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Cernnunos Pacahaca was Pan-Celtic triple god Cernnunos (Cernunos, Kernnunos, Kernunos) who was Green Man, Great Father, and Nature Deity. Revered since prehistoric times, he was mentioned in votive descriptions and depicted on relief carvings, stone monuments, and many Celtic artifacts and artworks like the Gundestrup Cauldron found in Denmark where he was accompanied by a boar and a bull. "Antlered Horned Forest Lord", "Leaf Faced Greenery Father", and "Primal Landscape Goddess Consort", he was known by many names throughout the ages on the European continent and in the British Isles. The keeper of the archetypal bag of fecund fertility coins, he carried a mighty club that symbolized his authority as master of the hunt, protector of nature, and Otherworld threshold guardian. A creative mentor of animals, nature spirits, and woodlands, Cernnunos was also a magical craftsman and mysteries initiator. As Pacahaca (Pachacamac, Huaca), he was the pre-Inca, pre-Columbian South American earth father, creator god who was revered by the South American Indians in the region of Lima, Peru. There are still remnants of a large pyramidal sanctuary dedicated to him built over a former Sacred Mound by the Inca conquerors who allowed the local populace to continue to revere Pacahaca but only in structures and practices of their design. Originally there were no buildings of any kind utilized by the Natural World Pleiadian progenitors for spiritual practices. They communed with the higher spheres of Creation by honoring the seasonal cycles and celebrating life in Hallowed Landscape sanctuaries.
Part of the Pacahaca Peruvian appellation derives from
the pre-Colombian South American Peruvian word Huaca. It refers to the
embodiment of the quintessence of a Natural World rock or spring.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Cernnunos Pacahaca and the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation are Worthington State Forest, which is located along the Kittatinny Ridge in Warren County on the Delaware River in New Jersey, U.S.A. and Lake Titicaca, which is situated more than 13,100 feet above sea level in Peru in South America. Encompassing 6,421 acres (26 square kilometers), the Worthington Forest extends for over seven miles (ten kilometers) just north of the Delaware Water Gap in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area. There are two Natural Areas in Worthington Forest. The 1,085 acres (4.4 square kilometers) Dunnfield Creek Natural Area has a Wild Trout Stream; while the 258 acres (1.0 square kilometer) Sunfish Pond Natural Area has a chestnut oak forest and a glacial lake. Managed by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry, Worthington State Forest has around twenty miles of hiking trails. Seven miles of the Appalachian Trail also traverse the forest. The Old Mine Road was originally a Native American trail that was also travelled by Dutch settlers. Camping, Canoeing, and kayaking along the Delaware River; as well as, viewing the panoramic vista of the Delaware Water Gap from atop 1,527 feet (465 meters) high Mount Tammany are popular pastimes. Another forest in the general environs, Jenny Jump State Forest has a narrow trail lined with rocky outcroppings that leads to the top of Jenny Jump Mountain which offers scenic views of the Great Meadows, the Highlands, Kittatinny Valley, and Kittatinny Mountains. Especially scenic when autumn fall foliage colours abound, the Jenny Jump Forest is part of a picturesque setting that includes rolling landscape and the Jenny Jump Moutain Range. The Jenny Jump Forest with its leafy trees, peaceful ponds, and babbling brooks provides habitat for a diverse array of flora and fauna. Besides such activities as hiking and canoeing, there is also an astronomy observatory in the Jenny Jump Forest. Hierarch Cernnunos Pacahaca shares the Worthington Forest Sacred Site focal point with his soulmate wife Hierarch Cerridwen Pacamama, also a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. Hierarch Cernnunos Pacahaca occasionally visits the Lake Titicaca Sacred Site focal point which he shares with his soulmate wife Hierarch Cerridwen Pacamama, also a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. Over 105 miles long, deep blue Lake Titicaca has been infused with the patina of traditional folklore. It is the largest lake in the world. The lake was also the nexus point of Inca creation myths. According to the legends of the Inca, the god Vairacocha came out of Lake Titicaca in order to create both the sun and the moon, as well as, to shape humans from stone. Interestingly, the Uros people of Lake Titicaca, who now live on the floating Uros islands made from compressed layers of totora reeds, originally left the lower altitude terraces surrounding the lake in their reed boats in order to avoid interaction with tribes like the Incas. At the bottom of the lake there are stone ruins buried under six feet of sediment which contain fossils of seashells that existed prior to 12,000 BCE. There is also a stone causeway at the 9,000 feet level that leads nowhere which archaeologists have conjectured once used to be at sea level and continued on until it reached the Pacific Ocean.
On the slopes of the mountains that
soar above the lake, there are ancient corn terraces where it can be seen that
prehistoric peoples once cultivated corn both before and after the cataclysms
that influenced the area, causing the Andes to rise... Hierarchs
Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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