A STORY BEYOND CO-INCIDENCE
Willy Whitefeather
Back in September, 1985, the US News reported in their
paper: “3,000 whales are killed annually in the Faroe
Islands. The article went on
to say “the Islanders do not need the blubber or the whale oil as they have
petroleum. They kill the whales only for
sport because their ancestors did it.” The news photo showed twelve year old
boys with hatchets cutting the heads off the helpless beached whales…Now; this
is what I read in the papers in September and October to November, 1985. Whales communicate and their soundings can
travel many miles underwater. They are
totally free spirits and their only enemy is man. So the 3,000 whales must have called for
help.
So, in September,
1985 a whale in the Pacific Ocean whom the scientists named “Humphrey” swam into San
Francisco Bay. Then the news reported that an out of season
hurricane named “Juan” came up in the Atlantic Ocean past Key Largo,
Florida into the Gulf of Mexico toward Pensacola,
Florida and Pensacola
was evacuated. Then Humphrey the whale turned around went back toward the Pacific Ocean
and Hurricane Juan turned around and headed back into the Gulf and the people
went back to Pensacola. But again
the people had to evacuate Pensacola and so around and
around the whale went and around and around the hurricane went and the people
kept leaving and coming back to Pensacola. To this day those folks say “That was the
craziest hurricane we ever saw!”
Pensa in Spanish means “to think”
and cola in Spanish means “tail.” Now
let’s think about the tail of the whale. Humphrey
the whale swam further inland than any whale ever recorded. He swam under six highway bridges at San
Francisco, California (and a children’s
book came out entitled “Six Bridges, the Story of Humphrey the Whale” by Toni
Knapp.)
One day the news reported that scientists wanted to study Humphrey; so, they shot two arrows with
tracking devices into Humphrey the
whale and Hurricane Juan and then
the news reported that “ hurricane Juan blew into an oil rig in the Gulf of
Mexico and two men drowned.”
Now to do some tracking…the highest mountain in Arizona
is Mount Humphrey in
the San Francisco Peaks.
Humphrey the whale has a blowhole and below Mount
Humphrey is the Blowhole
State Park at Wupatki,
an ancient Indian village. At the
blowhole in the park, you can put yourself there over the blowhole and feel the
air rush into the earth, then a lull and then the air rushes out of the
earth…just like a gigantic whale. And
just past Mount Humphrey there’s Twin Arrows, Arizona,
an official freeway exit and a gas station with two ten foot high arrows next
to the gas pumps. The interstate railroad tracks run nearby.
Mount Humphrey in Arizona
is a sacred mountain to all the Indian tribes in the area, especially the
Hopi. They say it is where the Kachina Spirits live and Hopi means “peace” or “peaceful
people.”
And when the entire world’s people see the Circles of
Co-incidence then they will know for sure that what goes around comes
around. Like Chief Stealth Seattle said
in 1855, “Man does not weave the web of life; man is but a strand in the
web. What he does to the web, he does to
himself.”
So, Hurricane Juan came past Key Largo, Florida and in the
movie “Key Largo” Humphrey Bogart was standing on the beach
and he was sending up smoke from his cigarette (tobacco was the sacred plant of
the last world that went down in the water because of no love among people.) In
the movie, the bad guys were coming in a boat to kill Humphrey Bogart but all of a sudden an unexpected hurricane came up
and sank their boat. The bad guys all
drowned!
The number one fruit in Florida is oranges and the number
one fruit in California is oranges and as our earth globally warms we are going
from North to Northwest and the color of the Northwest is orange and the
oranges are warming in Florida and they all froze in California in the winter
of 2006.
The news reported that Humphrey
the whale was last seen going out to sea on November 4, 1985, the anniversary
of Will Roger’s birthday, Cherokee Nation roll #11384.