53 "Defending One's Home"
69Home is where the heart is.
Defending One’s Home
I am sitting here on a dead log from a fallen tree and looking out across a valley at one of the beautiful scenes I have ever witnessed. Not even in magazines have I ever seen anything this amazing. To my left I can see a rumbling waterfall coming out of the mountains. At the base of the waterfall is a small lake surrounded by an array of wild flowers showing almost every color you could imagine. Behind the flowers grow the tallest, greenest pine trees I have ever seen. Down the center of the valley runs a river with a strong flow. From where I am sitting I can actually see trout feeding. Off to my right I can see the end of the valley and it opens to one of the richest pastures I have ever seen. I can see cattle grazing on that green grass.
As I look out across the vast beauty of this “Heaven on Earth”, off to my right I see movement. The movement seems to have appeared out of nowhere, but I do believe it came from the mouth of the valley. As I watch, I can make out the shapes of horses with riders. I watch as they cross the valley floor from the open mouth to the end with the waterfall. As they near the section where I am sitting, even though they are on the other side of the valley, I can see that they are Indians on the horses. I can count a total 11 Indians and 14 horses, 3 of which are pack horses. I watch them as they travel all the way along the valley floor. When they got to the waterfall they seemed to disappear into thin air, almost as if they were ghosts.
This didn’t really surprise me because you don’t see very many Indians in this area any longer. The ones that are still in these mountains don’t associate with the local people. They stay to themselves in their own world somewhere in the mountains. They don’t deal with the “White Man” any more than they have to.
As I was watching these 11 travel across the valley in front of my eyes, almost as though I was in a time warp, it made me think about the way it was back 200 years or so ago, back when the Indians had the free range and the only thing they had to worry about were other Indians and wild animals. What a life that must have been.
Off on another track for a couple of paragraphs. There are the animals that I think of that get basically the same treatment the Indians got back in those days. I always think about animals that live in the wild and have their own way of living, animals such as mountain lions, wolves, coyotes and all other animals that live in the wild. They live their lives the only way they are used to living, by their law, “The Law of the Wild”. They hunt when, where and what they need. Unlike man, who hunt what they want as long as they aren’t being threatened.
Then “man” moves into their territory and all of a sudden they are “dangerous” animals that attack people and their pets. When all they are doing is living on their land, in their territory the way they have for their entire existence and these two legged animals come along and start killing them because they kill for food and their home.
This line of thought can be used in the same way when looking back at the Indians and the way they were treated. They were living on “their” land, hunting and surviving the way they were accustomed to from their beginning. Then along came the “white man” and starts forcing them from “their” land. The Indians reacted the same way anyone would when their livelyhood is being threatened. They react in the same way animals would and do. Just the same way we Americans would react if someone came here and tried to take our homeland away from us. This was land that actually belonged to the Indians before we came along.
Sure, there were men that tried to negotiate and handle things in a peaceful manner on both sides. But then there were men that felt killing was the way to handle business on both sides. “White men were actually the savages and the Indians just reacted the best way they knew how, savagely.
Back when I was in school, in the 50’s and 60’s, we were taught how great the white man was and how they killed the Indians to protect the white settlers. This was true to a point, but it was after Indians were killed, a lot of them for no reason.
Now that I am older I find that the way white man killed the Indians, in too many cases, was to slaughter them. When I hear this I look back at “why” the Indians reacted the way they did. It is called “self preservation”. White man called it savage and murderous the way the Indians would attack the whites.
When I think about what happened to the Indians, I put myself in their position, but in today’s world. If someone came here and tried to take our country, I would react the same way the Indians did.
I was born in this country as a Free American. I have lived my whole life as a Free American. I plan on dying in this country as a Free American. Whether it be of old age or actually die fighting for the freedoms that this country stands for and was founded on. So many Americans have died defending those freedoms. There are so many people ready to give up on those freedoms saying the “government” is taking them away, when in reality, the people are just giving them up.
Greg
vote upvote downshareprintflag
- Useful (2)
- Funny
- Awesome (10)
- Beautiful (4)
- Interesting (5)
CommentsLoading...
A powerful hub Greg. You have a wonderful heart. I too can understand how they felt and they faught back the only way they knew how.
Up and awesome from me too.
Absolutely beautiful! As a student of history I can tell you that history is definately written by the winners. So much of what we were taught in school was simply wrong and a one-sided look at the truth. There are always two sides and the public until just recently was only privey to the "white American" side not the Native American side. Again, great Hub.
Excellent work, Greg.
I'm personally as white as they come--in this lifetime--but have many deep connections with Native Americans, dating back to my fullblood Mandan step-grandmother and forward to my quarter-Choctaw wife.
George Armstrong Custer wasn't actually the worst of the Army types (Chivington, Sheridan, and Baker all come immediately to mind), but for whatever reason, his is the name that raises my neck hairs and curls my lip in a fighting snarl.
Sort of like Obama today.
Voted up and everything but funny.
So sad how the Indians were slaughtered in the early days. We have a situation here in the Sierras where the native black bears are being hunted by so called sportsmen. even though thousands are signing petitions against it, it still is being allowed. Criminal in my opinion> Good hub.
This great a wonderful story to read. Are there still Indians around your house? I love their pottery.
So very true. I've quite often felt sorry for the Indians. There they were a free and proud people and along came the white man and started moving in on their territory. That would make anyone mad and in history their surprised that the Indians attacked the white people. Who was really at fault?
As a child when my sisters, my cousins and I would play cowboys and Indians, I was always an Indian. I always enjoyed reading Native American history and have always felt bad about how they were treated. Even as a young child I knew they were treated unfairly.
As for the animals - I believe the only reason one should kill animals is if you NEED to for food. I think it is sad that people move into an area that houses many different species of animals and then expect the animals not to be animals.
Great writing, as usual!
Your style of writing is excellent. When I read, I can visually see what you are writing about. Excellent.
I lived in Colorado for eighteen years and long to return, I feel as close to the Prime Creator as I ever have felt when I'm alone in the Rockies, mostly Arapaho country (Grand County).
That Hub made me home sick, very good!
Amen, brother! I enjoyed your hub and totally agree with your last sentence!
You are preaching to the choir, brother. Here in Florida, we have a whole different landscape that is too wonderful to believe. People move into a little section that has been cleared, and demand that we should "do something" about the gator that ate their poodle. The Native Americans that are here now are mainly descendants of refuges who vanished into this "howling wilderness" for self preservation from the advancing Americans. They are proud that they never surrendered. I want to make friends with them. It seems like a good idea to learn traditional survival. It might not be long before food can't be found on shelves.
I would love to give those trout a go.
Glad to meet you. I know the Navajo. I believe the first thing we need to do to get our country back on track is to replant the peach trees that Kit Carson burned down to rub defeat in their faces. I am glad he was not a friend of mine!
Good job, Gregas, you are truly a man after my own heart, and thank you for the follow. Referring to WD Curry's comment, right above mine, that Kit Carson must have been a real B******!
Thanks for the link, That's cool. I was wondering if HubPages was worth the time. It is.
Kit Carson was commissioned into the Army to betray his friends. He could have turned down the job, but he was wowed by the fat cats in D.C. (and their opulent lifestyle). He felt sorely inadequate, and bowed to the "greater mind".
I lived in Arizona for awhile as a kid and heard the story in elementary school history. I ran out of edit time testing the link, you'll see why when you go there, but this guy is a recognized authority.
It would do our children and grandchildren well to read some of these stories. I fear they are going to need the knowledge but then who knows maybe the electronic war games they play today will give them a clue.
This is an excellent story. I love the details of the mountains and nature. Brought out wonderful. I watched alot of movies about indians when I was a kid and love how their lifes were so simply. And they only had what they needed. They didnt need the extras like we have today.
What a wonderful Hub, and I salute your summation!
This hub showed back up on my comment feed, and I thought I would share again ... I so agree with all you've written, especially your conclusion ... I was listening today to the introduction to Cry the Beloved Country, and the author was saying how he hoped that one day love ... compassion and caring would overcome the problems in South Africa. It got me to thinking about how, no matter HOW loving and compassionate you might be committed to being, that it is pure suicide to not ALSO have a defense plan. I don't agree with Bush's wars, nor with Obama's spending ... but I so totally believe we need a strong national DEFENSE ... (meaning OUR borders .....)
Greg ... Amen!!!






















Sueswan Level 8 Commenter 8 months ago
I too can understand how the Indians felt.
As Elvis Presley sang
"Walk a mile in my shoes
Before you criticize and abuse
Walk a mile in my shoes"
Voted up and awesome