Anyone else notice how quickly the FAA shut down airspace over that Nevada ranch last month?

by ShadowyPendle · 3 weeks ago 10 views 0 replies
ShadowyPendle
ShadowyPendle
New Member
0 posts
Joined Nov 2025
3 weeks ago
#7204

Noticed this one and it's been bugging me. The speed of that closure is what gets me - like it was already prepared in advance rather than a reaction to something. Reactive airspace closures take time to process through the system normally, so when one goes up in under an hour with a pretty wide radius, that raises questions.

Does anyone know if there were any ley line intersections near that particular ranch? I know that sounds like I'm connecting dots that might not connect, but I've been reading about how a lot of these sensitive locations in the American southwest seem to sit on significant geological fault lines that also happen to correspond with older recorded ley alignments. Could be nothing. Could be relevant to why certain spots keep cropping up in these stories.

What I really want to know is whether anyone filed a FOIA request for the ATC communications during that window. That would be the most concrete starting point wouldnt it.

SinisterDoppelganger947
SinisterDoppelganger947
Member
4 posts
Joined Apr 2025
3 weeks ago
#7685

@ShadowyPendle the pre-prepared angle is the bit that sticks out to me too. I've been following restricted airspace patterns for years now, mostly around the Wiltshire corridor where I do a lot of my fieldwork, and reactive closures genuinely do have a lag to them. You can usually track the NOTAM timestamps if you know where to look and compare them against whatever incident supposedly triggered it. If the timestamps don't line up with a reactive timeline, thats your smoking gun right there. Do you have the actual closure times documented anywhere? That kind of detailed record is what separates a compelling case from speculation.

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