Chumash Rainbow Bridge Phenomenon. (2021)
This is my interpretation of the Chumash legend of the rainbow bridge, which occurred in the Santa Barbara channel in Southern California. I think a basic salary is that their creator was getting mad at our crowded and noisy. It was out on the islands and wanted some peace and quiet, so it was given to them through prophecy that a rainbow bridge would be made so that they could cross to the mainland safely. The rainbow punched through the fog and came back down, a lot of people fell.
And whoever made the bridge, their creator felt bad and turned them into dolphins and other types of life sea but specifically dolphins. It worked because if you looked down, the bridge would disappear. Hence, you had to believe all the way to the other sidein the summertime. So this is my viewpoint from Rincon State Park up on the mountain, the only two peaks you can see on a foggy day that stick out of the fog like islands. I wanted to try and capture the magic and mystery of the rainbow bridge myth.
This is my interpretation of the Chumash legend of the rainbow bridge, which occurred in the Santa Barbara channel in Southern California. I think a basic salary is that their creator was getting mad at our crowded and noisy. It was out on the islands and wanted some peace and quiet, so it was given to them through prophecy that a rainbow bridge would be made so that they could cross to the mainland safely. The rainbow punched through the fog and came back down, a lot of people fell.
And whoever made the bridge, their creator felt bad and turned them into dolphins and other types of life sea but specifically dolphins. It worked because if you looked down, the bridge would disappear. Hence, you had to believe all the way to the other sidein the summertime. So this is my viewpoint from Rincon State Park up on the mountain, the only two peaks you can see on a foggy day that stick out of the fog like islands. I wanted to try and capture the magic and mystery of the rainbow bridge myth.
This is my interpretation of the Chumash legend of the rainbow bridge, which occurred in the Santa Barbara channel in Southern California. I think a basic salary is that their creator was getting mad at our crowded and noisy. It was out on the islands and wanted some peace and quiet, so it was given to them through prophecy that a rainbow bridge would be made so that they could cross to the mainland safely. The rainbow punched through the fog and came back down, a lot of people fell.
And whoever made the bridge, their creator felt bad and turned them into dolphins and other types of life sea but specifically dolphins. It worked because if you looked down, the bridge would disappear. Hence, you had to believe all the way to the other sidein the summertime. So this is my viewpoint from Rincon State Park up on the mountain, the only two peaks you can see on a foggy day that stick out of the fog like islands. I wanted to try and capture the magic and mystery of the rainbow bridge myth.