The CrossField


The Domani National Register of Freeholds, Glades, and Haunts



The purpose of the DNR







Freeholds, Glades, Haunts and Refuges: their definitions in Domani terminology




The DNR FGH List
  Alphabetical Listing
       A to G
       H to K
       L to P
       Q to V
       W to Z
  Listing by Realm
       Fantasia, I.D.
       Aleutia
       Aquaterra
       ArkenStone
       Astoria
       Belle Terres
       the Black Hills
       Cascade
       Celtica
       Cibola
       the Dells
       the Dreamtime
       Eastern Divisia
       EternalBeauty
       FairyStone
       GreyHaven
       LoneStar
       Lumina
       the Mists
       Orinoco
       Pacifica
       Plainitia
       Remal
       Saint Lawrence
       Sil Magra
       Snake Mound
       Snowdonia
       Western Divisia|





The National Mystickal Refuge List










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The Domani National Register Listings:
H-K




Here are listed the current entries for freeholds, glades, and haunts: from H-K. Feel free to peruse them at your leisure.

Good Dreaming to you, and Blessed Be.





Ha'ena State Park
End of Kuhio Highway(Highway 56)
Ha'ena, Hawaii
Pacifica
Scenic wildland park. Viewing of wet caves--ancient sea caves formed during a higher stand of sea, probably 4,000 years ago; tradition credits Pele the volcano goddess as having dug the caves in her search for a new home. Beach-related activities, shore fishing, viewing of spectacular Na Pali Coast and swimming at Ke'e Beach. Trailhead for 11-mile Kalalau Trail. - provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit.

Harpers Ferry National Historic Park
Immediately South of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia
FairyStone
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park is located at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers in the states of West Virginia, Virginia, and Maryland. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Meriwether Lewis, John Brown, "Stonewall" Jackson, and Frederick Douglass are just a few of the prominent individuals who left their mark on this place.
       The story of Harpers Ferry is more than one event, one date, or one individual. It involves a diverse number of people and events that influenced the course of our nation's history. Harpers Ferry witnessed the first successful application of interchangeable manufacture, the arrival of the first successful American railroad, John Brown's attack on slavery, the largest surrender of Federal troops during the Civil War, and the education of former slaves in one of the earliest integrated schools in the United States.
- information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola

Hot Springs National Park
4-5 mile radius surrounding Caer Hot Springs(Hot Springs, Arkansas)
ArkenStone
Congress established Hot Springs Reservation on April 20, 1832 to protect hot springs flowing from the southwestern slope of Hot Springs Mountain. This makes it the oldest park currently in the National Park System -- 40 years older than Yellowstone National Park. People have used the hot spring water in therapeutic baths for more than two hundred years to treat rheumatism and other ailments. The reservation eventually developed into a well-known resort nicknamed "The American Spa" because it attracted not only the wealthy but also indigent health seekers from around the world. Today the park protects eight historic bathhouses with the former luxurious Fordyce Bathhouse housing the park visitor center. The entire "Bathhouse Row" area is a National Historic Landmark District that contains the grandest collection of bathhouses of its kind in North America. By protecting the 47 hot springs and their watershed, the National Park Service continues to provide visitors with historic leisure activities such as hiking, picnicking, and scenic drives. Hot Springs Reservation became Hot Springs National Park by a Congressional name change on March 4, 1921. The words "hot springs" often conjure up images of volcanoes, geysers, and underground chambers of molten rock or magma, and usually these features are found associated with hot springs. But in this area, the earth is relatively quiet. There is no evidence of magma lying close below the earth's surface to heat underground water. Instead geologists believe that just the right combination of rock types and old faults exists here to permit water to percolate deep, where it is heated by surrounding rock. Carbon - 14 dating methods and the measurement of tritium (an isotope of hydrogen) show that the hot springs water began as rainwater which fell over 4,000 years ago. Two rock types in the area, Bigfork Chert and Arkansas Novaculite, act like giant sponges, they are porous or highly fractured. Lying in tilted layers, these rocks absorb the rain and conduct it slowly downward to a great depth. The water travels downward for nearly 4,000 years to depths between 2,000 and 8,000 feet. A natural thermal gradient heats the water, the deeper into the earth it travels, the hotter it gets. Heat is supplied from the radioactive breakdown of particles found throughout the earth's crust. At great depth the heated water comes into contact with cracks and faults within the Hot Springs Sandstone. These cracks bring the water quickly, in about a year, back up to emerge as hot springs on the slope of Hot Springs Mountain. The water retains most of its heat during this relatively upward journey and arrives at the surface at an average temperature of 143 degrees Fahrenheit. In an arc from the northwest around to the east, outcroppings of Bigfork Chert and Arkansas Novaculite absorb rainfall. The pores and fractures in the rocks conduct the water deep into the Earth. As the water percolates downward, the increasingly warmer rock heats it, and filters out the impurities. In the process the water dissolves minerals in the rocks. Eventually the water meets the faults and joints in the Hot Springs Sandstone leading up to the lower west side of Hot Springs Mountain where it flows to the surface. - information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola

Ice Age National Scenic Trail
Runs throughout the whole of the province of the Rolling Hills(Wisconsin)
the Dells
A mere 15,000 years ago, two-thirds of what is today Wisconsin lay under the grip of colossal ice sheets. The climate warmed and they began to melt back. In their wake, they left an impressive glacial landscape of fascinating landforms--moraines, drumlins, kames, kettles, eskers, outwash plains, erratics, meltwater channels, potholes, driftless (unglaciated) topography, glacial lake beds and islands, and more.
       The Ice Age National Scenic Trail helps preserve this scenic beauty and provides a way to explore and appreciate this landscape, from expansive moraines to delicate marsh marigolds. It leads to places close to home as well as to remote parts of Wisconsin.
- information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola

Iron Tone Springs
Old 27 Northbound, in the Northern region of the province of Sunrise(between Gaylord and Vanderbilt, Michigan)
Aquaterra
"It's a natural spring which rises from the ground and produces a small creek. There is a great concentration of Iron in the water which turns all the rocks a rust color. There is a pipe coming out of the ground that clear water from the spring flows from that you can bottle. I've used this water in rituals with great results." - Lord Solace Boheme, ruler of Aquaterra

The Isle of Avalon
Near Bellingham, Washington(Lummi Island)
Astoria
"... a place called Lummi Island. There is a lot of good culture there and peaceful surroundings. There are artists and wildlife and a great little library." - Athene Airheart, former Domani and ruler of Astoria

Jean Lafitte National Historical Park & Preserve
Sites spread across the Mississippi Delta region
Southron
Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve was established to preserve significant examples of the rich natural and cultural resources of Louisiana's Mississippi Delta region. The park seeks to illustrate the influence of environment and history on the development of a unique regional culture.
       The park consists of six physically separate sites and a park headquarters located in southeastern Louisiana. The sites in Lafayette, Thibodaux, and Eunice interpret the Acadian culture of the area. The Barataria Preserve (in Marrero) interprets the natural and cultural history of the uplands, swamps, and marshlands of the region. Six miles southeast of New Orleans is the Chalmette Battlefield and National Cemetery, site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans and the final resting place for soldiers from the Civil War, Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, and Vietnam. At 419 Decatur Street in the historic French Quarter is the park's visitor center for New Orleans. This center interprets the history of New Orleans and the diverse cultures of Louisiana's Mississippi Delta region. The Park Headquarters is located in New Orleans.
- information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola

John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park
Key Largo, Florida
Orinoco
The first underwater park in the U.S., John Pennekamp encompasses approximately 70 nautical square miles. While the mangrove swamps and tropical hammocks in the park´s upland areas offer visitors a unique experience, it is the coral reefs and their associated marine life that bring most visitors to the park. Most enjoy the view from a glass bottom boat tour, but visitors can get a closer look by scuba diving or snorkeling through the reefs. Canoeing and kayaking through the park´s waters are popular activities; fishing is permitted in designated areas. Visitors can enjoy hiking two short trails, or picnicking and swimming at the beach. The visitor center has a 30,000-gallon saltwater aquarium and theater showing nature videos. - information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola

Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site
Half-mile North of Stanton, North Dakota
the Black Hills
Explore the lives of the Northern Plains Indians on the Upper Missouri. Step into a reconstructed earthlodge and imagine boiling buffalo meat in a clay pot or pounding corn with a mortar and pestle. View the artistry of everyday and ceremonial clothing, bags, and implements. Listen to memories of traditional Hidatsa Indian life, then walk through the past to the Sakakawea site, where earthlodge depressions hint of their life in a vibrant village, alive with games, ceremonies, and trade. - information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola


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