Thursday, January 30, 2014

The car trip


The continuation of our trip brought us from Oklahoma City to Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the Monument Valley, to Grand Canyon, on to Palm Desert, to Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, to Big Sur and on to San Francisco.  The distance we travelled from Orlando to San Francisco is 4,000 miles or 6, 400 kilometers that is like driving from Athens, Greece to Moscow, Russia and back to Athens.
 The following are the flags of the States we drove through in the second half of our itinerary.

The flag of New Mexico is based on the beliefs of the Zia an indigenous people the first Spanish explorers met.  Dr. Harry Mera of Santa Fe designed the flag.  Four is a sacred number to the Zia and symbolizes the circle of life: the four cardinal points, the four times of the day, the four stages of life and the four seasons with the sun binding all of them together.


The flag of Arizona consists of 13 rays of red and yellow on the top half, representing the 13 original states. The red and yellow is from the flag of Spain and also symbolize Arizona's picturesque sunsets. The copper star represents the copper mining industry in Arizona. The rest of the flag is colored blue, representing liberty.

The flag of California is white with a wide red stripe along the bottom, a red star in the upper left corner and a grizzly bear, walking on a patch of green grass. The history of California's flag is interesting.  In 1836, Juan Alvarado and Isaac Graham led a revolution against Mexican rule and declared California "a free and sovereign state". Although the rebellion failed, it inspired the design of the flag of the “Bear Flag Revolt” the Lone Star Flag with a single red star on a white background.  The original “Grizzly Bear Flag” was raised for the first time by the men who became known as the "Bear Flaggers" and was designed by William L. Todd, a nephew of Mary Todd Lincoln the wife of President Abraham Lincoln. The star on the today’s flag was influenced by the Lone Star Flag and the bear was designed to be a symbol of strength and unyielding resistance.

3 comments:

  1. The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz are like the beliefs of the Zia, it is based on the Toltec wisdom and is as well of Mexican origin. Toltecs were an ancient culture chiefly located in what is now the pyramid ruins of Teotihuacan in the high midlands of Mexico. A tradition that dates back thousands of years, one interpretation of the word means artist...they considered the manner in which you lived your life as your art, they embody many of the universally accepted truths adopted by spiritual traditions around the world, along with a common sense approach to explaining what we are and how we got this way. They taught that there is no way for us to change unless we have an awareness of how we created our own unique perception of the world.

    It is very interesting how the different cultures come up with various ideas of how and what the mysteries of life and living are, such as the #4 symbolizing the circle of life and so on and the flag of New Mexico is a reflection of just that.

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  2. p.s. That was one long and very interesting ride! Very informative, I learned a lot about areas in our country I knew little about! Thanks for sharing all that with all of us!

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  3. I want to thank you too for the comparative analysis between different groups that although at a distance from each other had similarities in their beliefs and cultures.

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