Water Ceremony on the Hudson River
Advertisement
***Directly following Water Ceremony I hope you can join The Witchcraft District Bazaar as they host Witches and Warlocks Stone Painting & BBQ Event. Link for more details in comments***
Please bring your family and friends and join us for our Water Prayer Ceremony along the banks of this sacred river. We gather at the Poughkeepsie Waterfront at the boat launch beside the The Governess to offer our prayers with tobacco and song.
Together we send our blessings downriver to the ocean, praying for the healing of the waters, the healing of Mother Earth, and all of our relations.
We come to honor our mighty Hudson, to give thanks for all the life she sustains along her shores and within her depths, and to remember the sacredness of water and our connection to it all.
This event is *Weather Permitting* and will be canceled in the event of inclement weather.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Let's Go Down to the River and Pray
The most beautiful ceremony that I had the privilege to participate in while I was at Standing Rock happened every morning at the Cannon Ball River ~ the Water Prayer Ceremony. It is my vision to stand with the intention of the Native People and to support and foster stewardship of Mother Earth and her Waters, here at our River Front, by joining our hearts in powerful prayer.
We live along a majestic, powerful body of water, originally called Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk, or Mahicantuck ~ the river that flows both ways. As a result of this flow, the merging of salt and fresh water has created an ecosystem unlike any in the world, with marine life found nowhere else.
Please bring your families and friends and join us for our Prayer ceremony along the banks of this sacred body of water. We will meet at the Poughkeepsie Waterfront – at the boat launch next to the Ice House. We will offer up our prayers with tobacco and song, sending them down to the Ocean, for the healing of the waters, the healing of Mother Earth and all of our Relations. We will honor our mighty river and all the life that it sustains within it and along her shores.
---------------------------------------------
Here’s a bit that I found on the web about Mahicantuck River, according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation:
“Of course, native tribes had named the river long before Hudson’s arrival. One of their names-Mahicantuck-means “great waters in constant motion” or, more loosely, “river that flows two ways.” It highlights the fact that this waterway is more than a river-it is a tidal estuary, an arm of the sea where salty seawater meets freshwater running off the land.
The Hudson estuary stretches 153 miles from Troy to New York Harbor, nearly half the river’s 315-mile course between Lake Tear of the Clouds in the Adirondacks and the Battery at the tip of Manhattan. The estuary feels the ocean’s tidal pulse all the way to Troy. Push a stick into the beach at the water’s edge, or note the water’s height on a piling or rock. Check back in 20 minutes. Is the water level the same? The estuary usually has two high and two low tides in twenty-four hours. With this rise and fall come changes in the direction of flow. In general, a rising tide is accompanied by a flood current flowing north towards Troy, a falling tide by an ebb current flowing seaward.
Salty seawater also pushes up the estuary, diluted by freshwater runoff as it moves north. In years with average precipitation falling in usual seasonal patterns, spring runoff holds the leading edge of dilute sea water-the salt front-downriver in the Tappan Zee. As runoff slackens in summer, the salt front pushes northward to Newburgh Bay, and further-to Poughkeepsie-in droughts.”
Copied from http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4923.html
---------------------------------------------
Please visit our website for more information about this and our other events: https://dreaminggoddess.com/events/
Please bring your family and friends and join us for our Water Prayer Ceremony along the banks of this sacred river. We gather at the Poughkeepsie Waterfront at the boat launch beside the The Governess to offer our prayers with tobacco and song.
Together we send our blessings downriver to the ocean, praying for the healing of the waters, the healing of Mother Earth, and all of our relations.
We come to honor our mighty Hudson, to give thanks for all the life she sustains along her shores and within her depths, and to remember the sacredness of water and our connection to it all.
This event is *Weather Permitting* and will be canceled in the event of inclement weather.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Let's Go Down to the River and Pray
The most beautiful ceremony that I had the privilege to participate in while I was at Standing Rock happened every morning at the Cannon Ball River ~ the Water Prayer Ceremony. It is my vision to stand with the intention of the Native People and to support and foster stewardship of Mother Earth and her Waters, here at our River Front, by joining our hearts in powerful prayer.
We live along a majestic, powerful body of water, originally called Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk, or Mahicantuck ~ the river that flows both ways. As a result of this flow, the merging of salt and fresh water has created an ecosystem unlike any in the world, with marine life found nowhere else.
Please bring your families and friends and join us for our Prayer ceremony along the banks of this sacred body of water. We will meet at the Poughkeepsie Waterfront – at the boat launch next to the Ice House. We will offer up our prayers with tobacco and song, sending them down to the Ocean, for the healing of the waters, the healing of Mother Earth and all of our Relations. We will honor our mighty river and all the life that it sustains within it and along her shores.
---------------------------------------------
Here’s a bit that I found on the web about Mahicantuck River, according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation:
“Of course, native tribes had named the river long before Hudson’s arrival. One of their names-Mahicantuck-means “great waters in constant motion” or, more loosely, “river that flows two ways.” It highlights the fact that this waterway is more than a river-it is a tidal estuary, an arm of the sea where salty seawater meets freshwater running off the land.
The Hudson estuary stretches 153 miles from Troy to New York Harbor, nearly half the river’s 315-mile course between Lake Tear of the Clouds in the Adirondacks and the Battery at the tip of Manhattan. The estuary feels the ocean’s tidal pulse all the way to Troy. Push a stick into the beach at the water’s edge, or note the water’s height on a piling or rock. Check back in 20 minutes. Is the water level the same? The estuary usually has two high and two low tides in twenty-four hours. With this rise and fall come changes in the direction of flow. In general, a rising tide is accompanied by a flood current flowing north towards Troy, a falling tide by an ebb current flowing seaward.
Salty seawater also pushes up the estuary, diluted by freshwater runoff as it moves north. In years with average precipitation falling in usual seasonal patterns, spring runoff holds the leading edge of dilute sea water-the salt front-downriver in the Tappan Zee. As runoff slackens in summer, the salt front pushes northward to Newburgh Bay, and further-to Poughkeepsie-in droughts.”
Copied from http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4923.html
---------------------------------------------
Please visit our website for more information about this and our other events: https://dreaminggoddess.com/events/
Advertisement
Where is it happening?
Poughkeepsie Waterfront, 1 Main St, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-2907, United States
Event Location & Nearby Stays:
Know what’s Happening Next — before everyone else does.
Host or PublisherDreaming Goddess









