An Indian Mystic has said "Really, one doesn't need to go to India. Everything I have needed to know about connecting to the spirit I learned meditating on a rock on the side of Mount Shasta. Its a place where the veils between the ethers are thinner than elsewhere, and where the Masters can communicate with you more easily. You should go there"
The Sanskrit word Shasta means one who lives according to divine law. Although, some say that Mount Shasta was actually named by French fur trappers who called it chaste, meaning "pure." Or, it could have received its name from the Tshastel Indians who lived in the area.
There is something uncanny about Mount Shasta. A buddymentioned how strange it was to see Mount Shasta rising above into the sky as he drove by on I-5....a sinister feeling to it. The mountain exerts a strange force. John Muir wrote that the first time he saw Shasta, "all my blood turned to wine and I have not been weary since."
We spent a short weekend trying to experience Shasta country...and it was one wonderful weekend.
Here are some things to do in and around Shasta
We had camped out at http://www.yelp.com/biz/castle-crags-state-park-castella.
It is a fantastic location if you ignore the I-5 freeway noise that becomes a tad annoying more so in the middle of the night if you happen to wake up. It didn't bother me - sleep is not an issue. One of the amazing experiences of camping out here was to see the galaxy of stars, the milky way streaming up in the sky in a straight line. This was the only time I have seen it.
We took a short trail at Panthers Meadow and also a trail @ Castle Crags
We bought some crystals in the town - interesting experience (though a ripoff in retrospect)
We also drove upto Mount Shasta as far as we could and did a short hike.
I am sure I am missing a couple things.
Everitt Vista Point
Drive up Mount Shasta on the Everitt Memorial Highway (just follow Lake Street up out of the center of Mt. Shasta City past the high school). After you drive approximately 8 miles, you will see the sign for the popular Everitt Vista Point 1/2 mile before the destination. The view west over the valley from your car is breathtaking, but if you walk through the parking lot and take the trail starting next to the restroom facility, you will soon come to a stone lookout which affords a panoramic view to the south. On a clear day you will see Mount Lassen and Castle Crags in the south, with the sweep of the Eddy Mountains and distant Marble Mountain Wilderness Area to the west.
The Everitt Vista Point lookout is the location of frequent "star parties" during the summer, where local astronomers bring their telescopes and binoculars for the celestial show. Check the local newspaper the Mt. Shasta Herald, to see if a star gazing party is planned during your stay.
Panther Meadows is one of the most beautiful locations on
To reach Panther Meadows, take the Central Mount Shasta exit off California's Interstate 5, head east on Lake Street through town, curve left onto Everitt Memorial Highway, and drive 13 miles up the mountain. There are plenty of campsites and vault toilets, but no drinking water except for the spring itself. The campground is open from mid-June through Labor Day, depending on weather conditions.
Here are extracts from a writeup in San Francisco Chronicle by John Flinn
I'd come in to shop for a souvenir. But in Mount Shasta's
Still trying to get a handle on the town's status as a "world renowned spiritual energy vortex," as a brochure I picked up in the visitor's center put it, I called the Circle of Life Wellness Center for Conscious Living and made an appointment to have my body's energy systems checked out by something called the Aurastar 2000.
In a little office above a Papa Murphy pizza restaurant, a woman named Carol Ito had me place my left hand on a device with 50 metal sensors and count backward from 100. Ito booted up her IBM ThinkPad laptop, and in a few seconds an image appeared on its screen -- Leonardo da Vinci's famous sketch of the male body superimposed on what looked uncannily like the swirling colors of a tie-dyed T-shirt.
Those colors, Ito explained, represented my energy fields. "It's the same as your aura, but we don't like to use that word," she said. "It's too charged. "
Examining the readout, Ito told me that my heart, solar plexus, spleen and root chakras were doing just fine, but that my neck and throat chakra wasn't doing so well -- probably stress -- and that my brain and third eye were working overtime.
"People use this feedback to make decisions in their life," she said.
Frankly, I wasn't much taken with the Aurastar 2000 -- until Ito noticed the band of gray around my midsection in the readout. "You've had an injury to your waist, haven't you?" she said. As a matter of fact, I had. I'd had a kidney removed three years earlier, the only serious trauma to my body in many years. I left her office a bit less skeptical than I arrived. On my last day in town I drove 15 miles up the Everett Memorial Highway to its end on Shasta's southwest flank, at about 7,900 feet. I set off walking up a rocky trail, past the last, stunted trees. Much of Shasta's paranormal activity has been reported in this area -- probably, the skeptic in me thought, because it has easy highway access.
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