SmugMug > keywords > phi > Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville

Originally i collaged a number of Google Earth images, including 3-D views, my paintings (and a Miro that was an accidental CLICK) and the centerpiece was my friend Rick from Jville. This was captured on Google Earth street camera. What are the odds of this? A biker captured on his Triumph in his front yard? A split second in the Google-Earth-mapping process.

I finally managed to get a portrait shot of Rick rather sneekily on my Apple iphone. He has incredible facial tattoos (Maori: 'moko') and you can just detect these above his glasses. The miracle of digital phi-tography allowed the Google-Earth image of Rick on his bike to be reflected in his glasses. 

Hence the title 'Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville'

courtesy of inanga, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox November 2009
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Avatrix Wambie finally makes it to the Getty Center, LA

She finally got her Oscar in person. I was out in Wellington yesterday and she was insisting on a collage of part of the city. So it looks like the Wambie gets her way!

pix by inanga, the rest courtesy of Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009

inanga
SmugMug > keywords > phi > The Search for Peace on Battlefield Earth

collage courtesy of inanga, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009

inanga
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Folding and Faulting, MacDonnell Ranges, Northern Territory, Australia

acrylic and oil on canvas board 2008 [temporary photo]

inanga
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Los Meurtos, near Tempe, Phoenix, Arizona

Strange, but thet still celebrate this Day of the Dead in Los Muertos, near Tempe - the day when the Pima and the Papago (Tohono O'odham) overcame the Hohokam and cast them out. Again, you rightly ask - what has this to do with a treasure hunt in the Superstitions? Quite a lot. We know the treasure is being protected - the list of 'los muertos' - the Dead - being found in the Superstitions is far greater than any other similar lair of treasure hunters.

The battle between the 'old' ones and the Tohono o'Odham ('the people of the finger language, [Odham = Ogham]) has a lot to do with what is going on in the Superstitions, now, tomorrow, whenever. If you think you have no 4-D foes then boy (or girl) are you in for a little surprise. Between the 28th and 31st of October if you are anyway in downtown Phoenix you will see the 'dead' reemerge in ghoulish masks - some are even riding motorbikes. Let's say that out in 'them thar hills' they are lurking all the time.

Now Latter Day Saints, i am going to explain to you why you should have brought the Book of Mormon. This battle of long ago is mentioned in detail in your 'good' Book. Several clues are laid therein, between the lines so to speak. What you will read in that repository of wisdom is accurate, only the names have been concealed.

For example all negotiations with the Tohono o'Odham and their allies in the Superstitions is done using the septagesimal [7] system of Mosiah as this wiki feed explains:

'Measuring system

In Alma 11, Mormon lists "the names of the different pieces of their gold, and of their silver" and their relative value (Alma 11:4). It is unclear what kind of system "reckoning" and "measure" refer to, although most Book of Mormon scholars now believe they were weights, not coins. Mormon explains that

'the names are given by the Nephites, for they did not reckon after the manner of the Jews who were at Jerusalem; neither did they measure after the manner of the Jews; but they altered their reckoning and their measure, according to the minds and the circumstances of the people, in every generation.' (Alma 11:4)

Mormon then explains that this fluctuating system was replaced with a standard system established by Mosiah². Such a uniformity of measuring systems would have done much to unify the newly formed society, streamline the calculation of exchange rates in long-distance trade, and increase trade revenue.

Gold units 	    Silver units 	  Relative value (in measures of barley) 	Equivalent
limnah 	    onti 	                7
shum 	    ezrom 	                4
seon 	    amnor 	                2
antion 		                      1½
senine 	    senum 	              1 	a measure of barley; one day for a judge
	        shiblon 	              ½ 	half a measure of barley
	        shiblum 	              ¼
	        leah 	                      ⅛

[Ed: having trouble aligning these.]

One of the apparent purposes of this system was economy of use. A set of weights that contained one of each unit could be used to measure out increments of up to 14 units without needing two of the same weight. Thus, a Nephite merchant could use his small personal set of weights for a range of products being sold instead of relying on a large quantity of weights.[4]'

If you are really serious about getting to use these units out in the wild you better familiarize yourself with this book - 'The short, swift time of gods on earth: the Hohokam chronicles' by Donald M Bahr as it correlates very closely with the Book of Mormon. As i said, maybe just with a change of characterization. If you are confronted with certain questions out in the Superstitions, and you are half way up the Peralta Trail already, you may need to have a knowledge of this book as bargaining background with the Tohono o'Odham.

In the spring of 1935 Juan Smith and William Smith Allison, who both lived on the Gila Indian Reservation [just below Chandler on the clue map above], sang and spoke their story to Julian Hayden. Julian was then a resident of Tucson and had devoted his life to writing on Hohokam archaeology, particularly on archaeological digs relating to Tohono o'Odham culture in the region of the Salado and Gila river valleys.

The recorded words and songs of the two Pima Songsingers were interpreted by Donald Bahr, Professor of Anthropology at Arizona State University, and author of 'Pima-Papago Ritual Oratory' (1975) and 'Piman Shamanism and Staying Sickness' (1974).

As the blurb states:

'Now this extraordinary document is presented in its entirety for the first time.

Beautifully expressed and composed of thirty-six stories, the narrative constitutes a kind of scripture for a native church, beginning with the creation of the universe out of the void and ending in the sixteenth century of present-day villages.

Central to the story is the murder/resurrection of a god-man, Siuuhu, who summoned the Pimas and Papago (Tohono o'Odham) as his army of vengeance and brought about the conquest of his murderers, the ancient Hohokam.' [ISBN 0-520-08468-3].

If you merely and simply substitute 'Tohono o'Odham' for 'Nephites' and 'Hohokam' for 'Lamanites' you are starting to get close to some old truths. Check out this about the Book of Mormon courtesy of wikipedia:

'Chronology

The books from 1 Nephi to Omni are described as being from "the small plates of Nephi".[43] This account begins in ancient Jerusalem around 600 BC. It tells the story of a man named Lehi, his family, and several others as they are led by God from Jerusalem shortly before the fall of that city to the Babylonians in 586 BC. The book describes their journey across the Arabian peninsula, and then to the promised land, the Americas, by ship.[44] These books recount the group's dealings from approximately 600 BC to about 130 BC, during which time the community grew and split into two main groups, which are called the Nephites and the Lamanites, that frequently warred with each other.

Following this section is the Words of Mormon. This small book, said to be written in AD 385 by Mormon, is a short introduction to the books of Mosiah, Alma, Helaman, 3 Nephi, and 4 Nephi.[45] These books are described as being abridged from a large quantity of existing records called "the large plates of Nephi" that detailed the people's history from the time of Omni to Mormon's own life. The book of 3 Nephi is of particular importance within the Book of Mormon because it contains an account of a visit by Jesus from heaven to the Americas sometime after his resurrection and ascension. The text says that during this American visit, he repeated much of the same doctrine and instruction given in the Gospels of the Bible and he established an enlightened, peaceful society which endured for several generations, but which eventually broke into warring factions again.' 

For the battles which followed go directly to the Book of Mormon: http://scriptures.lds.org/en/3_ne/4

[more to come...Ed] 

clue courtesy of Spider Grandmother [if you stand back you will see her], Google Earth [the treasure hunt clue map], a Phoenician cactus [Devil's tongue barrel or Crow's claw barrel, 'Ferocactus latispinus'], Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox October 2009

inanga
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Double Vision

'Cappella di Vitaleta' overlaid on Google Earth Panorama

Original painting by inanga, digital wizardry by Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Rainbow Serpent, Kata Juta, Australia

The rainbow serpent is pivotal in all the stories of the Dreamtime, perhaps mostly in the people of west Arnhem land. For more images and explanations see: http://www.aboriginalartonline.com/culture/rainbow.php
SmugMug > keywords > phi > Massacre Grounds

Before you make your first step across Fremont Saddle you had better read this - me and my first visit to the Massacre Grounds, and a little 'background'. And so close to the Valley of Armageddon - it's almost like 'A'm-a-gettin'' outa' here. This was all a few years back.


Back then, i took a shuttle down to Phoenix and then hitched out to the Golden Hillside Mine in Lost Dutchman State Park. I checked my pack to see if all i needed was there. I struck out east across the road to the area known as the Massacre Grounds. i had to appease the ancestors by leaving stones there, so i set up a small fire and lay out my sleeping mat and bag. 

Over this i erected a small plastic sheet, in the unlikely event of rain. It was in earshot of the road. My idea was to enter the heart of the Superstitions and wait until i was trapped in the loop. It was late afternoon and i was exhausted after the preparations of the day before. After i had made a hot drink with my second to last bottle of water i crept into my sleeping bag and lay thinking. I had a grasp of all the clues but i didn't want to think too much of them at this stage. I half knew that the gold was just a reason to get me into these mountains. 

Humphrey Bogart had been here before searching for the treasure of the Lost Dutchman in a Hollywood movie called 'The Treasure of the Sierra Madre'. He and his companions were gripped with the cursed madness tearing at their very being. Laughter echoed in the valley of the Massacre Grounds. And then there was howling, screaming, anguish, and blood curdling yells. There was slaughter all around. The Apaches fired volleys of arrows at the scared foreigners. They penned them into a ravine. They screamed to their God for mercy, vomited, choked and stood on the precipice of death. From above, the attackers rolled boulders and these fell through the darkness striking the life from those below. They were helpless in their armor, suited more to the jousting field. The Apaches cursed them as their souls departed this world. 

Their chief spoke:

'You come to steal our gold. Why do you treasure it so? You can't eat it. Yet you wish to steal it. Before you came to steal, and we had know that you came with honest intentions, we would have fed you, shared our shelter, and seen you safe through the desert. Now when we meet you on the brink of death in the desert we will stuff your mouths full of gold dust.'

The Peraltas were massacred at this spot but in my dream i saw conquistadors in armor dying under a hail of boulders. It was also here that the two strange, old prospectors known as Goldlock and Silverlock [no joking about names - Ed] recovered $15,000 in gold around 1914. It is likely that they recovered this from the Peralta cache that had been abandoned at the time of the massacre.

In the morning i awoke and looked for pieces of armor which had been crushed by rocks and rattling with bones. My dream in the harsh light of day had vanished. Obviously the Black Legion had not cottoned on to a lone camper in the Massacre Grounds yet, or at least they would have left some form of warning. i searched thoroughly around for footprints, and went beyond the sandy area to look for signs of disturbance. Nothing. So passed an uneventful first evening on the edge of the Superstitions alone.

At First Water Creek i realised that i was running out of water, so i searched around and dug in the sand, at a place where arroyo came together. Water started to fill the small hole and i let it settle before i started carefully filling the bottles with the oozing brackish water. 

i looked around and it seemed that i was penned in by the steep rocky cliffs. It was about half a mile as the crow flies to the recesses of O'Grady Canyon. There was seemingly no way through and a huge circular bluff dominated the access path. At the entrance to O'Grady Canyon i started climbing up through a notch that would lead north. An eagle soared above and i took heart that it was a good omen and guide. i cast sigils in the air and placed a piece of stone at the entrance to the notch. i had no idea where I was going but i knew that the passage northeast would eventually intersect a trail which led southeast to Weaver's Needle - the famed Weaver's Needle that featured in just about every legend of the Superstitions.

It was tough going in the canyon and progress was interminably slow. The ground eased off to the east and i climbed up through a boulder field. Below i could see an indistinct trail that zig-zagged across a creek led into Boulder Basin. i dropped into the trail, tripped and fell against a cactus. Fortunately it was not cholla but several lines of blood oozed from my palms and my arms. i disregarded the blood, knowing that this would happen time and time again. i had a bag of beef jerky and sat momentarily, then greedily ripped at a large piece and munched on it noisily.

Instead of heading north to the Dutchman's Trail i decided to take an easterly short cut to the Peralta Trail which i knew dropped south to Weaver's Needle. All the time i kept my eyes peeled for recesses and caves on the canyon wall. The ground was not too difficult but i know i would have saved time if i had used the actual trail. 

Finally i could see Weaver's Needle to the southwest, and East Boulder Canyon and the Peralta Canyon Trail heading northwest-southeast. Weaver's Needle is one of the most dominating features you could ever imagine in a desert. It reminded me of Uluru in the red center of Australia or Chimney Rock in Nebraska. There was a group of hikers in the far distance. This was the most popular time of the year for hiking, because of the lower temperatures of November and December. i was tired but knew that i had to get down in the canyon to look for a pool of water. You can stay alive in the desert if you have water but a pocketful of gold or semi-precious gems is next to useless. 

i sat gathering my thoughts and just as i was about to start walking i spied some petroglyphs on a nearby rock which lay in the recess of an overhang. They were covered with rock varnish and i deduced that they were of considerable age, perhaps Tohono o'Odham. 

Unbeknown to me two men inched to a prominent viewpoint and peered at me through the telescopic sights of their rifles.

Working out the meaning of the petroglyphs wasn‘t easy. One which i traced with my finger was familiar. It was a snake that entwined around a staff. The staff was crooked at one end. To the left of the caduceus was a maze symbol with two barely visible figures at each end of the maze. i knew it to be the Hopi man in the maze, and i knew that i was well and truly in it. All other figures were too varnished to discern. i took the discovery to be a sign that i was being guided and that i had reached the point in this three-dimensional anagram that i had to be.

i clambered down towards the Peralta Trail with the lofty bulk of Palomino Mountain to my north. When i found a flat patch of ground, more sand than rock, i set up camp for the night, about half a mile from the trail. The sun was getting low and it would soon be dark. i boiled some water and made some tea. Tomorrow i'd explore around the Needle so i lay back and thought of possibilities. And this entailed recapping more of the stories of treasure hunters.

Adolph Ruth, the cripple who came to search for the Lost Dutchman's mine alone. He had been left in West Boulder Canyon by two cowboys. He was armed with a copy of the Peralta map, which he had told all and sundry was an authentic version. To the east of my small camp, about a mile away, was Black Top Mesa. Ruth disappeared for six months until his skull was found by dogs on top of Black Top. The skull had a single bullet hole. Later his headless body was found in another location. There was no sign of his map, only a notebook with some of Ruth's handwritten notes. But the notebook was incomplete, with pivotal information missing. 

In Ruth's handwriting were the words  'veni, vida, vica... about 200 feet across from a cave.' The 'it' in the notebook could well refer to the mine, and the 'it' was within a two and a half mile radius of Weaver's Needle. But Ruth came, saw something, but certainly, unlike Caesar, did not conquer. The Superstitions were a killing ground, no doubt. 

A dozen or so people disappeared in here between 1951 and 1961, and gun battles were involved in some of these deaths. Some seven of the missing had been shot and killed and their murders left unsolved. Someone may still have the important missing notes from Ruth's notebook, passed down over time. i felt a chill up my spine and my hair stood on end.

And James Cravey. Another crippled man who had disappeared. He came in by helicopter and landed near the head of La Barge Canyon. After the helicopter lifted off Cravey was never seen alive again. His body, wrapped in a blanket, was found seven months after he went missing, in February 1948. He had been decapitated, and a short time later his skull was found. In Cravey's case it was obvious that someone had moved the body to a place where it could be found, attaching it to a rope which had been laid across a well-trod trail. It may have been that the person who moved the body wanted to deter further searching in the region.

It was a lonely spot when dark descended and i stared up at the stars of a now familiar night sky. I heard what I thought were footsteps and hurried out of my sleeping bag to investigate. i couldn't go far as i had deliberately not carried a flashlight. It could well be an animal. i moved over to a clump of boulders and saw what seemed to be a human form. My heart was pounding. Suddenly a figure came into the firelight behind me with his hand held out:

'Is this your stone?'

i composed myself as another armed figure appeared in the half light.

He aimed his rifle directly at my head, and i gulped, preparing for death. i was no stranger to the feeling having been detained at gunpoint several times before in Africa, when i traveled there writing for Lonely Planet.

'Take it!' the figure demanded. i could now see that he was Native American.

'Take it and go away from here.'

i took the piece of stone in my hand and it was the greenstone i had thrown to the ground at the start of O'Grady Canyon. These two people had retrieved it and followed me all the way to this camp.

'It is pounamu from New Zealand, my country. i mean no harm. i have come into these mountains to look for something, something more important than gold. The gold is just a clue.'

'You have been to our sacred grounds. You walked through our burial ground and touched our rock carvings. We have seen you. You are not hiking here. You are looking.'

The other intruder cocked his rifle and i prepared to die. The person who handed me the stone spoke:

'Tomorrow you leave here. Take the Peralta Trail to the south. You can live but you may not return or we will kill you. This is your last chance. This is our sacred ground and we want no strangers. You do not travel the beaten path. If you had we would not have followed. So go.'

As quickly as the appeared they melted into the darkness. They could have been Black Legion protecting their treasures or secrets, or they may have been merely preventing violation of their burial grounds. i had decided much earlier that if i died in the quest so be it. It would be the will of God. i would head down to the Needle in the morning and try and lose these watchers. They had the advantage of following and watching in the distance by virtue of their telescopic sights. But i would watch for them.

It was a fitful sleep of no remembered dreams.

There was a chill in the air the following morning. The sun had not yet risen over the surrounding rock features. i knew that every movement i made was being watched so i packed slowly, every now and then glancing around at the surrounding high points. i started off down the Boulder Canyon-Peralta Canyon Trail in the direction i had been told to go. 

i was soon at the base of Weaver's Needle which loomed over the trail at this point. In a likely sink where i knew i'd find water, i filled mybottles again - it was in East Boulder Canyon. Fill when you can, fill every time - and be ever mindful that you may not be so lucky every time. 

Behind me was a flash, the glint from glass. i was still being observed. Perhaps i could hide and wait until i could watch the watchers. i moved into a crevice, carefully covering my tracks with a broken piece of bush. But knowing that they would have seen me leave the path i knew I’d have to keep low until they came into my view.

They would be master trackers - that was obvious from their following me the previous day, so i would have to be careful. i was right beside the point where Weaver’s Needle rose abruptly to the sky, but the rugged hillside offered a mass of possibilities for concealment.

After about an hour i saw them. Two figures were silhouetted on a far ridge. Every now and then they would stop, move a hundred yards or so, then scan the surrounding area. They were well away from the trail, carefully avoiding a large group of hikers i could see snaking their way up towards the Needle. i could have joined them, seeking safety in numbers, but realized that they would consider my explanations a little mad. 

The two intruders from the evening before crossed the trail. They had guessed rightly that i was somewhere near its southern base where an indistinct trail led over a narrow saddle and on to Needle Canyon, the prominent arroyo on the Needle's east. They passed about two hundred yards below me and i could see that they both still carried rifles with telescopic sights. They were the two i had encountered yesterday and they also carried small backpacks. Not one hiker would have considered this unusual as just about every party coming into the Superstitions came armed, except for me. 

When i was sure they had dropped well into Needle Canyon i moved to a position where i could better observe them. They were now distant. i decided to stay near Weaver's and camp in a crevice where it would be difficult to find me. There would be no fire this evening. i ate a little food, crawled into my bag, and listened intently, all the while thinking of the path to this point. i had entered a strange realm, almost unbelievable, and had to pinch myself to prove that i wasn't imagining it all. New Zealand and my family, Australia and Cal, and the Eredo in Nigeria, seemed so far away. This journey was nothing like the usual assignment for Lonely Planet, that was for sure. 

i fell asleep and the next i knew it was morning, bitterly cold. The crevice was dark and the sun had yet to rise. i remembered where i was and looked around to see if anyone was approaching. The air was still and i could hear birdsong only. No human voices in between. i decided to stay in the sleeping bag until it was light enough to scan the surrounding countryside. i was stiff all over and badly in need of a pee. i moved to my side and urinated on the ground, careful not to spill over the bag as it had do considerable service from this point. 

Thinking that my two pursuers would be looking for me in Needle Canyon, i decided to continue south towards the Peralta Trail. i'd keep well away from the trail, although i would come close to it at Fremont Saddle, the dividing point between East Boulder and Peralta canyons. It was too dangerous to stay and explore around the Needle and i had to distance myself from it as quickly as possible. Using the more difficult route it took me about three hours to reach the Saddle. There was a tired party of hikers at the top. 

[And that is where i find anyone following this treasure hunt for the Lost Dutchman’s gold now - only a few years’ later - Ed:]
SmugMug > keywords > phi > The Watchtower, Grand Canyon

A sacred space in the Grand Canyon. Almost at the base of the Grand Canyon, near the Colorado River, one of the oldest rocks ever found is seen as a metamorphic strip - this is Vishnu stone. For more on ancient stones http://books.google.co.nz/books?id=z_KDdsQYuJIC&pg=PA100&lpg=PA100&dq=vishnu+stone+grand+canyon&source=bl&ots=xR3r-eVKG9&sig=NzdGsFXKzq5D3dwKw9OCXlA2jB0&hl=en&ei=f9rDSu3eDpPatgPy7p2vCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CBYQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=vishnu%20stone%

We used to call Jehovah's Witnesses 'JWs' here in Aotearoa. i used to wait for them to arrive so i could get a free copy of 'The Watchtower' as i was both intrigued by the content and the illustrations. i got more out of that magazine than i did out of Sunday School - and i loved Sunday School with never-to-be-forgotten hymns, camps and those frightening moments when i was confronted with sledge-hammer issues of faith. So when i first got to see the Grand Canyon the Watchtower was one of those most alluring prizes i could hope to see in my first sojourn to the United States. So the J-Double-Us (sort of like Dub-yas) played an important part in my journey towards the personal discovery of God. i tried several feeds for a good source on this wonderful faith but the most reliable ended up being wiki. So for great philosophy go to  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki and type in 'Jehovah's Witnesses'

courtesy of wiki, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox 2009

inanga
Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville

Originally i collaged a number of Google Earth images, including 3-D views, my paintings (and a Miro that was an accidental CLICK) and the centerpiece was my friend Rick from Jville. This was captured on Google Earth street camera. What are the odds of this? A biker captured on his Triumph in his front yard? A split second in the Google-Earth-mapping process.

I finally managed to get a portrait shot of Rick rather sneekily on my Apple iphone. He has incredible facial tattoos (Maori: 'moko') and you can just detect these above his glasses. The miracle of digital phi-tography allowed the Google-Earth image of Rick on his bike to be reflected in his glasses.

Hence the title 'Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville'

courtesy of inanga, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox November 2009
 > Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville

Originally i collaged a number of Google Earth images, including 3-D views, my paintings (and a Miro that was an accidental CLICK) and the centerpiece was my friend Rick from Jville. This was captured on Google Earth street camera. What are the odds of this? A biker captured on his Triumph in his front yard? A split second in the Google-Earth-mapping process.

I finally managed to get a portrait shot of Rick rather sneekily on my Apple iphone. He has incredible facial tattoos (Maori: 'moko') and you can just detect these above his glasses. The miracle of digital phi-tography allowed the Google-Earth image of Rick on his bike to be reflected in his glasses. 

Hence the title 'Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville'

courtesy of inanga, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox November 2009
Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville

Originally i collaged a number of Google Earth images, including 3-D views, my paintings (and a Miro that was an accidental CLICK) and the centerpiece was my friend Rick from Jville. This was captured on Google Earth street camera. What are the odds of this? A biker captured on his Triumph in his front yard? A split second in the Google-Earth-mapping process.

I finally managed to get a portrait shot of Rick rather sneekily on my Apple iphone. He has incredible facial tattoos (Maori: 'moko') and you can just detect these above his glasses. The miracle of digital phi-tography allowed the Google-Earth image of Rick on his bike to be reflected in his glasses.

Hence the title 'Rick sees Rick on his bike on Google Earth, Jville'

courtesy of inanga, Picasa 3, SmugMug, Google and Mozilla Firefox November 2009
Photo by: inanga • see photo in gallery

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