Monthly Archives: October 2023

Southwest Road Trip: Monument Valley Monsters

According to Navajo legend, the red sandstone buttes of Monument Valley that stand 1,000 feet above the desert floor, trap long-defeated monsters that are part of the Navajo creation story. Monument Valley is a Navajo Tribal Park and almost everything here is Native owned and operated. We are here for three nights, spending the first night at Gouldings in Utah, and the second night at The View Hotel, just across the border in Arizona. On Wednesday, October 4, we took a 4 p.m. to dusk tour with Chris, our Navajo guide from The Three Sisters Navajo Guided Tours. The tour was spectacular and Chris gave us both a cultural and personal history of the region, making it extra special.

We are in an ancient sea bed of red sand rich in iron ore, outcroppings of juniper trees, grasses, sage, and yellow-blooming chamisa. Once, millions of years ago, the mesa was at the top of these monster spires, which give the landscape a other-worldly appearance. We could be on the surface of an unknown planet. If you want to read more about the geology, click here.

Anthropologists generally agree that the Navajo came to North America some 6,000 years ago from north Asia, moving from Canada south into the American southwest and Monument Valley about 500 years ago. To read about the Navajo creation story, click here.

Our tour, on a dirt and sandy trail, took us into the far reaches of the valley, where erosion, wind, shifts in the earth, create phantasmagorical sculptures on the 7,000+ foot high desert floor that is part of the Colorado Plateau. In the distance, we can see Bears’ Ears, the latest national monument to be created by the Obama administration. Chris tells us that under the 45th President, there was a move to sell off the lands to private mining interests that was then reversed by Joe Biden. Still, the region is in peril of mining development because of strong lobbying interests.

Monument Valley is an icon of the America west. In the 1930’s, Henry Goulding, who had established a trading post here in the 1920’s, needed a source of income during the Great Depression. He went to Hollywood and convinced director John Ford to film Stagecoach starring John Wayne in his breakthrough role. The film was released in 1939. Goulding constructed lodge rooms and dining facilities to host film crew and actors. The rest is tourism history!

On this trip we have heard a multitude of languages here: Italian, German, Dutch, Russian, Slavic languages, Korean, Japanese, Dine (a southern Athabaskan language) spoken by the Navajo or Dine people, Spanish, and English. Tourists are here from all over the world!

If you want to know more about the history of the Dine people, please read the epic book Blood and Thunder, by Hampton Sides, about the conquering of the American west and the key characters who waged war and appropriated the land, including Kit Carson.

We made a stop to visit a rug weaver who raises Churro sheep on the reservation, cards and spins the wool, and who was born in a hogan (pronounced Ho-Wahn) next to where she conducted her demonstration. She tells us that winters have changed — there may be one foot of snow when in recent years there was six feet or more during the winter. Now, it is just windy and bitterly cold from December through early March.

Our guide Kris Chee, age 41, has only returned to Monument Valley, the original home of his family, a year ago. He had a yearning to return to his roots after working outside, telling us that there is little employment here other than tourism. His dad, who was in the US Army, was stationed in Fayetteville, North Carolina, for many years, and that is where he grew up. He returned here to finish high school and left again. Now, he drives a big Toyota Tacoma 8-cylinder truck that hauls a trailer to hold passengers intent on seeing the valley, explaining the lore as we make various stops to see buttes, climb sandhills, and oggle at ancient petroglyphs carved in rocks by Anasazi predecessors.

On our way back to the Visitor’s Center, we made a stop at Navajo Code Talkers point. The spot honors the young men who created an unbreakable code for communication during WWII based on the Dine language. This is an important part of our collective history to recognize the contributions of Native American culture.

Kris is intent on understanding and practicing native rituals and beliefs as he embraces traditional Navajo life. These are based on how to live in harmony with nature and other people. Something we can all learn to do better!

Tomorrow, Friday morning, we leave for Mesa Verde. To be continued!

Southwest Road Trip: We are on Hopi Time

The Hopi Nation is situated atop three magnificent mesas in eastern Arizona, about an hour-and-a-half across the New Mexico border. They are in their own time zone — Mountain Standard Time — where time never changes and we have been confused since we arrived here! Mostly because the rest of the surrounding world is an hour later. Our phones and computers are confused, too. My phone records MST while my computer records Mountain Daylight Time. We are constantly doing a time check.

Zuni dancers visit Hopi pueblo for Harvest Festival

The same has been true in Teotitlan del Valle, Oaxaca, where time also never changed until this year when Mexico did away with daylight savings time. Before that, we were always asking, Is it Teotitlan time or Oaxaca city time when making dates and appointments! I’ve said repeatedly over the years that the Mayas believed that those who controlled time controlled the world. Here, this is true, too.

Today, when we visited katsina carver Eli Taylor at his humble home between the Second and Third Mesas, he told us, Hopi time is when you are good and ready. Time does not stand still, but it is definitely not a priority to mind the clock in indigenous culture. Life has its own rhythms based on planting and harvesting, tribal celebrations and rituals, community and family commitments.

On Sunday afternoon, we arrived on the Hopi Second Mesa, checked into our room at the Hopi Cultural Center, then made our way to the Hopi Veteran’s Memorial Hall for the fall harvest celebration that included traditional dancing and a artisan trade fair. We were the only Anglos there! It was an amazing gathering of tribal arts that included food, jewelry, pottery, painting, and clothing. We saw handmade moccasins. We met artisans from the region, but also those who traveled from the Zuni, Kewa and Navajo nations to sell. The prices were amazing because they were selling to each other and not to a tourist audience.

On Monday, we had scheduled a morning meeting with basket maker Marvene Dawahoya and her husband, Nuvadi who carves katsina’s from cottonwood root. I had met them at the Free Indian Market in Santa Fe in August a couple of years ago. When we drove up, we were greeted by them and the sight of native corn drying on racks in front of the house. We learn that the corn is grown using the dry farming method: the seeds are planted a foot deep and three feet apart. Leaves are stipped from the stalk, leaving only three at the pinnacle, so that all the energy goes into making the kernels. This is ancestral corn, adapted to a dry climate, a technique passed down through the generations. Useful for global warming? I think so! The ancients have much to teach us.

Marvene goes into the valley below to cut the yucca leaves. She soaks and strips them, colors them and then weaves them. Nuvadi makes the rim ring from sumac branches using traditional methods.

Nuvadi comes from the Spider Clan. Marvene is from the Bear Clan, recognizing the power of the region’s Black Bear. All of the Shungopavi village leaders must be members of the Bear Clan. When a man marries, he becomes part of his wife’s clan — lineage is passed through the mother. But it is the man who who has the honor and responsibility for naming the children.

They explained to us that Hopi people believe they emerged from the bottom of the Grand Canyon, a sacred place for them.

We spent several hours with them at their humble home in Shungopavi village as they talked about their craft and their culture, gifting us with field grown squash and Piki, a Hopi-style blue corn bread made from meal that is cooked on a hot stone (like a comal) so it has the thin crunchy consistency of phyllo leaves, then rolled to look like a taco. Marvene said it can be crumbled into water to eat like a pudding, or just eaten hand to mouth as we did. Delicious!

After a picnic lunch, we set out to find Eli Taylor, a katsina carver who I also met at the Santa Fe Free Indian Market. He is building a one-room concrete block home on land his grandmother gifted him, just outside the gates of the Veteran’s Memorial building. Eli, who is almost age 70, is doing all the construction himself. He’s been carving and painting cottonwood root since age ten, a skill he learned from his uncle, and uses mostly natural pigments. He tells us the story of his original name: Wajshi (we don’t really know the spelling). When his father was born, the hospital couldn’t pronounce the family name, so they gave him the last name of Taylor on the birth certificate! And, so it goes.

Eli shows at the Heard Museum in Phoenix and is considered to be one of the finest katsina carvers in the region. He farms, grows watermelon, and gave us a melon as a gift when we departed.

I made a mental note of this similarity to Oaxaca. Often, in Teotitlan del Valle, I am given a gift of eggs or avocados or squash or chocolate as a thank you for visiting.

Of course, we left with treasures that we will cherish forever (or for the remaining years of our life!). I think one of the greatest pleasures we have is to meet artisans and support them where they live and work, ensuring that 100% of the cost of what they make goes directly to them.

Tomorrow, October 3, we will be on the road, first to Tuba City and the Painted Desert, then on to Monument Valley. To be continued.

Southwest Road Trip: Zuni Pueblo to Gallup, NM

There are 23 Native American tribes in New Mexico. In Oaxaca, we count 16 distinct indigenous groups each with their own language. My sister and I decided to do a Southwest road trip about six months ago instead of making an international trip. We chose to do a wide circle starting from Albuquerque (ABQ), traveling to Zuni Pueblo, then on to the three Hopi Mesas in Arizona, up through Monument Valley, on to Mesa Verde, Canyon de Chelly, and Chaco Canyon before returning to Albquerque and then to Taos.

The Zuni people live on native lands about two-and-a-half hours west of ABQ. We signed up in advance for a tour operated by the Zuni Cultural Center, where we met Shaun, a cultural interpreter, who took us on a tour of the original pueblo called Middle Village. The name Zuni, Shaun told us, is an abbreviation of the Spanish Conquistador Gaspar de Zuniga, who colonized New Mexico with Juan de Oñate. Their original name is A’shiwi.

The Zuni are known for their exquisite silversmithing and fine inlay work called petit point, using predominantly turquoise and coral. He explained that about 75% of the village is engaged in the artisan craft of jewelry making, but most are only able to sell through middle men, who take a 40-50% commission from the retail price. This is a familiar number to me, since this is what tour guides in Oaxaca charge artisans when they bring tourists to workshops and studios and the customer makes a purchase. Finding markets to sell directly to clients is difficult for most artists and artisans, who are makers and not promoters.

Isolation amidst exquisite landscape enabled the Zuni people to survive despite Spanish colonization, and then later expansion of the American west. This is a similar story to that of Zapotec, Mixtec and Mixe pueblos in Oaxaca; remote mountain villages were able to retain original language and culture because they were far from the colonizers. In the Zuni pueblo, we could feel the isolation and see the struggle to achieve economic well-being.

We left the pueblo in late afternoon and headed toward Gallup where we found a room at the El Rancho Hotel on the original Route 66. This is a memorabilia hotel is steeped in history of the silver screen. Hollywood directors made this hotel their headquarters for western films shot in the region. The two-story lobby boasts photos of John Wayne, Errol Flynn, Henry Fonda, Shirley Temple (as an adult), Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, Kirk Douglas, Gregory Peck, Ronald Reagan, and more!

Vintage Navajo rugs adorn the walls. Movie star photos, leather banquettes, antlers, carved table lamps with cowhide shades, a floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace add to the old-timey atmosphere. And, the restaurant is always packed, likely the best place in town to eat. What’s yummy? Enchiladas with Christmas sauce (red and green salsa), and a Prickly Pear Margarita to wash it down.

The next morning, we set out for Ganado, Arizona, and the historic Hubbell Trading Post, a mid-way stop on our way to the Hopi Mesa. The trading post is the oldest operating in the Navajo Nation, and is operated by the National Park Service. To be continued.