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Ancient Myth and History of Zaca Lake
Located in beautiful Los Olivos,
California amidst the wine country of the Central Coast,
Zaca Lake has been occupied and used as a sacred mystery
school, sanctuary and center for contemplation for 13,000
years by the Native American Chumash.
Zaca
Lake possesses a powerful spiritual and transformative
current. The
Shamans of the Chumash spent many lifetimes studying
and working with the special healing and transformative
energies of the lake and its surrounding
environment.
As expected
in a place of this magnitude, there are numerous myths
and mysteries surrounding Zaca Lake. A few years a go,
while visiting the Maoris of New Zealand, a Chumash
elder was told that for centuries Zaca Lake was a mystery
school and place of initiation for the Polynesian people.
The Chumash state that there is a rainbow bridge of light
and energy arising in Ojai, California that flows into
the depths of Zaca Lake. There is even a story that an
underground tunnel exists deep within the earth that
connects Zaca with Lake Titicaca in Peru.
According to Chumash oral tradition; presented
in December's Child, #58-Blackburn:
Zaca Lake was formed when Thunder sat down
there and made a great hole in the earth. There once was
a village at that place, and a man was eating ilepesh [Chia, Salvia
columbariae] there one day when he looked up and saw
Thunder and started talking in an insulting way to him. And
the people said "Let us get away from here, for Thunder is
someone you have to respect." They fled and as they looked
back they saw that where Thunder had sat down there was water,
and that the man who had spoken to Thunder had disappeared.
Later, when they had cattle, it was noticed that cattle near
the lake were nothing but skin and bone although there was
plenty of grass. The head of a monster was seen sticking
up out of the lake. No wonder the cattle didn't go near it!
And it is said that in the middle of the lake the water eddies
around and around and there is no bottom to the lake at that
point.
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John Libeu and Family
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The first European homesteader
at Zaca Lake was John Libeu who was part of a family of
landowners and politicians
who had come to America from Pau, France. In 1890, John
Libeu found that the lake area was available for homesteading
and filed for 160 acres. In 1895, he and his new bride
Catherine moved to Zaca Lake, living at first in a one
room cabin. As their family grew to include five daughters,
a ranch house, barn, corrals, chicken coups and other outbuildings
were constructed. Apples, grapes and olives were grown
on the property, as well as a large garden. John Libeu
established a resort hotel at the lake in 1917.
Catherine was the cook and the girls took care of the cabins.
Catherine and John were legally separated in 1918 and she
moved to Los Angeles. In 1925, Catherine sold her share
of the lake to the noted physician Dr. Robinson. John sold
his half in 1926 to the playwright Salisbury Field. By
March 1928, he had acquired the rest of the area. His wife
Isobel built an artists studio at the lake. Since that
time, Zaca Lake has had a number of owners. At times it
has been a resort, at times private.
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Interesting past events at Zaca Lake:
In 1913, Flying "A" Studio filmed, The Zaca Lake Mystery, starring
Pauline Bush and Jack Richardson and in 1919 they filmed, Rivers End.
More recently, The Creature From the Black Lagoon was filmed at Zaca Lake,
as well as Friday the Thirteenth part three.
Lindberg landed at Zaca Lake and explored the huge air pockets trapped in caverns
under the surface. He found no bottom.
The son of famous oceanographer Jaques Cousteau, also explored the lake and
found no bottom. It was reported to be a frightening experience, for after
he had broken through the algae layer and dove down to try to discover the
bottom, he found it difficult to make his way up again.
Zaca Lake used to be the valleys center for top quality moonshine.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, the Rolling Stones and many more celebrities have stayed
at Zaca Lake. At one time the Beach Boys were interested in buying the lake.
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Foundation plays host to numerous non-profit children’s
groups and retreats It also plays host to weddings, yoga retreats, family celebrations, film shoots and
people just yearning to get away from it all and reinvigorate themselves
by spending a few days immersed in the beauty, grace and solitude of the natural
world. |
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