Bradshaw Ranch — Comparison with Skinwalker Ranch
Bradshaw Ranch — Comparison with Skinwalker Ranch
[edit | edit source]Overview
[edit | edit source]Bradshaw Ranch is most frequently compared to Skinwalker Ranch in the UFO and paranormal research literature. The two properties share structural features that make comparison instructive: both are remote Western ranches that accumulated extensive paranormal and UFO reports; both were acquired by outside interests under circumstances that fueled conspiracy theories; both have been the subject of History Channel programming; and both have been proposed as sites of interdimensional portal activity.
Structural Comparison
[edit | edit source]| Feature | Bradshaw Ranch | Skinwalker Ranch |
|---|---|---|
| Location | Verde Valley, Arizona; near Sedona | Uinta Basin, Utah; near Ballard |
| Size | 90 acres | 512 acres |
| Previous use | Hollywood filming location; working ranch | Working cattle ranch (Sherman family) |
| Phenomena reported | Orbs, UFOs, humanoid entities, portal, electromagnetic anomalies, Bigfoot, Men in Black | Orbs, UFOs, poltergeist activity, crop circles, cattle mutilations, Bigfoot, wormholes, telepathic encounters |
| Primary documents | Merging Dimensions (Linda Bradshaw and Tom Dongo, 1995) | Hunt for the Skinwalker (Colm Kelleher and George Knapp, 2005); subsequent books |
| Outside acquisition | U.S. Forest Service, 2001 ($3.15 million via Trust for Public Land) | Robert Bigelow/NIDS (1996); Brandon Fugal (2016) |
| Current owner | U.S. Forest Service | Brandon Fugal (private) |
| Ongoing research | NAU SEGA climate research (22 acres) | Brandon Fugal's History Channel-documented investigation; previously NIDS (National Institute for Discovery Science) |
| TV coverage | Beyond Skinwalker Ranch (2023) | The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch (ongoing; History Channel) |
| Access status | Restricted — no public access | Private property; no public access; TV crew access only |
| Government acquisition motivation (official) | Forest conservation | Private sale; no government acquisition |
| Government acquisition motivation (alleged) | Suppress/study portal phenomena | Robert Bigelow's NIDS had government research connections; AAWSAP program |
Key Differences
[edit | edit source]Scale of investigation: Skinwalker Ranch has been subjected to far more sustained and better-resourced investigation than Bradshaw Ranch. The National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) conducted a years-long systematic investigation in the late 1990s and early 2000s. No comparable systematic investigation has been conducted at Bradshaw Ranch.
Documentation level: The Skinwalker Ranch investigation produced extensive documentation including systematic instrumental measurements, multiple trained-observer witness accounts, and eventually the AAWSAP government research program. Bradshaw Ranch's documentation is primarily limited to the 1995 book and subsequent testimonial accounts.
Government program connection: Skinwalker Ranch was explicitly studied under the U.S. government's AAWSAP program (through Robert Bigelow's BAASS). Bradshaw Ranch's connection to government programs — if any — is alleged but not documented.
The Pattern They Both Represent
[edit | edit source]Together, Bradshaw Ranch and Skinwalker Ranch represent a specific pattern in the American paranormal landscape: remote Western ranches with apparently anomalous phenomena that were either acquired by outside interests with possible government connections (Skinwalker) or by the government itself (Bradshaw). This pattern — whatever its ultimate meaning — suggests that at minimum, powerful institutions have identified specific geographic locations as warranting special interest that goes beyond normal land management or investment rationale.
