That's an interesting twist, saying it was your great grandpa that was the white shaman/medicine man/adopted Indian. Such a thing would have been all over the history books. But the only sites I found mentioning Woodcook are the ads for Lifegarden.
There is a site mentioning a photographer named Ryan Rampton living in China taking photos of infants with cleft palates. The site is
http://chinaryan.blogspot.com/Yes, that's the real web address. Stuff this strange you can't make up. Near the bottom you can see Rampton in some of the photos.
Another site mentions him as being a Mormon who did his year of missionary service in Taiwan.
http://www.mission.net/taiwan/kaohsiung/sendemail.php?uID=169800Of course it's possible there could be two Ryan Ramptons who are photographers. The one Barnaby found is in Syracuse and then South Syracuse Utah, near Salt Lake City. The one I found is in Sandy Utah, closer to Ogden. There looks to be less than an hours drive between the two addresses.
Hard to tell from the photos if they are different people, or the same person at different ages.
The wife of Ryan Rampton (or *one of the* Ryan Ramptons), Jessica Rampton has her own line of nutrition products, with Ryan endorsing them on the site as an "unbiased testimonial".
http://www.upliftnutrition.com/catalog/information.php?info_id=11Their company is called Uplift Natural Energy, with an angel's halo in their logo!
Actual slogan, "Get The Devil Out Of Your Energy Drink!"
There are agencies that investigate fraudulent medical and pharmaceutical claims about products. The fact that he makes up a false name, a false history about the product and seemingly conceals his true identity would all be of interest to them.
Hilton, do you know of anyone who has been harmed by these products? That's the most important question.