THE PLAINS INDIAN TIPI
Constructing a plains Indian tipi: the best movable shelter ever developed.
THE PLAINS INDIAN TIPI
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"There were 50 tents made of tanned hides, very bright red
and white in color and bell-shaped, with flaps and
openings, and built as skillfully as those of Italy, and so
large that in the most ordinary ones four different
mattresses and beds were easily accommodated. The Indians .
. . are as well sheltered in their tents as they could be
in any house. "
From Don Juan de Oate's account of a 1599 Great Plains
expedition
"Tazhebute came to join us with a good Indian tent . .
. Those tents have no equal for camping purposes. They shed
the rain well, and in cold weather one can build afire
right in the center of them, with the smoke rising cleanly
up out of the top, where the flaps are set to suit the way
of the wind.
"Thomas Henry Tibbles, describing an 1881 trip among
the Ponca Indians in his book, BUCKSKIN AND BLANKET
DAYS
"Ye kin live in it forty below zero and fifty 'bove
suffocation an' still be happy. It's the changeablest kind
of a layout for livin' in. "
Caleb Clark, The Old Trapper, in Ernest Thompson
Seton's TWO LITTLE
SAVAGES, 1903
"It's a whole new trip, man. It's, like, living inside
and outside both at once. During the day - even on dark
days - a tipi has a mellow, even illumination that'snever been equalled in a house. When it rains, you're
right out in it . . . yetprotected, you know? Like, you'reright
there, man, but warm and dry too. And at
night . . . wow . . . It's a groove to watch the fire
making shadows on the wall and - later - maybe wake up to
see the moon or some stars shining down through the poles
in the smoke hole. Fantastic.
"I once heard Buckminster Fuller tell how he wanted to
build a double-walled geodesic dome house for movie
director John Houston and Fuller's basic idea was that
living in the place would be a natural inside-outside
thing. But it's already been done, man. Like, the Indians
were WAY ahead. "
A back-to-the-land tipi dweller, 1969
For over 400 years, knowledgeable people have agreed that
the Plains Indian tipi is absolutely the finest of all
movable shelters. To the Indian - whose concept of life and
religion was broader, deeper, richer and infinitely more
unified than that of his white conqueror - the tipi was
much more: Both home and church . . . a sacred place of
Being and sharing with family, friends, Nature and
Man-Above.
Unfortunately, the white man - with a fragmented and neatly
compartmented view of existence - found the
All-encompassing Indian way literally "beyond
understanding" and, therefore, of no consequence. This
high-handed and naive judgment extended, of course, to the
lodges of the Plains Indians.
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