Cambria AAA Motel - Find Motels, Hotels, Inns, B&B's Homestays and Cabins
Cambria Blog - Read Cambria and Post Comments ~ Hotels, Inns, B&B's Homestays and Cabins
Cambria Blog
Read & Comment
blog || headlines || search ||pewter93428@aol.com.
You may also contact the director at
brentwilliamharvey@yahoo.com.
The Pewter Plough Playhouse in Cambria is looking for a director for its upcoming production of Love Town by Michael Kaplan. Love Town, the winner of our playwriting competition, tells the somewhat ironic story of a single man in a small town known as a romantic getaway. It tells of the downside of love as well as its power to transform. The premiere production of this play will open on March 14 and will run weekends through.April 27. jimdavidbuckley@aol.com or
pewter93428@aol.com.
|
by Greg Wilson & Flash Alexander
Did you know…
Native American people still make their home on the Central Coast They have been living in (or near) what is now called Cambria for roughly 9,000 years? The coastal stretch from present-day Cayucos to San Carpoforo (near Ragged Point) was their home.
Archeologists refer to these early coastal residents as 'playano',
a name first given to them by early Spanish explorers.
Playano translates as 'beach people'. Research has revealed
that the area around present-day Cambria may have been
occupied by as many as 200 families belonging to various
tribes who shared a common language known as 'hokan'. These
families included individuals from Chumash, Salinan and
Esalen native groups. Intermarriage among these groups was
common, as was trading and commerce.
Fading evidence of the occupation of these early groups can
still be seen along the coastal beaches and byways in or
near Cambria. 'Metate', smooth holes which have been worn in
the face of boulders by countless years of grinding acorns
(a staple food source), can be still be seen along the side
of at least one local creek bed. Other evidence includes the
presence of simple beach-side fire hearths which were used
to prepare shellfish, another favorite food. Some of these
sites are thought to date as far back as 4,000 BC.
Well known among these natives are the Chumash Indians. The
Chumash lived along the Central Californian coast for
hundreds of years.
The Chumash interacted intimately with the ocean and were
able to craft magnificent plank canoes made out of redwood
trees that had drifted down the coast from Northern
California. Unfortunately, after the establishment of the
Spanish Missions in Central California in the late 1700s,
the Chumash population began a rapid decline. Today, only
about 7500 people of Chumash decent remain with a small
group of them living in the last Chumash village located on
the present grounds of the Santa Ynez Chumash Reservation
(near Santa Barbara).
Interesting links:
Esalen Institute:
| |
Chumash Website: | |
Influential Chumash Indians of southern
California:
|
Places to visit:
Mission San Miguel:
| |
Santa Ynez Chumash Indian Casino:
|
Things to buy:
Book: Evolution of Chumash Society : A Comparative Study of Artifacts Used for Social System Maintenance in the Santa Barbara Channel Region Before A.D. 18 |
- Edward Thomas, Poems (1917) "Early One Morning"
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Upgrade 0% complete WelcomeUpgrading Gallery 2 requires 7 steps. This upgrade tool will guide you through these steps and provide assistance along the way if additional steps are required. Please read the Help File before proceeding. If you have a busy site, consider putting your Gallery in maintenance mode. This gives visitors a message that the site is temporarily offline, rather than showing everybody this upgrade page. Edit your config.php file to activate maintenance mode. |
|||||||||||||||||||
