I just came back from a trip in Colorado and we came across 3 of these!
@CWS-h5z4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video and making it accessible to the large KZbin community. I am hoping that the education of European/American children these days includes the true history of indigenous peoples, unlike the slanted versions, or no versions at all, in schools when I was a kid.
@andytuesday5005 жыл бұрын
I’m part Spanish and American Indian and grandparents came from Colorado. I want to thank you 🙏 for making and sharing this.
@agento59522 жыл бұрын
I Love learning about the Ute tribe and their land
@jeffreywalton52085 жыл бұрын
A special moment, and a special place in my life was in 1981 in the sweat lodge of Red Ute-a remarkable and spiritually powerful man. He would callin the eagle-3 or 4 times.the eagle would then come each time. Life-changing for me. There was much more, as a result of his presence.He also located a sacred site-near the base of the Sangre De Christo mountains, where 3 underground rivers converged. Dousing was a familiar tool for him. A 600 year old site he told me. He held great wisdom, and was willing to share it with us. Remarkable man. remarkable and historically peace-loving people, worthy of great honor and respect. Thank you Ute nation. I will never forget.
@Dovid2000 Жыл бұрын
Jeffrey, after watching this, I share a sense of your excitement!
@Kobewankenobiofficial Жыл бұрын
Dousing works, don't ask me how but it does. I used to work at an old cemetery and we needed to douse sometimes to find where to dig as to not disturb grave sites that could be there that weren't documented correctly
@sungoddiss7 ай бұрын
Wonderful experience for you!
@Dusty3574 жыл бұрын
Fascinating, amazing all these years and still standing wow
@Craigeek5 жыл бұрын
I love this video. Finally something that explains these structures I've seen out hiking in various parts of Colorado. Also, I wish the word "Indian" wasn't used as extensively in this video as it was. This is the Ute Nation or Ute People. They aren't Indians. Indians live on the other side of the planet - in India. Thank you RMPBS for bringing wonderful content like this to the open internet. The more I learn about my State's past the more respectful I get of the people whom walked this land before us modernites.
@ColoradoForestBeings5 жыл бұрын
Not all of these are from Indians. This is not the answer to all the structures you see.
@ionebrown4814 жыл бұрын
These are found all around the Rockies and the Sami people of Norway and across the artic still build and maintain this type of structure.
@AZTLANSOLDIER13 Жыл бұрын
Contrary to what liberal white people want to believe most first nations people still prefer to be called Indian
@jamesziegler98885 жыл бұрын
I love this! So lucky to have actually visited one site. But it’s so far away from water I can’t understand why that spot. It does have excellent pasture, piñon tree harvesting and mule deer migration. All good reasons but no water. Thanks for sharing!
@sungoddiss7 ай бұрын
Where would the deer find their water? Perhaps that’s where the Ute found theirs in this area.
@CA-qx1mv4 жыл бұрын
In relation to the wickiups, we come upon a lot in the mountains of Colorado. Many of them are not associated with the Utes, and are instead associated with hippies and modern influences. There are different lines of evidence that are reviewed before recording them as being of Native American origin. When I come across one, I look at the size, I look at how disintegrated the wood is, what level of collapse is occurring, what other material culture is around, what are the natural or modern manmade physical features surrounding it? Is it near a road? What is the viewshed? Are their axe marks on the branches? How much deposition of soil and pine duff is within the wickiup? Does it look recently disturbed? Are there any arborglyphs? Is there any organic material/dark sediment or deflation of soil within the wickiup or just outside of it? There is a lot that goes into it.
@newmoon543 жыл бұрын
Well said! Any wickiup that you find, based upon chronology, would have to be from the 1920's back! Therefore,, the supporting branches would all be a minimum of 120 years old, to possibly 150 years old at a minimum!!! The further west you go, the older the age range of the archaeology!!!!!
@markjennings-principals.p.58702 жыл бұрын
We found them in the Uinta mountians... some were made by the "boy scouts". ;)
@zulemamijangos40622 жыл бұрын
I saw , Mr,WALLY IN THIS PROGRAM I might be right Thank you for this program
@ohmeowzer15 жыл бұрын
Loved this
@ionebrown4814 жыл бұрын
You could do 2hours on this subject and have my attention every minute. Fascinating. People attempt to attribute these to big foot shelters not the remnants of peoples habitat meant to fall into the earth when left behind. Education ends ignorance.
@debbiemitchell60555 жыл бұрын
Although some of the structures are ancient many found today are newly made! Who keeps making them, could be a answer many of you are not ready to believe or comprehend!
@ColoradoForestBeings5 жыл бұрын
Right on!
@olysasquatch5 жыл бұрын
They must have skipped the Sasquatch part lmao...
@trip49235 жыл бұрын
Probably anyone who could build a simple teepee. Nothing mysterious about your claim whatsoever.
@7eyesopenwide1685 жыл бұрын
The forest people are always watching and may have copied what they have seen. I don't believe the Utes are the ones leaving structures in the woods where huge newly fallen trees are placed in various formations, some would require many men or even machinery to place them as they are. Are Utes building current structures? These archeologists are researching sites that are very old. The structures being found now are new. Some look very much like Ute structures but most do not.
@allaboutroofing24 жыл бұрын
I found a few near lake george, specifically the terryall wildlife area. I've also felt the presence of being watched when camping in these isolated areas. Is it bigfoot, the spirts of past humans, or just a fluke.
@nancypeteja65605 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! TFS.😊
@adamheskett62455 жыл бұрын
I remember finding these structures in the 1980’s in the mountains of Colorado. At the time I didn’t know who made these, I thought maybe some hippies made them. The structures were not very big.
@christinakaur87662 жыл бұрын
I've found several wikiups over the years, too. They are pretty cool!
@reuterromain10543 жыл бұрын
You live and learn. I always thought the Utes lived in tipis!
@bethbartlett56922 жыл бұрын
❤ for the Native Americans. They've been so patient with us. I want to go home, County Kerry, Ireland, my lineage Orgin. Peace be with you.
@worldscollide4691 Жыл бұрын
What are you even on 😂 no one packed you up and moved you out
@bethbartlett569211 ай бұрын
@@worldscollide4691 You must "read" the History Book to know what you're speaking about, your comment reflects your lack of knowledge.
@gladegoodrich2297 Жыл бұрын
Boy scouts love to build these every where they go.
@reallydarlings-se2xf3 ай бұрын
Really? Everywhere? Like in a mall?
@forcesightknight3 жыл бұрын
I put one up around my shelter when in the back country to keep critters from approaching my 6, fire pit a few feet in front of the East facing door. I don't complete the shelter, just take downed wood and make a palisade.
@adeshwodan4679Ай бұрын
Archaeologists always think they are the reigning superior authority of everything. ❤😂🎉😂❤
@jerryswallow5 жыл бұрын
RESPECT THE UTE
@sungoddiss7 ай бұрын
There could’ve been people camping and scouting for wood to burn in their campfire, happened upon a Wikiup that had fallen to the ground, and not knowing any better picked up the wood and burnt it!
@mariekatherine52384 жыл бұрын
We used to make little “wikiups” as kids when we played in the woods, pine barrens, of Eastern Long Island. We had one camouflaged so as to serve as a look-out tower over the roads and paths leaving to our land. We had another to spy on a neighbor lady who used to harass us for playing. I hope nobody finds the remains and tries to sell them as Native culture!
@newmoon543 жыл бұрын
Wow! I'm from Lake Ronkonkoma, Long Island. I know those pine barrens too! The very BEST spring water is under those pine barrens! I used to work in Riverhead, and Calverton, Long Island at the Grumman aircraft factory, plant 6 ! If you care to, please get back to me, I'd love to know where about's you used to live! Thanks very much!!! Sonny (Sal).
@mariekatherine52383 жыл бұрын
@@newmoon54 I grew up in Ridge, Rocky Point, and Miller Place. Graduated from Port Jeff, class of 1972, second to last year before they built Rocky Point HS. My mother and two brothers also graduated from Port. My father and an uncle were in the Navy, but worked supervising civilian contractors, my Dad at Brookhaven Lab and my uncle Lou MacDonald at Grumman, some of the time in Bethpage, but later, in Calverton. Sorry, he’s been gone over 30 years now, so I’ve no idea what building. I know he was a test pilot and did fly out of Calverton. We moved around a lot with Dad in the Navy. Two brothers and one sister are still living. Myself, I’m retired from teaching and live in Northern Maine above Greenville/Millinocket area. Long Island has become far too built up for my taste, plus the cost of living??? Through the roof.
@astralblaster2 жыл бұрын
Visiting sites I remove my hat and say a prayer to those who were there before us in peace and understanding. Lands remember spirits who cared for it
@stephenolson5326 ай бұрын
It was used as an Elk blind
@CA-qx1mv4 жыл бұрын
Also, the removal of indigenous people off their homelands was a horrible atrocity in our history. Tribes are still dealing with the effects from it, and are still having their land and water rights taken away. The amount of inhumanity that occurred in the past, and now, is indescribable. Through history, tribal relations have always been complex; however, the amount of absolute destruction by the Spanish, and particularly, by Europeans to the Native Americans was enormous. There was absolutely no excuse for it. We cannot "right the wrong" that has happened. However, we can acknowledge the truth behind past experiences, we can try to learn from the past. That is how we honor the past.
@Dirt-Fermer3 ай бұрын
Don’t worry, the government is also taking everybody else’s land now to.
@dwightehowell81798 ай бұрын
If the Ute don't want artifacts collected on tribal lands, O.K. Elsewhere people, especially land owners, are going to deal with the land as they wish. Making a collection as well as taking pictures is about the best you can do if you don't want the items to be scattered to the four winds.
@geraldmcbride23372 жыл бұрын
So this the way you feel about people that study things about the history of people of long ago.
@adeshwodan4679Ай бұрын
The land belongs to ALL the people; not greedy power hungry controlling bureaucrats . ♥️🙏♥️
@olyokie5 жыл бұрын
Very cool. I was afraid it was goofy mtg booger stuff.
@adeshwodan4679Ай бұрын
Documenting how “indigenous” couldn’t do anything until they got European glass beads, metal knives and axes; guns horses etc ❤😢❤
@eringemini7091 Жыл бұрын
What about the Wickiups that show up at high elevations, miles from any road, trail or park. The original & best Wickiup builders are Sasquatch!🦍👣 Theres some beautiful Wikiups on Colorado Bigfoot channel.
@BUrtREYNOLDSjr.20 күн бұрын
Wickiupes from a native is home, a place for the family. Expert Caucasian man: "its basically a brush shelter."😢
@newmoon543 жыл бұрын
Any wickiup that you find, based upon chronology, would have to be from the 1920's back! Therefore,, the supporting branches would all be a minimum of 120 years old, to possibly 150 years old at a minimum!!! The further west you go, the older the age range of the archaeology!!!!!
@protoeuro7637 Жыл бұрын
Many of those structures belong to sasquatch and other wild-men.
@bobfrog48364 ай бұрын
Or the giant envelope people of the wild north of Iquiibadia.
@Boonedoggler2 ай бұрын
I was once evicted from my house, I’m my mind, that’s still my house… 😏
@protoeuro7637 Жыл бұрын
DNA indicates all Utes and other tribes originate from Eurasia.
@tonybobay62765 жыл бұрын
Conquered peoples....
@SinCityRaider814 жыл бұрын
I was looking for the ignoramus in the comments found her!
@iPhantom28710 ай бұрын
Not conquered at all. We still exist, speak our languages, and are connected to the land. To conquer is to break spirit, and no such thing can be done to us. Colonized land, not conquered people. Inin totlahui ihuan tinemizqueh nochipa ✊🏽🌎
@emersonbenally72155 ай бұрын
Says a decendent of a Immigrant.
@adeshwodan4679Ай бұрын
Wish I had reservation land - a home where I was always welcome. Went to Scotland and Germany - no place for me. I have to pay mortgage endless taxes avalanches of regulations that dictate how I can live and what I should do - or I can be kicked out of my little
@daniellerawlins38873 жыл бұрын
Mitokeoyasin all my relations we are all related
@HugeWolf15 жыл бұрын
I've noticed that modern ancestors of Native Americans tend to claim they are environmentally minded. But archaeology has proven different. To understand each tribe, you have to go back hundreds of years before the European culture influenced them. A good example of "cultural contamination" is the horse.
@CA-qx1mv4 жыл бұрын
Archaeology has not proven different. Where did you come up with that notion? Indigenous populations lived off the land, their culture, their prayer, their economic systems were completely dependent on the land. Therefore, they absolutely had to manage it right. There was not much room for error. Also, the horse is not a "contaminant" to indigenous cultures. It was a resource that yes, Europeans brought over, however, they were welcomed additions to pre-existing ways of life on the Great Plains. Tribes also absorbed new technology from one another as well. This isn't cultural contamination, it's development (not "progress," but development).
@wombatcube4 жыл бұрын
They're depressed, oppressed to this day....that's the legacy white people gave them and continue to give them. Look at Standing Rock. That's a lot of cultural contamination right there. We're ruining their land. They tell us to back off, and we do it even more. That's the issue we should be worried about, these days. It's hard to care about the planet when you don't want to live. If we gave them a better way of life, if we helped them instead of kept shoving them away from success, we'd get to see them rise again. Right now they're striving to live with the life we left them with. We should be ashamed, honestly.
@movingforward25704 жыл бұрын
Archeology can also produce lies and is monitored by the governments
@chucku.farley39274 жыл бұрын
if I ever see one I'm gonna use it for fire wood
@TheBandit76133 жыл бұрын
Nice and dry.
@robertstarling15214 жыл бұрын
Oh I thought bigfoot built wikiups
@roymiller58473 жыл бұрын
Who's paying these guys wages? They should only be allowed to go on the land by the Ute's invitation.
@dreed73125 жыл бұрын
Theyre huts made of gathered sticks. Big deal. Cultural resource management my ass. :)
@user-dh6yv9uo4k3 жыл бұрын
You sound as hollow as a pile of sticks
@geraldmcbride23372 жыл бұрын
This is for D. Reed. So this the way you feel about history. Well you can go on feeling that way