Solar Grand Solar Minimum part deux

philkar

Veteran Member
I lived in the midwest for 20 years and "cold snaps" were just part of life but I didn't see life as permanently changing. But I may add some more varieties to my garden just in case it turns out to be cooler than I anticipated. That is...if I can find seed!

We are older and start cutting wood now for next year because we are slower! We know just how much we need and then cut extra to be able to give away if someone needs it. But we may need to adjust all of that!

And by the way how is your eye coming along?
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
In Athens, rare snow blankets Acropolis, halts vaccinations
Heavy snowfall in Athens has blanketed the Acropolis and other ancient monuments and halted COVID-19 vaccinations

By ELENA BECATOROS and DEREK GATOPOULOS Associated Press
16 February 2021, 07:38


On Location: Feb. 16, 2021


ATHENS, Greece -- Heavy snowfall blanketed the Acropolis and other ancient monuments in Athens and halted COVID-19 vaccinations in the Greek capital Tuesday as the weather brought many services across the country to a standstill.

As western Europe got some respite from winter weather, temperatures plunged in the southeast of the continent and winter storms also battered Turkey.

The snow, an unusual sight in Athens, a city of more than 3 million residents, also stopped most public transport services, while toppled trees caused blackouts in several mountainside suburbs.

Snow is common in Greece’s mountains and in the north of the country, but much rarer in the capital. Some Athenians emerged cautiously outside, snapping photos on balconies and in the streets
.

The snow arrived as Athens and several other parts of Greece remain in lockdown to curb coronavirus infections. Schools and most stores are closed, and residents must stay indoors during a nightly curfew.

Some children skipped online classes Tuesday to play in the snow. Adults also went out to play, with some digging out skis to use on the capital’s hilly slopes. One man skied along Pnyx hill in central Athens, near the Acropolis.

Norwegian Ambassador Frode Overland Andersen tweeted a video of himself skiing down a hill in the suburb of Filothei with his teenage daughter.

“Challenge accepted,” he wrote, after a friend in Oslo challenged him to prove it really was possible to ski in Athens.

“It was the best day at my home office during the lockdown so far,” the ambassador told The Associated Press. “Sadly, my skis took a rather hard beating, so I will be waxing and prepping for next season.”

Outside the parliament building, orange-colored snowplows cleared streets of ice and snow, while presidential guards, dressed in traditional pleated kilts and pompom-tipped shoes, were given heavy woolen overcoats.

The cold snap, which has already caused snowstorms around much of Europe, kept temperatures hovering around freezing in Athens on Tuesday but was expected to lift abruptly with highs of 14 degrees Celsius (57 degrees Fahrenheit) expected on Thursday. In neighboring Turkey, heavy snow and blizzards forced the closure of a highway in northwest Turkey. Around 600 vehicles were stranded on a nine-kilometer (six-mile) stretch of the snow-covered road, and another 800 other vehicles were stranded elsewhere, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

Sections of Greece’s main highway were also closed Tuesday, and most ferry services to the islands were canceled, while flights from regional airports to Athens were disrupted.

Greek Fire Service spokesman Vassilis Vathrakoyiannis said the service had received more than 600 calls for assistance in greater Athens.

“The calls mainly concerned downed trees and transporting people stuck in their vehicles to a safe place, but also to transport kidney dialysis patients to receive treatment,” he told state TV.

“Vaccinations have been postponed, but we have helped transport doctors and medical staff where they are needed, and we helped power technicians get to damaged electricity pylons in areas where access was difficult,” Vathrakoyiannis said.

Power and water cuts were also reported in central Greece. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis met with emergency response leaders to assist residents in blacked-out areas and villages cut off by the snow.

“We obviously recommend great care be taken in all movement, all unnecessary movement should be avoided,” Mitsotakis said after the meeting, adding that authorities were doing everything they could to keep the roads open and to restore power to areas without electricity.

“I think we will all show patience as we deal with a phenomenon that is truly unprecedented,” he added. ——— Follow Becatoros at https://twitter.com/ElenaBec and Gatopoulos at https://twitter.com/dgatopoulos ——— Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey and Thanassis Stavrakis, Petros Giannakouris and Srdjan Nedeljkovic in Athens contributed.

In Athens, rare snow blankets Acropolis, halts vaccinations - ABC News (go.com)
 

Windwood

Contributing Member
Well add us to the growing list. Our power went out this AM at 6:51. Still out. Landline phone also out. DH has the generator up and running so we're good. Fireplace to keep us warm and plenty of supplies.

Daughter in a neighboring town is also out as is my sister across the big bridge. We got down to 13* last night and believe me that is cold for the Gulf Coast.

Brother in Houston has been without power and water for 3 days. He just got water back this morning, but still no power. This is a crippling system. No one in La. Or Texas has snow removal equipment. I'm in my 60s and this is only the 5th time in my whole life I have seen snow. People around here just don't know how to deal with it. Sorry, rant off. I apologize. I know all you people in the north must think we are all stupid, but this just doesn't happen down here. Sorry.
 

TxGal

Day by day
I am a newcomer to this info and am just now reading thru it all so be patient with me! Will there be an immediate change in temps and last frost date? The cold in Texas seems rather abrupt. What changes in your preps are you making? I collect seed specifically with my areas temps and moisture in mind. Is it time to rethink that? TYIA for any help your time allows you to give me.

What Summerthyme said! Also pay special attention to articles on the Polar Vortex, and also the change to a more meridianal flow of the air systems that bring down that arctic air into the US. This one was a doozy :-) Electroverse.com usually has great articles on the subject. They're often posted on this thread, but you can also go to the website and do a search on them. It'll be faster, the GSM threads are a lot of heavy reading - but full of good info and advice.
 

BenIan

Veteran Member
25 miles off the Gulf in So. Central LA. We had a snow and ice mix early Monday morning. Low was in the teens last night. Ice on the ground and we had snow flurries this morning.

One thing I am noticing is the increased unreliability of weather reports. Knowing this system was coming, I've been closely monitoring the forecasts for a couple of weeks. The forecast changed multiple times a day...and not slight changes either. One night before I went to bed last week I looked at the weather forecast for February 15th, it said snow with a low of 7 degrees. The next morning I checked and it was mostly sunny with a low in the 30s, the next day it switched to ice with a low in the teens. This has been happening for a while now.
 

philkar

Veteran Member
What Summerthyme said! Also pay special attention to articles on the Polar Vortex, and also the change to a more meridianal flow of the air systems that bring down that arctic air into the US. This one was a doozy :-) Electroverse.com usually has great articles on the subject. They're often posted on this thread, but you can also go to the website and do a search on them. It'll be faster, the GSM threads are a lot of heavy reading - but full of good info and advice.
Electroverse.com is offline but will continue to check
 

raven

TB Fanatic
is this minimum supposed to last 5 years, 10 years, 50 years, or 100 years.
is there any agreement on the time span?
 

mecoastie

Veteran Member
is this minimum supposed to last 5 years, 10 years, 50 years, or 100 years.
is there any agreement on the time span?

I think it is something like 25 years. IIRC I figured I would be in my late 60s when it was over. But who knows for sure.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Well, Mother nature added insult to injury for me. As I'd posted previously, my well froze up last night around eight and I was okay dealing with that. But this morning around 6:30 I was awakened by a beeping sound. It was my computer power battery thingy telling me the power was out so I could come shut down the computer properly. (Which I did) And I found out later from my sister that it was 3 below zero at that time! It sure was cold in my unheated house!!!!!

Nephew called me around ten AM and said he and his kids would be down later to shovel my walks for me and check things out. The power came back on around 11:30 as he was on his way. He's only half a mile from me. Any way, he lifts his little girl over the fence so she can come get the gate padlock key which I set outside when they do this. They shoveled all my walks and the checked the pump house. The light bulb had NOT burned out. It just got too cold in there in spite of the light. Then they gave the rabbits and chickens food and fresh water. After tonight/tomorrow's snow, they are going to come shovel again and and hopefully they might do the animals again for me, too. Thursday they will come and put leaves in the bunny cages for me. If they do the animals one last time on Thursday, then it I'll be able to handle it after that as it begins to get warmer out. And he will find out what the damage is in the pump house and hopefully be able to fix it.

I am so lucky to have such a fine nephew! I almost cry when I think how many old, nearly helpless people there who don't have even this much help. Thursday night should be the last of this super-cold and not as bad as last night was.

Oh, and nephew also brought in my tiny rolling cart and put two of my 4 gallon water jugs on it that I can pull into the bathroom for flushing until I get my pump running again. I've already figured out how I'm gonna get water out of those heavy jugs and into a pail that I can lift.

This spring when things dry out, he is also going to grade the high-center bump off of my lower driveway and pack it into the deeper ruts and then I might have to get a big load of gravel brought in. Am hoping he can spread and pack that gravel for me, too. Right now the drive is so bad that my sister can't come here any more in her low-slung car.

So I"m getting my kitchen heated up again now and things aren't looking so grim other than the frozen water supply. But I'm grateful to have power back and chores done and I just have to take the bad with the good.

One more icky snowfall and one more extra cold night, then we will start getting back to normal, thank goodness, even if it is the newer unpredictable normal.
 
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Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, We are to get more snow tonight and tomorrow and then down to 11 for Thursday night, and then the Big Awful will be over, at least this time around.

Good news hopefully. My water tried to come on a little while ago ( I'd opened a kitchen tap to watch for this) and then I went out and checked the pump house for any spraying or leaking and there was none at all. (And nephew had cleared a path to the pump house so well that the sun has melted it almost down to bare grass!)

Then just a couple minutes ago I heard a hissing sound from the faucet and so I turned it on to check and got a full stream of water. Nephew will check it out later today, but it's looking to me like there may not be any cracked pipes. It was probably just that tiny copper line that goes to the sender switch.

Fingers crossed!!!!! Or maybe clasped together in gratitude?
 
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Slydersan

Veteran Member
Just saw this one from Ice Age Farmer (linked from a totally different site). I haven't watched it, but it doesn't sound good.


Run time 6:23
45% of the US Winter Wheat crop is estimated to have been damaged as the polar vortex (also known as meridional jetstream flows associated with Grand Solar Minima) brings Texas’ power grid down.
 

rolenrock

Senior Member
25 miles off the Gulf in So. Central LA. We had a snow and ice mix early Monday morning. Low was in the teens last night. Ice on the ground and we had snow flurries this morning.

One thing I am noticing is the increased unreliability of weather reports. Knowing this system was coming, I've been closely monitoring the forecasts for a couple of weeks. The forecast changed multiple times a day...and not slight changes either. One night before I went to bed last week I looked at the weather forecast for February 15th, it said snow with a low of 7 degrees. The next morning I checked and it was mostly sunny with a low in the 30s, the next day it switched to ice with a low in the teens. This has been happening for a while now.
I have noticed weather reports are getting unreliable more so than usual and change wildly from one day to the next. Their models are not keeping up with the GSM realities.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
I just watched all three of the short videos IAF put up today.

In one of them he says it looks like he won't be able to use YouTube much longer.....he could be taken down any time now.

I sure hope someone finds links to those new platforms he keeps mentioning. I'm no good at finding new stuff like this and have always depended on links from those who, unlike me, actually know what they're doing! (:
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I lived in the midwest for 20 years and "cold snaps" were just part of life but I didn't see life as permanently changing. But I may add some more varieties to my garden just in case it turns out to be cooler than I anticipated. That is...if I can find seed!

We are older and start cutting wood now for next year because we are slower! We know just how much we need and then cut extra to be able to give away if someone needs it. But we may need to adjust all of that!

And by the way how is your eye coming along?
I hear you. What has me more concerned than any one event, even one as out of the ordinary as this deep south bitter cold, is *how many* wildly "out of the norm" cold events have are happening world-wide! Multiple snowstorms in Japan dumping as much as 7 feet in each storm- that is NOT normal weather! Combined with the blank sun, I think its a strong warning of what is coming.

My eye seems to be starting to clear up. Today was better.. Yesterday, I was nauseous and sick all day, if I was moving and working. The only thing that would settle it down was lying in the dark with my eyes closed. Rather hard to get things packed that way! I think it was because more light was getting through, so it was like looking at the stars rushing by in TY he Star Wars movies, and it was giving me motion sickness!

I've got to drive 150 miles tomorrow to get it checked. The office is located in a snowbelt area that is getting 2 inches an hour right now!

Summerthyme
 
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Martinhouse

Deceased
Oh, Summerthyme, I do hope your eye heals properly, and am so sorry it's slowing down the things that are so necessary that you do!

Alpha, I keep trying to add the Ice Age Farmer-Bitchute to my bookmark list and it just won't take it. Grrrr! I'm sure I'm just missing something that says "complete" or "Okay". Guess I just have to keep looking.
 
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TxGal

Day by day
Martinhouse, when you have IAF's Bitchute page open, in the url box off the the far right end, do you see an open star? If so, if you click it a little box should open up that is your Favorites. It will show the name of the Favorite (IAF), and Folder. My Folder box shows Favorites bar and the first option, but there are other options if you click the down arrow. Just click Done when you choose where you'd like it stored. If you're successful, the open star in the url will change from open to a solid blue. And, it will always be there for you....you'd just click on the star off to the right of the url bar, and IAF will come up as one of your favorites.

This is for the Windows 10 version, so I'm not sure if it will be the same for your verison (took me forever to learn this new version, and sometimes it still drives me nuts!).

I'm glad we now know where IAF is!! I've missed him.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Texas frozen wind power – Millions of outages ensue - Ice Age Now

Texas frozen wind power – Millions of outages ensue
February 16, 2021 by Robert

Frozen-Texas-wind-turbine-15Feb21.png


“The folly of chasing renewable energy as a means of mitigating “climate change” is making itself abundantly clear today in Texas. When will politicians wake up and realize that renewable energy almost always equates to unreliable energy?”
– Anthony Watts
___________

Electricity now at unheard of $9000 per megawatt-hour.

ERCOT is placing rolling power outages in effect to prevent a complete collapse of the power grid

With dead wind turbines littering the state, the focus on deploying unreliable renewable energy in the name of “saving the planet” has literally “messed with Texas” in a huge way.

Ice storms knocked out nearly half the wind-power generating capacity of Texas on Sunday as a massive deep freeze across the state locked up wind turbine generators, creating an electricity generation crisis.

texas-outage-map.png

Approximately 75% of Texas has some level of power outage – source: poweroutage.us

Wind generation ranks as the second-largest source of energy in Texas, accounting for 23% of state power supplies last year, behind natural gas, which represented 45%, according to Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) figures.

ERCOT reports today the spot price for electricity in Texas is currently a stunning $9000 per MegaWatt-hour. Even in the high demand summer months, $100 per MW-hr would be high.

At the moment, ERCOT is placing rolling power outages in effect to prevent a complete collapse of the power grid saying:

“ERCOT has issued an EEA level 3 because electric demand is very high right now, and supplies can’t keep up. Reserves have dropped below 1,000 MW and are not expected to recover within 30 minutes; as a result, ERCOT has ordered transmission companies to reduce demand on the system.
This is typically done through rotating outages, which are controlled, temporary interruptions of electric service. This type of demand reduction is only used as a last resort to preserve the reliability of the electric system as a whole.”
Source: Energy Emergency Alert (EEA) 3 ROTATING OUTAGES IN PROGRESS: Conservation Critical
“It is sad and ironic,” says Anthony Watts, “that in a state known for its huge petroleum and natural gas resources, the lack of reliability of wind power has brought the state to its knees in a time of crisis, not unlike that which California experienced in 2020 during record heat where wind and solar power could not keep up with demand and was near collapse.”

 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks. I have Windows 10 and got as far as the box after cllicking the yellow star. But I didn't want a folder so I didn't click that. But if I can't have it listed right on the bookmark list I have showing right now, I guess the folder thing will have to do. I'll give it another try in a while here.
 

TxGal

Day by day
TxGal, thanks. I have Windows 10 and got as far as the box after cllicking the yellow star. But I didn't want a folder so I didn't click that. But if I can't have it listed right on the bookmark list I have showing right now, I guess the folder thing will have to do. I'll give it another try in a while here.
If you click on Other Favorites, I'm pretty sure that will put it on your bookmark list. Heck, try it both ways! I have two lists now, not really in separate folders (I'm confused enough!) - the Favorites Bar, and Other Favorites. Both are pretty easy to pull up. Gosh, I hope that helps.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, I couldn't make the folder thing work, either, but here's what I did. Until now I only had IAF-YouTube bookmarked. So I went to iceagefarmer.com instead and there's a list at the left and I clicked on
Bitchute and when that came up I clicked on the yellow bookmark star and got the drop-down box I am used to and it added to my bookmark list just fine.

But I 'm not gonna delete the link to his YouTube channel just yet.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
thank you, Carol! I don't think I'll be posting much for a bit... on top of the move, my tablet finally decided to die for good, and it's replacement is 220 miles away at the new farm!I'm using hubby's, which has a weird keyboard, and combined with almost no functional close vision... this is laborious. I'll be back.

Oh, I got your corn seeds out today. I was afraid someone was going to pack them! Watch for a purple padded envelope.

Summerthyme
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Summer, I had fully expected that the seeds would get lost in the commotion of the eye problem added to the big move. So I am surprised and pleased that they are on the way. You continue to amaze me.....you are an angel who must be made of 90% sheer grit!
 

TxGal

Day by day
TxGal, I couldn't make the folder thing work, either, but here's what I did. Until now I only had IAF-YouTube bookmarked. So I went to iceagefarmer.com instead and there's a list at the left and I clicked on
Bitchute and when that came up I clicked on the yellow bookmark star and got the drop-down box I am used to and it added to my bookmark list just fine.

But I 'm not gonna delete the link to his YouTube channel just yet.

Excellent! Glad it worked for you :-)
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
I hear you. What has me more concerned than any one event, even one as out of the ordinary as this deep south bitter cold, is *how many* wildly "out of the norm" cold events have are happening world-wide! Multiple snowstorms in Japan dumping as much as 7 feet in each storm- that is NOT normal weather! Combined with the blank sun, I think its a strong warning of what is coming.

My eye seems to be starting to clear up. Today was better.. Yesterday, I was nauseous and sick all day, if I was moving and working. The only thing that would settle it down was lying in the dark with my eyes closed. Rather hard to get things packed that way! I think it was because more light was getting through, so it was like looking at the stars rushing by in TY he Star Wars movies, and it was giving me motion sickness!

I've got to drive 150 miles tomorrow to get it checked. The office is located in a snowbelt area that is getting 2 inches an hour right now!

Summerthyme
Summerthyme, I hope that your eye recovers.

You are describing a change, a change I believe is a GSM which will be confirmed very soon.

Take Care

NW
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Japan's stressed power grid faces new test with Arctic blast on way

By Aaron Sheldrick
FEBRUARY 16, 20213:23 AM
UPDATED 4 HOURS AGO

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan’s overstretched electricity grid is likely to receive another Arctic blast in the coming days, which is already pushing up wholesale prices and may stress generators as they struggle to keep units running after a powerful quake.

While the world’s third-biggest economy is unlikely to see millions plunged into blackouts as in the United States currently, the country narrowly avoided power cuts only last month in another wintry spell.

Utilities and independent power providers got another jolt at the weekend when a 7.3-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Fukushima, northern Japan, and sent plants into automatic shutdown, briefly knocking out power for nearly 1 million people.

Power companies restarted some units on Tuesday after checks for quake damage. Wholesale electricity prices for peak-hour delivery on Thursday reached a three-week high of 38.80 yen (37 cents) per kilowatt hour, up more than 40% from Wednesday.

“Japan’s weather is getting colder, with the forecast pushing demand up quite considerably into Thursday,” said James Whistler, global head of energy derivatives at SSY Futures.

“Thursday’s load forecast is up 20% on Monday, or about 10 gigawatts, which gives you a sense of the size of the Japanese power market,” he said.

(Graphic: Japan wholesale power prices, daily highs, lows, )

Reuters Graphic

JERA Co., Japan’s biggest power generation company, told Reuters on Tuesday it had brought online another of the units at its Hirono coal power station that were shut down in the earthquake.

Japan Petroleum Exploration Co said it had resumed partial operations on Tuesday of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal but the nearby gas powered generation unit was still shut down.

Other units remained down and were undergoing checks.

The magnitude 7.3-earthquake injured more than 150 people, causing damage throughout the northern region, including Fukushima, where the meltdowns after a massive quake and tsunami 10 years ago left Japan without its fleet of reactors that supplied about a third of the country’s electricity.

Nine reactors have been licensed to restart but only four are presently in operation, leaving Japan ever-reliant on imported fossil fuels or solar power generation that this winter has been snowed out.

The country’s power generators were caught on the hop trying to get cargoes of LNG on demand last month. Operations of some U.S. LNG export terminals have been suspended as freezing weather in Texas sent power prices spiralling more than 100 times higher.

The Japan Meteorological Agency issued warnings of snow storms, blizzards and high waves over a wide swathe of northern eastern and western Japan.

Blizzard conditions are expected to be the worst in “several years” and people should stay in shelter, the weather agency said.

($1 = 105.9200 yen)

Reporting by Aaron Sheldrick; Editing by Susan Fenton and Tom Hogue

Japan's stressed power grid faces new test with Arctic blast on way | Reuters
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Kim99, that is a very nice headline page. Thanks! Is it a site I can link to? Where I see watchers.news, I also see a padlock. Does that mean I can't go to that site?
 

Kim99

Veteran Member
Kim99, that is a very nice headline page. Thanks! Is it a site I can link to? Where I see watchers.news, I also see a padlock. Does that mean I can't go to that site?

It’s not a subscription website. I’m sure that that anyone can read it.
 
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