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In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Dec 14, 2015

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Jack Rice
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Page 1: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.
Page 2: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons.

• The First Nations, Metis and Inuit people of North America have always depended upon the natural world for their survival.

Page 3: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• The lyrical poems and striking paintings in the book celebrate the wonder of the seasons.

• The pattern of the thirteen scales (and the 26-28 smaller scales around the perimeter) remind us that all things are connected and that we must try to live in balance.

Page 4: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

The Native American people used the back of the snapping turtle shell as a way of keeping track of the moons in a year.

I know you are thinking, “Aren’t there twelve moons in a year?” That is true if there were not occasionally two full moons in one month approximately every 2.5 years.

Page 5: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Not all First Nations people talk about the twelve or thirteen moons.

• In some places like the far north or the desert southwest, the seasons are divided into winter and summer…or the dry time and the time of rains.

Page 6: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.
Page 7: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

What is a 13 Moon Calendar?

• A 13-Moon Calendar is the logical and natural way to count the 365-day year cycle.

• Printed around the world by people of diverse cultures and faiths, this 13 Moon calendar is proposed as the harmonious alternative to the unnatural, irregular 12-month yearly calendar which serves as the current world standard of time.

Page 8: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Instead of 12 months which are 28, 29, 30, or 31 days long, the year is instead measured into 13 months, each one an even 28 days (the 28 smaller segments which surround the perimeter of the shell)

• 13 moons of 28 days each gives 364 days - plus 1 "day out of time," a day of celebration and forgiveness, to acknowledge the passing year and welcome in the new year.

Page 9: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Unlike the 12-month calendar which corresponds to no natural cycles, the thirteen moon calendar is a "solar-lunar calendar" because 365 days is the measure of the Earth going around the Sun (solar) and 28 days is the average measure of the Moon's lunar cycles

Page 10: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Let’s get started on the 13 moons

• To assist you in your understanding, try the following:

• As you listen and read the moon titles and the excerpt from the poems…VISUALIZE.. Make a MOVIE in your MIND…make connections to YOUR OWN UNDERSTANDING of our climate and changing seasons… have you ever seen this? Have you ever felt this? What would that be like?

Page 11: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

The slides that follow are organized in this way:

• The first slide is the title from the Poetry Book AND the name given to it by the various First Nations

• The second slide gives us the Anishinabe version

• And so on for each set of 2 slides

Page 12: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

First Moon – Northern Cheyenne

• Moon of Popping Trees

• “Outside the lodge, the night air is bitter cold. Now the Frost Giant walks with his club in his hand. When he strikes the trunks of the cottonwood trees, we hear them crack beneath the blow”

Page 13: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version of same story• Spirit Moon• Manidoo giizis

Page 14: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Second Moon - Potawatomi

• Baby Bear Moon• “Instead we think how

those small bears are like our children. We let them dream together.”

Page 15: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version of story

• Bear Moon• Makwa giizis

Page 16: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Third Moon - Anishinabe

• Maple Sugar Moon

• “All year round, you just had to break a twig and lie down beneath the tree with open mouth.”

Page 17: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version of same story

• Snow crust moon• Naabidin giizis

Page 18: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Fourth Moon - Cree

• Frog Moon

• “The trickster met with all of the animals to decide how many moons would be winter”

Page 19: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Sugar Moon• Ziisibaakadake giizis

Page 20: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Fifth Moon - Huron

• Budding Moon• “One year Old

Man Winter refused to leave our land and so our people asked for help.”

Page 21: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Sucker Moon• Nmebine giizis

Page 22: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Sixth Moon - Seneca• Strawberry Moon• “He shared with his people what he was

taught and gave them the sweetness of the red strawberries.”

Page 23: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Blossom moon• Waabgonii giizis

Page 24: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Seventh Moon – Pomo

• Moon when Acorns Appear

• “That was when Earth Elder made the first tree, a great oak with twelve branches arching over the land.”

Page 25: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Berry Moon• Mnoomni giizis

Page 26: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Moon of Wild RiceEighth Moon – Menominee

“The Bear people gave them wild rice in exchange and so it came to

be that those two families live together and harvest this special food.”

Page 27: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Rice moon• Mnoomni giizis

Page 28: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Moose-calling MoonNinth Moon – Micmac

• “So the Moose comes and stands strong as the northeast wind. He looks at us, then we watch him disappear back into the willows again.”

Page 29: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Changing leaves moon

• Waabagaa giizis

Page 30: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Moon of Falling LeavesTenth Moon - Cherokee

• “Long ago, the trees were told they must stay awake seven days and nights, but only the cedar, the pine and the spruce stayed awake until the seventh night.”

Page 31: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe Moon

• Falling leaves moon• Bnaakwii giizis

Page 32: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• Eleventh Moon - Winnebago

• Moon when Deer drop their horns

• “Now, each winter, when the deer gather, just as we enter our medicine lodges, they leave their weapons outside the door.”

Page 33: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Freezing Moon• Baashkaakodin giizis

Page 34: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Moon when Wolves run togetherTwelfth Moon – Lakota Sioux

• “Shunk man-i-tu tan-ka we call the wolves, the powerful spirits who look like dogs…”

Page 35: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Little spirit Moon• Manidoo giizisoonhs

Page 36: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Big MoonThirteenth Moon - Abenaki

• “So it is that our own People of the Dawn place one final moon at the end of each cycle. We call it Kit-chee Kee-sos, Big Moon.

Page 37: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

Anishinabe version

• Spirit Moon• Manidoo giizis

Page 38: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

“…the last in our circle of seasons, thirteen moons on Old Turtle’s Back.”

Page 39: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• In Anishinabe culture, we are taught that a piece of mother earth was put on the turtle’s back after the great flood.

• Nanabozho saw that the back of the turtle had thirteen sections, which he compared to the thirteen moons of the year.

Page 40: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.
Page 41: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• There are many, many different versions of this story. This book and this presentation explores some of the versions.

• Native Tribal Nations in different regions of the continent give us a wider sense of the many things to notice in this beautiful world around us….

• …it is a world which must be listened to and respected.

Page 42: In Native American legend, the thirteen scales on Old Turtle’s back hold the key to the thirteen cycles of the moon and the changing seasons. The First.

• This presentation was prepared for you by Ms. C. Forbes, First Nations, Metis and Inuit Student Support