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"What it comes down to is having it reflect the aspirations of the community," Gaines said. "Because you can't really do it on your own." It takes up to four and a half hours for a body to burn completely. Since there's no way of separating human ashes from those of the wood the family receives about five gallons of ashes. Relatives are sometimes apprehensive when a family member declares a desire to be cremated in a funeral pyre. "I just thought it was crazy at first when I heard," Randy Ellis said. But by the end of it, he said, he wants the same service for himself. By all accounts, Belinda Ellis was a free spirit. During the last years of her life, she lived with her husband and her boyfriend, Skip Benson, 59. "We had a friendship between the three of us that very few people could share," said Randy Ellis, 51. Belinda's relatives described her as a giving and stubborn person who loved motorcycles, the outdoors, and smoking pot. Amid the scent of juniper and burning wood was a smell of marijuana from a bag that someone dropped into the pyre. Someone joked that perhaps they also should have poured in some Pabst Blue Ribbon. Quiet, otherworldly chimes sounded from crystal bowls that a woman played at the beginning of the service. On a table were flowers and pictures of Belinda Ellis and her family. Other ceremonies are more elaborate, with as many as 200 people attending, or even featuring a New-Orleans style funeral march. Her relatives carried her from a car on a wooden stretcher and placed her on top of the steel grate. The site is encircled by a bamboo fence. "What was a physical body will become one with the sky," said William Howell, a project volunteer. Crestone is nestled at the foot of the Sangre De Cristo mountain range, some 200 miles southwest of Denver. Sangre De Christo means "blood of Christ," and legend has it that the name comes from a Catholic missionary priest whose dying words were "Sangre de Cristo" after seeing a sunset over the mountains. Native Americans are said to have called the area "The Bloodless Valley" because it was so sacred no bloodshed was allowed. "Being in this setting, you realize that we're all just part of nature," Randy Ellis said. "And she's just rejoined nature in another form. It's all that's going on here." ___ Online: Crestone End of Life Project:
http://www.crestone-end-of-life.org/
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