U.S. Army OH-6A Cayuse circa 1966
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U.S. Army OH-6A Cayuse circa 1966
**Photo location and author unknown
C. 1910 ... The image depicts a Cayuse woman on the Umatilla Reservation in Oregon, showcasing the elaborate regalia and beaded horse trappings used for special occasions and celebrations ...
Apologies for the radio silence; I've been at the Oregon Outdoor Recreation Summit since Wednesday. It's been an incredible experience once again, with some superb programming, cool exhibitors, and getting to rub elbows with all sorts of amazing people in a wide variety of roles in the outdoor recreation arena (we miss our federal partners this year!) They've also fed us exceptionally well--that was worth the price of admission alone.
One of yesterday's highlights (among many) was an incredible talk by Charles Sams--yes, the director of the US National Parks System in the last administration. He's also from the Umatilla Reservation, which is just up the mountain pass from where we are in Pendleton. After his career in the Navy as an intelligence specialist, he put a lot of time into both indigenous and conservation efforts in the Pacific Northwest. And that's before he became the NPS director in 2021.
First of all, he's a really engaging speaker, weaving in personal stories with current events. He also, out of everyone in the room, almost certainly has the best firsthand understanding of the intricacies of the federal government, to include the military and the Department of the Interior. A lot of discussions during this summit, both formal and informal, concerned the many negative ways the current administration has affected public and private sectors in the outdoor recreation industry and beyond, and Sams didn't shy away from acknowledging that (though he was characteristically diplomatic.)
I appreciated how he wove in his experience as a Cayuse and Walla Walla man growing up within the Umatilla Reservation community. He explained the importance his community places on maintaining longtime relationships with the land and its denizens through responsible stewardship and how that informed his professional decisions over the years.
But what I will take with me most is his hope and optimism that things can turn around. There are so many people who are working to protect our public lands, sensitive species, and public access. During questions I asked him the same thing we were all asked in a previous session--what place brings him joy, especially when things get difficult. He told us about his connection to particular areas of the reservation and his roots there, and how that restores him just by being there.
If someone who has been through so much and carried so much on his shoulders can still find hope, I can do the same. I needed that dose of inspiration, and I wish you all could have been there.
Japanese OH-6 Cayuse
Ruth Coyote, Cayuse Woman, Carrying Child in Decorated Cradleboard On Back - Moorhouse - 1900
Decades after saber-toothed cat bones were discovered in Oregon, two scientists realized they belonged to a previously unidentified species. Cayuse scholars helped name the feline, which they say shows their language persists.
Fossils of the massive feline were found in the 1950s on ancestral Weyíiletpuu (the name for Cayuse people in the Nez Perce language they later adopted) lands in today’s eastern Oregon, where the cat shared the earth with giant camels and giant sloths five to nine million years ago. Scientists only recently identified the fossils as a new species.
The full name of the new cat is Machairodus lahayishupup.
Cash Cash, who taught linguistics for 10 years at the University of Arizona, took on the task of finding a Cayuse name for the cat, searching through documents of the original language, looking for “any correlation to cat or cat species.”
He was able to compare Cayuse words from the earliest Smithsonian records in 1829 with later documents from 1888 containing similarities that allowed him to reconstruct a name.
The genus Machairodus comes from the Greek and Latin words for “dagger tooth.” The Cayuse words Lahayis Hupup (pronounced Leh-HIGH-ees-hoop-oop), translate to “ancient wild cat” or “old wild cat.” Taken together the full species name roughly translates to “ancient wild cat with dagger teeth.”
A ceremonial naming, a common tribal celebration in which a name in the Native/Indigenous language is given to an eligible tribal member, will be scheduled when COVID-19 protocols are eased for the community.
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Since the 18th century, the norm has been to name new species using Greek or Latin, “but this cat didn’t live in Italy or Greece, and we wanted to give it a name in a language indigenous to the landscape in which it did live,” Orcutt said.
Working with Indigenous institutions like the Tamastslikt Cultural Institute, he said, is a way for paleontologists “to recognize the importance of that context and of including Indigenous voices in our field.”
“It means a lot to me to be able to collaborate with the tribes on whose traditional lands I do my field work and to be able to give this amazing animal a name with real local significance, rather than some phrase from the dead European language,” Orcutt wrote in an email. “On a larger scale, I think and certainly hope that this name is just one part of a larger pattern in our field of recognizing that the fossils we study come — unless you’re working in Antarctica — from someone’s native land.”
“Science names the world,” Cash Cash said. “Indigenous knowledge can make a contribution, even when it isn’t cataloged or documented, and that is profound. I think the opportunity exists for Indigenous groups to make contributions in this way. … It provides a rare opportunity not just for paleontology, but for the world of tribal people as well. To name it in the way we did allows us to express ourselves and be who we are.”
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The Cayuse language was an isolate that had no words and speech patterns in common with other Northwest languages. Its last fluent speakers died in the 1940s. Over time, the Cayuse people started speaking Nez Perce.
Tribal dictionaries contain no more than 400 Cayuse words, said Bobbie Conner, director at Tamastslikt. However, some old Cayuse words are still used to describe places, and tribal members still carry Cayuse names.
“Naming the cat is an opportunity for us to keep the Cayuse language alive, but it also recognizes fossils collected from our homeland over six decades ago still have stories to be discovered,” Conner said.
Cash Cash, who prefers the term “dormant” to “extinct,” said the language will never be revived, but it also hasn’t faded away.
“The ability to use what is in these sparse records really is astonishing when you think about it, because Cayuse language has been classified as extinct for quite a long time,” Cash Cash said.
Connecting the Cayuse language to ancient history “is its own kind of blessing” because it sustains the language and “also ties us to the ancientness and the landscape of our past,” Conner said.
“This is a unique opportunity to make the world aware of not only the fossil, but of the language,” she added.
Said Cash Cash, “Even if you are alone and speaking withoutanother person present, the words still have meaning and the words still are heard by the world around us. It’s kind of like the elders tell us that names echo across the earth and when they echo across the earth, the earth receives that and recognizes that those names are being spoken. So, the land and earth hears when we speak the language.”
“It comes down to a speaker uttering the words of a language,” he added. “The real value, at least in the perspective of our community, is that the cat species found and identified is in and of itself saying the language is alive in some way. It isn’t extinct. As our elders say, ‘The language hasn’t faded away.’”
Blind tasting fun! I blinded everyone on my wine to start the night. From that point on, all wines that night were presented blind. And, of course, people then chose wines that were not easy to identify to make things interesting (2006 Patagonia Pinot?!?). Predictably, there were some highs (I correctly called Washington Cabernet and even Cayuse for the ‘16 Camaspelo (swipe left)), and some lows (calling Amarone, then Left Bank Bordeaux for ‘01 Guigal Ex Voto Hermitage Rouge). If you have not tried blind tasting before, give it a shot sometime! My WOTN was the ‘93 Gaja Barbaresco. Initially reticent, this wine unfurled majestically in the glass! Although supposedly an off vintage, this wine was yet another example of amazing terroir and top notch wine making being more important than vintage. The Gaja drank like a champ with notes of licorice, dried red cherry, earth, spice plenty of acidity and a long, complex finish. The pristine bottle of ‘03 Pichon Lalande drank beautifully as well and was a close second. The ‘06 Bodega Chacra from Patagonia was a nice, mature Pinot. The ‘04 Arcadian “Hommage A Max” Syrah from Santa Ynez Valley was drinking incredibly young for its age. When I poured it into the decanter, aromatics of dark red fruit exploded into the air and @rootsandwaterwine called syrah from 5 feet away! @chefdat correctly called 2004 and the AVA. Speaking of Chef DAT, he also prepared an amazing charcuterie tray (pic 2) for us to enjoy. ______________________________#dallasblogger #blindtasting #wine #winetasting #sommelier #sommlife #gaja #piedmont #barbaresco #nebbiolo #bordeaux #pichonlalande #cabernetsauvignon #cabernet #cayuse #washingtonwine #guigal #syrah #rhone #pinotnoir #patagonia #argentinawine #santaynez #chateauneufdupape #oregonpinot #southernrhone (at Roots and Water Wine Room) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bu_1fk5ns7V/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=2fdcwy8suass
In 1968 the US Army began fielding the first Bell AH-1 Cobra gunships in Vietnam. The gunships were usually paired up with a Hughes OH-6 Cayuse scout called the “Loach” on account of its army development designation, LOH (Light Observation Helicopter). A light gunship team was one Cobra and a Loach. A heavy gunship team was two Cobras and a Loach. I have the pleasure of knowing a Loach pilot pretty well, and those boys have the biggest brass balls in any aircraft in the skies over Vietnam with the FACs and Wild Weasels a close second. Using the speed and maneuverability of the OH-6, the Loach crew would dart around at low level drawing fire. Once they had spotted a target, one of the Loach pilots would toss a smoke grenade out to mark the target for the orbiting Cobra crews overhead who would swoop in, make their initial run on the target, climb out and then repeat until the ground fire had been silenced. It wasn’t unusual for the Loach crew to come back and help out, even to the point of firing their 45-caliber pistols. In the words of an Army Huey pilot “Loach pilots routinely hung it out and tempted fate in ways that made my skin crawl!“ | October Aviation Photo Challenge | @kjdphoto1971 | #1017planes | “Good Morning Vietnam” | Day 21 | #Avgeek #aviation #aircraft #planeporn #KNFW #NFW #NASFortWorthJRB #CarswellField #AirPowerExpo2016 #airport #planespotting #Hughes #OH6 #Cayuse #Bell #AH1 #Cobra #Loach #instagramaviation #igaviationcontest #Avgeekery #AvgeekSchoolofKnowledge #mil_aviation_originals #instaaviation #aviationlovers #aviationphotography (at NAS Fort Worth JRB/Carswell Field)