus Indians (pr. es-SOAP-es) was a tribe of Lenape (Delaware) Native Americans who were native to [Southern] New York, specifically the region of the Catskill Mountains. Their lands included modern-day Ulster and Sullivan counties.
The tribe fought a series of conflicts against settlers from the New Netherland colony from September 1659 to September 1663, known as the Esopus Wars, in and around Kingston NY. At the conclusion of the conflict, the tribe sold large tracts of land to French Hugenaut refugees in New Paltz NY and other communities.[2]
Descendants of the Esopus tribe now live on the Stockbridge - Munsee Community reservation in Shawano County, Wisconsin and among the Munsee Delaware of Ontario Canada. Historians believe surviving Esopus joined with the Ramapough Mountain Community of New Jersey following the wars, as well as some Wappinger people after Kieft Warin 1643.[3]"...
References
1  ^considering the title of "An Agreement made between Richard Nicolls Esq. Governor under his Royal Highness the Duke of Yorke and the Sachems and People called the Sopes Indyans" from 1665, shown at right
2  ^Eric Roth, “Relations between the Huguenots of New Paltz, N. Y. and the Esopus Indians”, Huguenot Historical Society, (10/8/1998, Revised 3/15/1999)
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^Kraft, Herbert C. (1986). The Lenape — Archaeology, History, and Ethnography. New Jersey Historical Society. p. 241. ISBN 0-911020-14-4.



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art with Earth blog, charcoal, collaborative with Nature, eco-environmental land art, fractals, quantum field, webh


 

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