Ottawa Citizen

AREA 51 LOCALS ENDURE WEEKS OF ‘PURE INSANITY’

- LAURENCE DODDS

In the grey light of the Nevada dawn, in a parking lot beside a tiny rural courthouse, a small group of people board a white bus with tinted windows.

At about 10 minutes to seven, the bus pulls out of the lot onto the main road and speeds past the sign that reads Extraterre­strial Highway.

It passes the Alien Research Centre gift shop, with its giant metal alien statue, and ET Fresh Jerky, a food stop with outer space murals.

Finally it slips onto an unmarked dirt track and into the hills, passing through a hidden security checkpoint to deliver its passengers to another day’s work at Area 51.

Despite its near-mythical status among UFO obsessives, Area 51 — properly known as Groom Lake — is a real place, and to the people living in the small towns and farming valleys nearby, its brooding, secretive presence is just a normal part of life.

Now, though, they are scrambling to prepare for a massive influx of outsiders drawn to the area by a viral Facebook event, set for Sept. 21, which calls on attendees to “storm Area 51” and “see them aliens.”

The event’s creator has admitted he was joking, and most of the 1.9-million who have signed up are probably joking too. But even a fraction of that number would utterly overwhelm towns such as Rachel, a tiny community of 54 lying just off the road leading to Groom Lake’s “back gate.”

“It’s been two weeks of insanity, pure insanity,” says Connie West, owner of Rachel’s UFO-themed hotel, the Little A’Le’Inn. All her rooms for the weekend of the 20th are taken and the phone is still ringing off the hook. “I’ve had no sleep. I have no voice. I would like to shake the hand of the young man who made this happen and created this monster, and also would really like to punch him as hard as I could.”

It is unlikely that the CIA anticipate­d anything like this when it chose Groom Lake in 1955 to be the test bed for its U2 spy plane program. Today it is just one facility in the vast forbidden kingdom called the Nevada Test and Training Range (NTTR), a U.S. military reservatio­n the size of Yorkshire containing everything from drone bases to botanical experiment­s.

Some parts of the NTTR are quite open, but Area 51 is not one of them: it is off-limits even to most NTTR workers, and is guarded by infrared cameras, buried motion sensors and private security guards in grey pickup trucks known to locals as the “camo guys.”

As the proving ground for generation­s of advanced U.S. aircraft, and with appearance­s in films such as Independen­ce Day, Area 51 has always been of interest to UFO devotees.

On June 21, however, a physicist named Bob Lazar, who has been claiming for decades to have worked on a crashed alien space craft near Groom Lake, went on the popular Joe Rogan podcast. That piqued the interest of 20-yearold student Matty Roberts, who thought it would be funny to suggest an invasion. The event quickly escaped his control, which is when Connie’s ordeal began.

Already the Facebook event is drawing extra visitors.

“I think everything Bob Lazar says is true,” says Andrew Cudlipp, a young sound engineer from Seattle who is scouting the area for a music festival.

“I wholeheart­edly believe,” says Laura Campos, a mural artist from San Francisco, who believes aliens are probably responsibl­e for many recent technologi­cal advances.

“Something is being covered up here,” says Phil Hartley, a lecturer in electrical engineerin­g from Bo’ness, Scotland, who strongly believes that “ancient aliens” influenced humanity’s past.

“If it was nothing, they would just come out and tell you there was nothing.”

Perhaps, come September, we will find out. More likely is that a tiny fraction of attendees will turn up, get cold feet and hang around without crossing into the NTTR.

Linda Looney, who works at the Alien Research Center gift shop, says she is hiring extra security to control the crowds, fielding inquiries from food-truck companies, and preparing to be open 24 hours a day.

Anyone actually trying to enter Area 51 will face stiff resistance.

The camo guys are authorized to use deadly force; only in January, a man was killed trying to cross the line near the town of Mercury, at the opposite end of the NTTR from Groom Lake.

Most dangerous might be the NTTR’s natural defences: high mountains, baking heat and miles of jagged terrain to cross.

“This is a very rough, tough desert,” says Roberta Park, a retired school teacher.

“It’s not a good place to get stranded or run out of gas.”

An ill-prepared raid could become a humanitari­an disaster without the military ever intervenin­g. The Telegraph

 ?? DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? A warning sign is posted at the back gate at the top-secret military installati­on at the Nevada Test and Training Range known as Area 51 near Rachel, Nev.
DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES A warning sign is posted at the back gate at the top-secret military installati­on at the Nevada Test and Training Range known as Area 51 near Rachel, Nev.
 ?? DIGITALGLO­BE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The United States Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 is within the Nevada Test and Training Range.
DIGITALGLO­BE VIA GETTY IMAGES The United States Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 is within the Nevada Test and Training Range.

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