Great episode Nick! Thanks for sharing your story Mr. Lewis! I love hearing “our” Creation stories, they’re always so interesting. My peoples(the Klamath, Modoc, and Chasta) witnessed the Mt. Mazama eruption! So our peoples have been here for a very long time! : )
@baTonkaTruck4 ай бұрын
Hearing First Natives speak in their tongue always chokes me up, what an amazing spirit.
@MrLocomitive6 ай бұрын
Randy brings tears to my eyes!!
@OkieJammer27367 ай бұрын
Spectacular, indeed. 😌
@mhansl7 ай бұрын
Can never be enough Randy Lewis.
@myrachurchman50137 ай бұрын
I love listening to Randy; respect and gratitude to you both.
@MGeofire7 ай бұрын
Love this guy...
@zazouisa_runaway43717 ай бұрын
Wonderful to listen to Randy, so interesting and fascinating ❣️Thank you Randy to share with us ❣️ Thank you Nick to make it possible ❣️🫶❣️
@GlassEyedDetectives7 ай бұрын
Randy's' re-telling of the 'Salmon with the Golden Tail' smashing into the ice barrier and releasing the flood waters kinda resonantes with Randall Carlson's hypothesis, thank you for sharing. '
@sharonseal91507 ай бұрын
So wonderful to see a new interview and stories of the land from Randy! Thank you Randy for sharing your unique perspective with us and help us see the land and the people with the eyes of the Ancestors, and thank you Nick for bringing us this interview. These interviews with Randy are priceless.
@beckyburns2177 ай бұрын
My absolute favorite guest!
@oscarmedina13037 ай бұрын
It's always wonderful when you feature Randy Lewis. Thanks!!!
@maxinee12677 ай бұрын
It warms my heart to see you and Randy Lewis out learning about the Indian ways and storys, IT is so nice to see you healed Randy, I too was praying for your restoration. May you stay filled with love and kindness for the land, May you be well. May you be peaceful and at ease, and May all your days be Happy. Nameste.
@eforsy6507 ай бұрын
I grew up in Wenatchee and always wondered how all the random boulders that were in our neighborhoods got there.
@complimentary_voucher7 ай бұрын
Shout out to that 1894 flood lol. Thanks for these personal stories, Randy, you are the bomb.
@ksea91467 ай бұрын
Beautiful, land and oral history. Thank you.
@pmgn84447 ай бұрын
Thank you Randy and Nick for sharing this with us.
@straightupninja7 ай бұрын
What an honor to listen to
@sdmike11417 ай бұрын
Great and important POV from a very kind familiar face. Kudos to the cameraman for keeping the important things in frame!! (Sneaky good. Harder than it looks to do). Thanks Nick.
@ktdale13407 ай бұрын
His sadness at all the loss but his happiness with his grandson being chosen by the Creator to keep the knowledge alive is so very evident. He spoke to my soul as I too carry the ancestors knowledge that the Residential School genocide tried to erase. ❤
@peterlancaster53577 ай бұрын
About a mile of so south along the ridge where you stood, the first "Clovis" point was found in the '30's, long before the exciting Clovis finds in the '80's near Pangborn Field. It was a single point. There is a break in the cliffs below the plateau from the valley side. It appears to have been a natural corridor to the plateau. The Clovis point was found on the plateau not far from this corridor. Regardless, the view from the plateau into the valley is so stunning that I always marvel at it. I would so like to have seen the view through the eyes of Randy's ancestors.
@KenakaElric7 ай бұрын
Closer to the Clovis point elementary school. My mom was a realtor and if I remember it was found when the old orchard was being excavated. Based on the stories I was told.
@OkieJammer27367 ай бұрын
Hearing Randy Lewis reminisce causes me to respectfully step back into the shadows and simply marvel. My. Goodness.
@Steviepinhead7 ай бұрын
The scenic photography, the oral history with its geologic implications, the ecological wisdom, all these are wonderful. But most wonderful of all is the relationship Randy and Nick have forged between themselves...!
@raenbow667 ай бұрын
Finely done, Nick and Randy. We are given a look back to heartbreak and forward to hope. I try to imagine people so completely infused with all of life there's no separation, with elders and stories and food and seasons....a complex completeness. Thank you Randy for your willingness to share.
@erfquake17 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Lewis.
@acfanter7 ай бұрын
What s beautiful gift this video is… thank you
@snuugumz7 ай бұрын
YES. This is what I have waited patiently for. Thank you, gents.
@yukigatlin93587 ай бұрын
A wall of ice...✨Interesting!!😃. Randy, thank you for sharing the story of Coyote intertwined with the stories of the living things, the stories of the landscapes, and your ancestral families and your families! All precious stories, thank you, Nick for letting us connect with Randy in spirit!!😄💞💗✨
@sheetmetalhead7 ай бұрын
Thanks Nick & Randy, I always feel deeply honored to listen to Randy’s history! Thanks for putting life into perspective!
@jessdavies54047 ай бұрын
Such an amazing story of the people and the mountain I was blessed enough to grow up on! We had a family that would come every spring and dig roots. This brought me back to my childhood! Thank you.
@jakeshuster67837 ай бұрын
Using this platform for something grand. thank you.
@sueellens7 ай бұрын
I’m very grateful to Randy for sharing these stories. I always said, if I could have a super power I would be a true polyglot…being able to speak, read, and write all languages. I wish I could learn the languages of the indigenous peoples. Thank you, Nick, for your videos.
@DanFarrar7 ай бұрын
Such a rich full history. It makes one have new respect for these spaces. What a gem Nick!
@mikehoroho84537 ай бұрын
Wow, great story. It's interesting how this story gives some insight into what may have occurred some 12,000 to 13,000 years ago.
@HouseOfCouplePuffs7 ай бұрын
Such a treasure lives within Randy Lewis.
@iviewthetube7 ай бұрын
Thank you K'ayaxan and Nick for putting this amazing story together for us. This is strong evidence that humans cohabitated with the ice here. Ha, ha, I wonder if new words were invented as they saw that wall of water, rock, and ice rushing down the valley!
@artninja25797 ай бұрын
I love that these stories are being shared with us, giving us context and knowledge that we didn't have before. Please thank Mr. Lewis, and let him know that this white girl from AL and NY definitely appreciates, and enjoys, hearing these stories.
@ocrow80797 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this intimate and heartfelt history.
@heathertaylor46777 ай бұрын
So good to hear Randy! He has a wonderful voice for stories, and wonderful stories to tell !
@donnparis1377 ай бұрын
Can't get too much of Randy's history lessons!
@janhelm31157 ай бұрын
Randy's stories are wonderful. I close my eyes and try to visualize the area from the distant past. It is all so precious to him.
@SteveHarris2127 ай бұрын
Excellent perspective, thanks to both of you for sharing
@DonShriner7 ай бұрын
Thank you Nick and Randy.
@tennesseenana48387 ай бұрын
I love listening to Randy! He has so much wisdom and knowledge about the land, the animals and the plants for food as well as medicine. Hopefully the young ones like his nephew, will regain their culture and knowledge. We would be much better off to listen to Randy and other elders and learn from them.
@swirvinbirds19717 ай бұрын
I love listening to Randy speak about his people's history. He's great at painting a picture in your head.
@briane1737 ай бұрын
That's what makes it so compelling -- you just sorta close your eyes and listen to Randy paint the picture while you put yourself in those communities back during that time, looking at the same landscapes and the wealth of natural life all around them which gave them their sustenance. And you can only imagine what it must've done to the hearts of his people when White settlers started coming and taking the land all over, and upending thousands of years of these tribes' existence. It's altogether heartbreaking and maddening at the same time. There still exists within us that arrogance of proclaiming ourselves more advanced which for some reason affords us the right to just mow down whoever came before us. Human history is replete with examples of this, and I'm sure predates any documented history. One of the most destructive forces in the human condition -- arrogance -- but somehow humility comes out of it unscathed while those who forced themselves upon these cultures have to live with the shame in what they've done. That's what makes this oral history so important, and is a reminder that _no one_ has a monopoly on virtue -- that we're all reminded that each new generation is tasked with making themselves better, even though they can't change the past, so that the past can't be repeated.
@mikepallister30377 ай бұрын
Lord . Nick what a message . We owe his people EVERYTHING
@jamesdriscoll_tmp15157 ай бұрын
Thank you, Randy, thank you Nick. Enchanting talk!
@hestheMaster7 ай бұрын
It is just beatiful mountain scenery until Randy comes along and tells us his people's oral version of why it is beatiful. Great visit with him once again professor!
@guykarafa58667 ай бұрын
Priceless is indeed the word . Thank you both for these oral histories.
@daniel-bertrand7 ай бұрын
Mesmerizing ...
@jameskilpatrick77907 ай бұрын
These oral traditions are wonderful, and a priceless addition to the story of that land. Randy is certainly aware that once you get into the many thousands of years timescale of the geological focus of this channel, (at least in respect to the ice age floods), the peoples that inhabited the land were almost certainly many times removed from his own ancestors, but it really doesn't detract from the traditions and stories that he passes on. Really, the stories are timeless. Life, love, joyous gain, and terrible loss, are stories of humanity, and always repeated. The land will always imprint itself on the stories.
@jonathanblubaugh50497 ай бұрын
Thank you again, Gentlemen. Mesmerizing. 🤗
@tombrockwell69617 ай бұрын
Oh how interesting & wonderful stories about our Indian ancestors of the valley. Times when lives mattered instead of troubled times we have now. Thanks for sharing.
@p.d.nickthielen66007 ай бұрын
What an honor to hear these stories
@wesleyhales70977 ай бұрын
Can you please give him my thanks for sharing that? You can feel the emotions.
@GregsGeologyChannel7 ай бұрын
Thanks Nick! Attaboy Randy! I'll see you soon! 😀
@anaritamartinho13407 ай бұрын
🎉🎉🎉 Is so good to see again Randy❤
@hankgraver69347 ай бұрын
This is important. This must not be lost.
@wadehines99717 ай бұрын
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you!
@Alfred-i2v7 ай бұрын
These are awesome. Plenty of important history in the southwest. Looking foward to more viddys! Thanks gentlemen. P.s. take Randy to my hometown of mesa verde plz ")
@AnitraN-if6ku7 ай бұрын
WOw, this is so interesting. So many things here.
@notvanpron41157 ай бұрын
Thanks Nick & Randy for this amazing series. This is quickly becoming one of my favorites. It really give us a different insight that really isn't taught anywhere else.
@dougmay29577 ай бұрын
Love this!
@charlesflorian17587 ай бұрын
Very Nice for the info and history of area/ Thanks
@carriesue96437 ай бұрын
Nick again I say thank you for sharing the truth spoken not one person can know the times I climbed the Columbia Stone walls. Any good weather day a lunch would be packed and my little brother and I would hike from the town of Rock Island that was before the road you stand on was built.. I do wonder what Randy will share about the ice cave??
@JamieZoeGivens7 ай бұрын
Shout out to Larry!
@fredmunson86037 ай бұрын
My great grandmother Willa EELs, who came to Cashmere in 1912, fed the Indians who lived where Tree Top is located now.
@jonathanblubaugh50497 ай бұрын
This is so cool. So I looked it up. I am completely ignorant of native plants in Eastern Washington. Lomatium - Biscuitroot - parsley/carrot family. Yum!
@JeffJ3377 ай бұрын
Makes me think of the stories of the Klamath native americans about the eruption if mt mazama
@lauram94787 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@janhelm31157 ай бұрын
Randy's grandma was very wise
@mountaingirlzstuff43147 ай бұрын
The boulders and the plants Bitterroot and Lomatium are native to Montana, arriving with the lake Missoula flood sequence. Also the more tropical seeming plants of the Washington coast match up with Montana.
@StanDavid-ix6yk7 ай бұрын
I love the oral history and that Mr Lewis is willing to share with us. I was wondering how the floods happened. Figures Coyote was involved. IMO "modern" man should pay more attention to this view of the world....the health of mother earth would be better for it.
@Valkyrie8017 ай бұрын
❤
@1118blackstone7 ай бұрын
Could Randy's creation story with coyote's golden tail striking the glacier be the possible origin story for the Willamette Meteorite?
@johnplong36447 ай бұрын
I love listening to his stories ..So much of the native people ‘s stories history culture and language has been lost already There is a lot to learn..I know you want to stay neutral here but I believe That it needs to be told with emphasis that Europeans didn’t discover The Americans people were living here thousands of years before
@genie79237 ай бұрын
Randy, it is time for coyote to reawaken Red Star and Blue Star for Spexman has returned….
@scottcox91087 ай бұрын
Allegedly, the aboriginies tell stories of when the barrier reef was flooded. They talk about how fast the water covered the shoreline. The barrier reef floor is very flat, so the water moved quickly towards mainland.
@silveramenesiahaze7 ай бұрын
@johnnash51187 ай бұрын
Science is the “What, Where, When and How.” Spirituality is the “Who and Why.”
@KenakaElric7 ай бұрын
I feel like as a kid someone old timer told me there was a lucky / unlucky person up on mission ridge area hunting gathering when they witnessed one of the floods.
@KenakaElric7 ай бұрын
The few remaining stories about the valley. I believe they were based on a truth as they tried to comprehend the chaos.
@overthemoon36147 ай бұрын
Are there indigenous flood stories about first hand witnesses and their survival?
@acfanter7 ай бұрын
This story …. This is a serious education… listen and learn
@KenakaElric7 ай бұрын
Stemilt and grizzled bears?!? Wow
@brycecarver9917 ай бұрын
Long golden tail that released a bunch of rock…. Sounds like an asteroid.
@KenakaElric7 ай бұрын
Going to google pit houses and lahar. Was enmuclaw like Pompeii? What. Pit houses. At stemilt creek? When was this?!?
@sheilatruax61727 ай бұрын
That the farmer was so petty irritates the daylights out of me. That's just wrong! Obliterating someone else's heritage because you're so petty is so close, in heart, to the people who ran the residential schools. I keep expecting such things to change. I'm naive, I know. Hope springs eternal.
@KathrynRose-schultz-qs6qw2 ай бұрын
It falls back to people sued and losing land that has totally destroyed …for money!