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Hunter Banjo
Hunter Banjo
sunny sunday poll for ladies?


     1.
1. Banjo or harmonica
       2.
2. Guitar or piano
       3.
3. not tell motel or tell all tv talk show
4. jelly beans or baked bananas
9. applied appled monkeys or snobby snake salad
11. cold coffee or hot bleuberry chocolate with raisains
15. Ghost busters or ghost hunters
20. clover valley cola or clover valley moutain explosion
555. Say good night Irene

1. harmonica
2. piano
3. tell all tv talk show
4. jelly beans
9. snobby snake salad
11. cold coffee
15. Ghost busters
20. clover valley cola
555. good night Irene



No items matching your keywords were found.


No items matching your keywords were found.


No items matching your keywords were found.


No items matching your keywords were found.


Banjo Hackett


Banjo Hackett


$10.99


Banjo Hackett DVD New Synopsis: An 1880s horse trader helps his orphan nephew find his Arabian mare, stolen by a bounty hunter. Format: DVD Color: Color Rating: Not Rated Genre: Western Runtime: 104 Year: 1976 Director: Andrew V. McLaglen

Banjo Hackett - Fullscreen Dubbed Subtitle


Banjo Hackett - Fullscreen Dubbed Subtitle


$12.99


Also known as Banjo Hackett: Roamin' Free, this TV pilot film stars Don Meredith in the title role. Banjo Hackett is a western horsetrader, circa 1885, who travels in the company of his orphaned nephew (Ike Eisenmann). While searching for a rare Arabian mare stolen from the nephew's late mother, Hackett occasionally pays a visit to Mollie (Jennifer Warren), a ranch owner whom Banjo would marry if he'd only admit he loved the woman. Millionaire Dan O'Herlihy and untrustworthy bounty hunter Chuck Connors are also after the stolen horse. The film's storyline is as rambling as Banjo Hackett himself, which was both its charm and curse. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Banjo Hackett - DVD


Banjo Hackett - DVD


$9.83


Rated: NRSynopsis: Synopsis:Legendary Dallas Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith is Banjo Hackett, a free-spirited horse trader who travels the American West in search of a rare Arabian mare. Accompanied by his orphaned nephew (Ike Eisenmann, Star Trek: Wrath of Kahn), Banjo faces stiff competition from bounty hunter Sam Ivory (Chuck Conners, "The Rifleman"), a dirty skunk who ll stop at nothing to claim the $10,000 reward forthe mare's capture. Jam-packed with action, excitement and fun, BANJO HACKETT is a straight- shootin Western adventure the whole family will enjoy.© 2007 TriStar Pictures, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Banjo


Banjo


$24.99


George Marks Banjo - Photographic Print

Banjo Hackett (DVD)


Banjo Hackett (DVD)


$15.42


A rambling western from 1976, BANJO HACKETT is a horse trader played by legendary Dallas Cowboys` quarterback Don Meredith, a freewheelin` cowboy who roams the old wild west with his orphaned nephew, Jubal (Ike Eisenmann, STAR TREK: WRATH OF KAHN). The pair are in search of a rare Arabian horse that was stolen from the boy`s mother before she died. They have some stiff competition from millionaire Tip Conaker (Dan O`Herlihy), however, as well as a devious bounty hunter named Chuck Connors, who will stop at nothing to get his hands on the missing steed. Banjo also pays the occasional visit to Mollie (Jennifer Warren, SLAP SHOT), a beautiful rancher with whom the skittish cowboy is reluctantly in love.

The Hunter


The Hunter


$14.49


The Hunter

Hunter


Hunter


$12.49


Hunter

Recapturing The Banjo


Recapturing The Banjo


$12.49


Recapturing The Banjo

Banjo Or Freakout


Banjo Or Freakout


$9.49


Banjo Or Freakout

Masters Of The Banjo


Masters Of The Banjo


$14.29


Masters Of The Banjo

Banjo Hockey


Banjo Hockey


$11.49


Banjo Hockey

The Banjo-ologist


The Banjo-ologist


$17.99


The Banjo-ologist

Banjo Jamboree


Banjo Jamboree


$6.49


Banjo Jamboree


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Frank Hunter - Banjo - Fiddler's Picnic


Plant Spirit Shamanism: Floral Baths

In Peru, floral baths known as banjos florales (‘flower baths’) are a staple of shamanic healing from the high Andes to the Amazon basin, where they are used to wash away unhelpful spirits so that blockages are removed and the energy of the universe can flood in to correct the imbalance.

Shipibo shaman, Artidoro, describes the process in Peru.

How are these baths taken?

The bath is most often taken on the morning after ayahuasca ceremonies so that the body is modified to accept the new information of the visions. But this is not always true. Sometimes baths are taken before the ceremony to open the person up, and sometimes they are taken by themselves, as a healing.

A tub is filled with water and to this is added the plants that the patient most needs, like mocura and ajo sacha, some of the most powerful doctors. Agua florida or agua de colpas [i.e. water from jungle clay licks, which is rich in nutrients] may also be added.

The patient must approach in a sacred manner, in prayer that his needs will be met, and with the intention that they will. The shaman then pours the water over his head and lets it run down his body, also blowing him with smoke to purify him, or with perfume so he will flourish.

Sometimes the patient turns as this is happening – first to the left [in a circle, anti-clockwise], then to the right [clockwise]. The first turn is to get rid of negativity; the second to draw in positivity.

The bath takes place on the bank of a river so the energy that is removed will find its way to the sea [i.e. be taken away completely].

What plants are used in baths?

Floral baths do not contain large numbers of plants. Specific plants or flowers are chosen instead according to the patient’s ailment.

I begin by cooking up good smelling plants from the forest, and to that essence I add a little alcohol and a little agua florida. Then I get flowers and mash them and add that juice to the mixture and put it into bottles. When I do this, I diet and refrain from eating salt, etc. You can either have a one-off floral bath or you can have a series of them for a deeper and more thorough effect.

A common reason for people to want to take floral baths is that something is not going well for them – like, for example, they can’t get work or they are having bad luck. First I give them a cleansing bath to take away the saladera [bad luck] which is shows up as salt on their skins. In that bath I put ajo sacha, mishquipanga, ruda and romero [rosemary]. Then the floral bath follows to give the things the client wants: luck, work, etc.

Can you give examples of other baths and what they are used for?

For changing luck, mocura is used and the patient will find that after a couple of weeks, things have changed. For example you may find the job you were looking for, or where your life felt stuck or turbulent there is some momentum; things start to shift. Mocura is also used for clearing negative thoughts and feelings sent to you by others.

For cleansing the spirit, the dark red leaves of pinon colorado are used to undo sorcery and harm. This plant is also used in steam baths and when this is done you can actually see the phlegm, which is the bad magic, appear on the patient’s skin as it comes out of the body.

For flourishing or blossoming, bano de florecimiento plants are used. These help us to connect with and draw upon the strength and courage within ourselves, to overcome obstacles, and to lead a purposeful and productive life in accordance with our soul’s intention. The mixture for this bath is agua de colpa water from a place in the forest where pure rainwater collects. Often hunters drink this water as well to attract the animals.

To this is added albacca, which is a plant used widely in Peru for its strong, sweet perfume. It is used instead of an aerosol spray to freshen a house and is also placed on corpses during funerals. From a floral bath perspective, it attracts lots of friends and positive outcomes. It is also used medicinally for gastritis, appendix, or gall bladder problems, in which case you can take it as a tea. Menta [mint] is also added to freshen and re-vitalise the bather. Menta is also good for calming the nerves and releasing worries and preoccupations.

When the person bathes, all of these plant qualities are absorbed by the skin and the spirit.

About the Author

Ross Heaven is a therapist, workshop leader, and the author of several books on shamanism and healing, including Darkness Visible, the best-selling Plant Spirit Shamanism, and Love’s Simple Truths. His website is http://www.thefourgates.com where you can also read how to join his sacred journeys to the shamans and healers of the Amazon.

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