Village of
 Many Nations

reservation
toll free

800-871-6811
or
435-619-5936

Cave Lakes Canyon Kanab Utah Bed and Breakfast, cabin rental tipi rental







































Village of
 Many Nations

reservation
toll free

800-871-6811
or
435-619-5936






















































Village of
 Many Nations

reservation
toll free

800-871-6811
or
435-619-5936
































































VILLAGE OF MANY NATIONS

Native American Cultural Center
a NON PROFIT organization
Now taking reservations for the 2011 season
RESERVATIONS


vILLAGE OF MANY nATIONS. TIPI RENTAL

IN CAVE LAKES CANYON


        Utahtrailsresort.com    

 

 

 

 



Sleep in a TiPi
Memories that will last
 a lifetime




Sleep in Comfort
1 to 14 people






Navajo Hogans
Sleep 1 to 6 people






Entertainment nightly
Drums
Dances
Story Telling




      <Petroglyph Classes

      Horseback riding>
   

 

 

 

Spend some time on Sacred Ground
That was once occupied by ancient
Anasazi Indians (seeHistory)

Utah Trails
(Village of Many Nations)


A Native American Cultural Center
non profit organization
see also
www.villageofmanynations.com
Located at Cave Lakes Canyon Adventure Resort,
5 and 1/2 mile  from Kanab Utah on Hwy 89
on the left just past Moki Cave (coming from Kanab).

RESERVATIONS

 












A LEGEND  REBORN,

Sharing our future,
while preserving the past.

If you are the type of person
 who would enjoy
sleeping in an authentic

hand painted tipi with incredible
 Native American Decor,


or would like to visit the Navajo Hogan
and learn from the Navajo
 about their great culture,

or visit a Paiute Indian Village
and be taught about a people
who were taught to nurture
 and protect the land.,

YOU MUST GIVE US A VISIT !

Come and meet Dr. Harris,
 a scholar in Ancient Alphabet writing,
Let him share with you the stories
 of the Ancient Ones found in
what we call Indian Rock Art
that can still be found
in the Canyons of this area.


We also have a native
American Indian show
nightly at 7:30 p.m
This is a must see on your visit.
Drumming, dancing, storytelling,
right in the middle of our
Village of Many Nations

Don't forget to stop by the
Mountain Man area
and hang out for a while,
 they have stories to share.

Native Americans tell us that this land
 is a Sacred Ground,
 they still feel its heart beat.

Come visit us
we will help you experience this land
 as it once was.


An Exiting Destination
Walking tours Daily -

10am to 7pm
$ 5.00 per person
RESERVATIONS


see our website
Utahtrailsresort.com
info@utahtrailsresort.com
toll free: 1-800- 871 -6811
or : 435-619-5936

 

 


The center consist of a Dakota Village with 24 tipis
a shade structure, four fire rings, a sweat lodge and a medicine wheel.

The Navajo Village will have seven Hogan, a sweat lodge, a shade structure, or no oven and a garden
.

The Paiute village will have four wickie-ups, a shade structure, bow and arrow and tomahawk throwing.

The Mountain Man Village will have four wall tents, craft classes, herb classes, survival classes, costume rooms, large fire ring and a garden.


Entertainment nightly
All overnight Guest will get an overall tour and an evening show

 
 

 

 


INDIAN  NATIONS  IN  SOUTHERN  UTAH

 

Yellow-orange represents Southern Paiute.
The Paiute tribe of Utah includes five bands, each with their own land base in southwestern Utah.

San Juan Southern Paiute
is the other federally recognized Paiute tribe in Utah. Their homeland lies in southeast Utah and northern Arizona, although they currently hold no reservation land.

The Paiute Tribes of Utah chose to present the broader Southern Paiute Nation in the exhibit and included the San Juan Southern Paiute, Kaibab, Moapa and Las Vegas Paiutes in their narrative.

Indian Nations in Utah

Turquoise represents Navajo.
The Navajo Nation is the largest reservation in the United States. Its northern edge (the "Utah Strip") lies along the southeastern border of Utah.

 

Red represents Ute.
There are two federally recognized tribes of Ute Indians in Utah at the present time, those residing at the Uintah-Ouray reservation in northeastern Utah (the largest reservation in the state), and those at White Mesa Ute Council near Blanding, Utah (an outlying 
community of the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation in Colorado).


Blue
represents the Northwestern band of Shoshone Tribe.
Today the Northwestern Band of Shoshone Tribe has a small  parcel of reservation land in northern Utah, near its border with Idaho.
 
 

Green represents Goshute.
There are two federally recognized tribes of Goshute, the Confederated Tribes of Goshute living at Ibapah, on the Utah/Nevada border, and the Skull Valley Band of Goshute at Skull Valley, Utah.

Reference.umnh.utah.edu

 


Medicine Wheel


Medici
   
                                    MEDICINE WHEEL


A much-enlarged reproduction of artist Dallin Maybee's Medicine Wheel depicts an ancient symbol used by native people throughout the Americas.
 Many concepts are expressed within the circle and its four quadrants:
the four cardinal directions, the four winds, the four elements, the four parts of a human being (mental, physical, spiritual, and emotional), and other relationships expressed in sets of four.

Maybee made this image for the cover of Forrest Cuch's excellent book, Utah's American Indians. It celebrates the indigenous people of Utah--
the mountain-plains cultures (Ute and Shoshone),
the desert cultures (Goshute, Paiute, and Navajo),
as well as the ancient Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi) and Fremont



 The Sun Wheel (Medicine Wheel), which exists all over the Earth,
presents insights into the evolution and history of mankind
through a better understanding of the cycles of nature.
It is a very important part of our ongoingness.
In the study of nature and its many patterns, the Medicine Wheel is duplicated in everything.
 It is constructed with stones, each one representing a part of the universe


T
his pattern is symbolized by a circle or wheel, with directional spokes.
The spokes demonstrate the natural progression of the stages of life as it spins in a full cycle.
The pattern of the wheel can be applied in all our life situations where cyclical movements exist.
Each spoke of the wheel tells us exactly where we are, both psychologically and physiologically,
from where we have just come, and to where we will go next


The word medicine does not refer simply to healing as it does to western man.
 Anything that promotes harmony with all creation is medicine.
An illness was not so much a disease, rather, it was a disharmony in the soul of a person.
In presenting the Animal Medicine Wheel it is important to realize
that the reading is about coming into harmony with the natural flow of life's changes,
 which does not necessarily require a medical ailment.

The wheel teaches us to be respectful of all life
and emphasizes that each step we take on our beloved Earth Mother,
must always be a prayer.

The wheel teaches us that all aspects of the wheel intricately interact with all other aspects of the wheel.
We are not alone but are part of the whole.

 

The wheel teaches us to break the illusion of separateness
and to see ourselves as necessary parts of the whole.
No one cell is any less important than the next, for it takes all cells to create the whole.
You cannot have a forest without the trees.
This does not take away from the uniqueness of the individual;
 rather, it allows the individual access to the strength and resiliency found only in the whole.


Life is a cycle, a cycle is a circle, and in a circle, all things return to where they began.

 

 

 

 



 
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