A
special place: Native Americans, namely the
Esopus Tribe of Lenape Indians, first roamed the Big Indian-Oliverea Valley,
headwaters of a famous trout stream. In fact
the word “Shandaken” is a Native American derivative that means “rapid waters”. Also local legend--- as recalled in Richard Lionel De Lisser's Picturesque Ulster--- has it that a young Indian
girl “of rare beauty named Tawasenta”, meaning Blossoms of Spring, fell to her
death from a falls that still bears her name--- Blossom Falls, not far from
this place.
In
his 1918 classic, The Catskills, T. Morris Longstreth wrote the following about
this valley, “Big Injin is the birth-dale of the Esopus, which conjures to my
mind pictures equal in charm to those brought back by the mention of the
Rondout, the Neversink, and the Schoharie.
Always there was some glimpse of the creek hurrying around the
corner. Instead of the Mountains of the
Sky, the Indians might have called the country the Land of Little Rivers, for
down each glen sprang some brook to join the bright Esopus. … I could not help
exclaiming about their beauty, so intangible, so unpicturable.”
The
setting on the upper reaches of the Esopus Creek remains home to wild brook
trout, Salvelinus fontinalis. This place
is still special, and someday my ashes will be spread here to be among the wild brook trout and spirit of Tawasenta.
A
Special Place, 11x14 (NFS):