Forwarded in part by Mixon:

JIM CONRAD’S NATURALIST NEWSLETTER
Issued from Hacienda Chichén beside the Maya ruin of
Chichén Itzá in the central Yucatán, MÉXICO

March 14, 2010

*****

THE HALTÚN
When I first arrived here Don Philomeno, in his 70s
and Hacienda Chichen's longest-serving employee,
showed me around the grounds. We came into an area
where soil was completely missing, exposing nothing
but an expanse of white limestone bedrock. The Don
knelt beside a water-filled depression in the rock,
about the size of a yellow dog, and proudly told me
how he vividly remembered the day when it was he who
discovered this very depression.

In Maya such water-holding holes in limestone bedrock
have their own name. Such a hole is a haltún. You can
see several typical ones at
http://www.backyardnature.net/n/10/100314ha.jpg

In Maya culture, the haltún is important for the
simple reason that when you're wandering in the forest
and find one, you can drink its water. At least older
Maya are still acutely aware that humans need
unpolluted water, and that if drinkable water
disappears, living becomes impossible. For older Maya
like Don Philomeno, the haltún demands great respect.
Don Philomeno spent several minutes explaining to me
the proper way to clean one and protect it, and I felt
honored to be initiated in such a way into the
mystical realm of the haltún.

I'm thinking about haltúnes nowadays because most days
I pull up a few buckets of water from the 80-ft-deep
well where the Brittle Maidenhairs live, keep each
haltún in the area filled, and water various saplings
we want to bring through the current dry season.

Also I'm thinking about the haltún because if you want
to see birds you can't do better than to position
yourself nearby, and just watch the stream of species
come in from the forest and settle there for a drink.

The haltún is a wonderful thing.

*****
Best wishes to all Newsletter Readers.

Jim

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