by External Poster » Thu Mar 11, 2010 7:31 pm
This posting is from: kumiko yvonne watanabe
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They have one pow wow each year where I live,
but mostly western tribes are represented, from
the Pacific Coast and south west tribes.
Two earlier postings one got missed and the other
didn't make sense, but I love the food at pow wows.
Fry bread (w/honey) and corn soup comes to my mind
first. If anything, those are the first two foods I miss
the most and have at the pow-wows. Every time its
a little different.
Sorry to hear the problems with you transitioning.
Being a cd, I am drawn to how beautiful the women's
regalia is, and the unique shawls usually quilted and
very ornate. The women dancers dancing with
wearing alot of items, the use of materials
like alot of tin bells, ornate beadwork, and the chest
plate, jewelry, etc, the special meaning of feathers.
The beadwork...gosh the old designs from long ago,
how small the beads were and intricate and detailed
designs. colors. and patterns made from very tiny
seed beads, smaller than the manufactured ones in the
craft stores made from glass or plastic.
I've always been fascinated and very impressed with
american indian culture, the pride and diversity of the
tribes at pow-wows and also the music, chants, drumming,
and dancing. Gosh, the ring dance, when performed
well is awesome to see.
The drums too, vary in material and how they are
hit, some using long slender drum sticks and others that
are short but blunt, almost like a small baseball bat.
The hand drums, some hit the middle, others hit the
side.
There is another type of gathering ... forgive me if
I write or say it wrong but I think it was called
pot-ash or something like that... Did the plains
indians have something like that to?
Maybe this is better offline, you can email me
at kywatanabe@yahoo.com
-Kumiko
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(This posting was entered by kumiko yvonne watanabe, an external user of MyDLV.)