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Homes were usually just shade roofs called ramadas with
four or six poles supporting a flat roof covered with
bundles of reeds or grasses. For cold weather the house had
side walls made from poles standing from the roof covered
with bundles of grass and then with a layer of mud several
inches thick. Sometimes a settlement would have one or two
such houses larger than the rest where the leader lived. If
the weather was very cold they would invite others to stay
with them. It seems that neither the Mojave or Ouechan used
sweathouses as most early Californians did. The Mojave
Indians ate acorns, cactus, clover, cherries, plums,
berries, prickly pear, and small game. There was a rain
maker. He gathered the community. Then he sang, prayed,
danced, and asked spirits for rain.The Mojave traded with
other tribes for items they could not make such as wooden
bowls, horns, spoons, and dentalium shell beeds. Both the
Mojave and the Quechan also called the Yuma lived mostly in
the east of the Colorado river in what is now Arizona and
partly in California. |