By K. Don Munson: While I was soaking and thinking 'I could stay in here for hours', a huge rock landed in the lake behind me as if in response to my thankfulness for the blessing of that space inside a town limits...
Tag: #indigenous
Thomas Johnson on Serpent Mound Crater, Sasquatch and more
In this newly released interview, Thomas Johnson, co-host of the Serpent Mound Star Knowledge Peace Summits in Ohio, talks about Sasquatch and mentions me (SunBôw) a couple times, among many other fascinating topics, including the Serpent Mound impact crater (which he made me visit a couple weeks ago) and some of the paranormal phenomena observed around there...
NW Native Tracker channel
NW Native Tracker channel: Once in a while, we find a channel offering honest and valid information on Sasquatch...
Conversations about Ma’ii Tso with Chizhii L. Bows from Navajo Nation
I connected recently with Chizhii L. Bows from the Dine (Navajo Nation), who has been recommending and citing my books and this SCENIC website in his circles of relatives, as well as on X (Twitter). After a few conversations, he agreed that I published here a few excerpts. Ma'ii Tso is the name by which he calls Sasquatch in his Dine language...
Indigenous Perspectives on Sasquatch (Part 3)
Following Part 1 and Part 2 in this series, here are additional comments on the post about Chiye Tanka or Sasquatch by Indigenous Life Movement.
Indigenous Peoples know Sasquatch
''The existence of Bigfoot is taken for granted throughout Native North America, and so are his powerful psychic abilities. I can't count the number of times that I have heard elder Indian people say that Bigfoot knows when humans are searching for him and that he chooses when and to whom to make an appearance, and that his psychic powers account for his ability to elude the white man's efforts to capture him or hunt him down. In Indian culture, the entire natural world -- the animals, the plants, the rivers, the stars -- is seen as a family. And Bigfoot is seen as one of our close relatives, the "great elder brother.'' --Native quote





























