Skinwalker
In Navajo culture, a skinwalker is a type of witch who has the ability to turn into or possess animals. They are considered evil and can be male or female. The nearest creature in western mythology would
be a werewolf, The Navajo are reluctance to talk about them,
"We as Native people are now opened up to a
barrage of questions about these beliefs and traditions ... but these are not
things that need or should be discussed by outsiders. At all. I'm sorry if that
seems 'unfair', but that's how our cultures survive.”
(Keene, founder of the website Native Appropriations
on being asked about skinwalkers in literature.)
The legend came to the notice of the wider world
with the story of the skinwalker ranch.
The so called Skinwalker Ranch, previously known as
Sherman Ranch, is a property located southeast of Ballard, Utah,Claims about paranormal
events at the ranch first appeared in 1996 in the Salt Lake City, Utah, Deseret
News,
Robert Bigelow, founder of the National Institute
for Discovery Science, purchased the ranch for $200,000 in 1996, after being convinced
by the stories of cattle mutilations, and strange lights told by the family of
former ranch owner Terry Sherman.Bigelow set up round-the-clock surveillance of
the ranch, hoping to get to the bottom of the paranormal claims.
In 2005, Colm Kelleher and co-author George Knapp
published a book, Hunt for the Skinwalker, Kelleher and Knapp, reported they
saw evidence of incidents that include
vanishing and mutilated cattle, sightings of unidentified flying objects or
orbs, large animals with piercing red eyes and invisible objects emitting magnetic fields. However, the investigators
admitted to "difficulty obtaining evidence consistent with scientific
publication".
There was a TV series made of the investigations at
the Ranch which further extended its fame.
The Sherman’s
family ranch was 400 miles north of Navajo Nation so skinwalkers unlikely..
Author Robert Sheaffer believes the events at the Skinwalker Ranch to be "almost
certainly illusory", as the previous owners of the property, who had lived
there for 60 years, say that they saw no strange things of any kind . Sheaffer
considers the "parsimonious explanation" to be that the Sherman
family invented the story "prior to selling it to the gullible
Bigelow", with many of the more extraordinary claims originating solely
from Terry Sherman.
All I can suggest is read the literature and watch
the TV series and make up your own minds.In view of the lack of Navajo nation
in the area ,the skinwalker legend seems unlikely. However as I have said in
the past certain areas seem to attract strange phenomena .Or do they attract
the people that see them? You decide.
An article
for those interested in the ranch:
https://www.history.com/news/skinwalker-ranch-paranormal-ufos-mutilation
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