In Oregon's Western Cascades, Pilot Rock rises thousands of feet above the Rogue and Shasta Valleys. The area's original Native American inhabitants, the Takelma, called it Tan-ts'at-seniphtha, or "Stone Standing Up." The Takelma lived in the rock's shadow as they fished, hunted, and foraged along the Rogue River. In this pattern, arrows represent salmon swimming into nets, and large baskets overflow with abundant acorns and camas. Woven in our Pacific Northwest mills, this blanket is a twin/robe size—a perfect accent for the foot of a bed, on the back of a couch, or used as a wall hanging.