[Aztlan] God L's tobacco
D. M. Urquidi
deamayaspin at yahoo.com
Mon Nov 9 10:19:29 CST 2009
Where did the incense come from?
The Buffalo Hunters had to build a fire to cook their dinner of at least one of two of the beasts, so they could do the work necessary on the rest of the carcasses. If they drove a whole herd over the cliff, the burned bones were dinner, and maybe even breakfast for a few days. It would have been work, fun, work and fire would have been very necessary in the evenings during story telling times.
Dea
D. M. Urquidi
dmu Ink
P. O. Box 49485
Austin, Texas 78765
http://www.mayalords.org
http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=4433051
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/ancientamericas/
--- On Mon, 11/9/09, Scott <harview at montana.com> wrote:
> From: Scott <harview at montana.com>
> Subject: Re: [Aztlan] God L's tobacco
> To: aztlan at lists.famsi.org
> Date: Monday, November 9, 2009, 9:36 AM
> On Sun, Nov 08, 2009 at 04:34:24PM
> -0800, D. M. Urquidi wrote:
> > I used one in Canada a long time ago. There was
> one set in the museum , a funny name, Bison Fall Down or
> some such,
> >
>
> Was it in Alberta? "Head Smashed In", perhaps. Excellent
> museum! Just
> north of Ft. Macleod.
>
> My guess would be that as a practical matter the incense
> was probably
> lit just prior to or after cooking up the evening meal, as
> who would
> go to all the trouble of doing a fire-drill just to burn
> some incense?
>
> Scott Swanson
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