Solar The Grand Solar Minimum (ORIGINAL)

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TxGal

Day by day
David DuByne has posted a new Adapt 2030 MIAC #272.

"You Don't Matter When There Is Corporate Money in the Way"

runs 22:32
Thanks, Martinhouse, here's the podcast:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AoohOhLw2wY


(MIAC #272) You Don’t Matter When There is Corporate Money in The Way

Run time is 22:32

Steve O’Brien of the Texas Radio Show on the RBN Network and DuByne creator of the ADAPT 2030 channel on YouTube discusses energetic changes in consciousness and frequency on Earth as the Sun moves into its 400-year cycle affecting global crop production, the economy and everyone on our planet. This is an energetic timeline for what you can expect from now to 2023.

•Solar Radiation Management (SRM)
•Cosmic Radiation Management
•Geoengineering
•Telling the global populace the truth will upset the world’s financial structure
•Subtle hints about radiation increases, UV clothing
•Expected UV changes as the Grand Solar Minimum begins
•Sun changed from yellow to white •Scary implications but not fear
•Food production of a country is really its productivity
•Why so many internet outages recently across the planet
•Electric geology
•Increase in Red Sprites and Blue Jets above storms
 

TxGal

Day by day
Here's one from the Oppenheimer Ranch Project:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q21m4W4x5Uo


Record Flooding = Spring Worries + Crop Shortages - The Oldest Story Ever Told 37,000 Years Old

Run time is 4:25

Two people are dead under an avalanche they accidentally triggered https://cnn.it/2vEsSHL
Ice balls appear on Lake Michigan beach, wash up 'by the thousands' https://fxn.ws/38uk4Tf
COLORADO STATEWIDE SNOWPACK TRACKING WELL-ABOVE 1981-2010 AVERAGE http://bit.ly/2SA8KiI
65 Mph Winds, Blowing Snow, Expected In Southern Wyoming http://bit.ly/2uIi0sl
Fresh blanket of snow forecast for snow-weary northern tier of the US http://bit.ly/3bSVuxA
Rain/snow likely Monday, then another Arctic blast midweek http://bit.ly/37xasG5
Repeating weather pattern= more snow across Great Lakes, New England http://bit.ly/2wpp4uj
Snow creating hardship for local wildlife http://bit.ly/2HwTfBS
Snow targeting Minnesota, Twin Cities on President's Day http://bit.ly/2PfER5B
Snow in north Georgia this week? Possible but unlikely http://bit.ly/2u2X0vN
Next round of snow Tuesday in Maine http://bit.ly/2UZEWOi
Snowfall Deficits Continue to Climb http://bit.ly/2witUcx
Flooding prompts state of emergency in Mississippi http://bit.ly/39IYF9g
GFS Model Total Snowfall US http://bit.ly/2SNLE7r
Storm Dennis breaks record for number of flood warnings issued in England! http://bit.ly/2uR8m6C
Winter storm barreling toward the UK is possibly the strongest ever for North Atlantic http://bit.ly/2OXnGpe
Earthquake experts lay out latest outlook for the ‘Really Big One’ that’ll hit Seattle https://yhoo.it/37vY9tG
Semisopochnoi volcano news & activity updates http://bit.ly/39GHMMh
Worldwide Volcano News http://bit.ly/2v9JJhO
Missouri Farm Awarded $265M in Suit Against BASF and Bayer http://bit.ly/37CJkoV
Is an Aboriginal tale of an ancient volcano the oldest story ever told? http://bit.ly/2HraVyS
A 5000 Year Old Aboriginal Cave Painting of The “Wandjina.” Known As ‘The Sky Beings’ http://bit.ly/3bNgo18
 

TxGal

Day by day
From Felix at Iceagenow.info:


Is Earth’s Magnetic Field Reversing? – Video

February 17, 2020 by Robert

“There is no evidence of increased extinction rates associated with any of the past reversals,” the announcer for PBS Space Time video assures us.

Really!??

Oh, “there may be higher incidences of cancers and other mutations from more high-energy particles reaching the ground,” he continues. “And probably we’ll need to get much better at shielding satellites from the solar wind.”

Higher incidences of cancer and other mutations, but no evidence of increased extinction rates?

View: https://youtu.be/51usJ74pPP8


The short answer I get from this video about whether or not Earth’s magnetic field is preparing to flip is, “Well, maybe.” How’s that for a scientific answer?

However, the video does provide some insights that I have referred to in both Not by Fire but by Ice and Magnetic Reversals and Evolutionary Leaps.

Our magnetic field is currently undergoing rapid changes, possibly signalling the imminent flipping of its polarity, the video says. The north pole may become the south, and the south the north.

The earth’s magnetic north pole is currently moving around 60 km (37 miles) per year, around 5 degrees south of the geographic pole, leaving Canadian territory and heading toward Siberia.

The good news (I guess) is that Earth’s magnetic field will probably hold out for at least our lifetimes… and perhaps for generations to come.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks for posting those.

I didn't think to mention the last two. I think I'm trying to fight off burn-out on all this doom coming at us from all sides!

I know I will...I always do. It just doesn't feel much like it at the moment.

Or maybe it's just this dreary unreliable weather getting me down. There has been a day here and there warm enough to do a few things, but the forecast is always so uncertain I can never make any plans. I'm not as flexible as I should be about such things and I find myself getting impatient much more easily lately.
 

TxGal

Day by day
TxGal, thanks for posting those.

I didn't think to mention the last two. I think I'm trying to fight off burn-out on all this doom coming at us from all sides!

I know I will...I always do. It just doesn't feel much like it at the moment.

Or maybe it's just this dreary unreliable weather getting me down. There has been a day here and there warm enough to do a few things, but the forecast is always so uncertain I can never make any plans. I'm not as flexible as I should be about such things and I find myself getting impatient much more easily lately.

Jeez, I hit the like button, sorry!

I'm with you there, the coronavirus seems to be gaining steam, and it's beyond concerning. I'm doing what I can to get set for it as much as possible, but there is much to do. I'm pretty much glued to that thread when I'm on.

Our weather has been up and down, today was 80 and downright muggy. Tomorrow another cold front comes in with rain, and we're looking at several inches between tomorrow and Thursday. Not sure if you're getting that, too. Just when it seems it will settle down enough to make gardening possible, we get more rain....we may be heading to mushy territory. I'd like to get more seed potatoes....still haven't planted the ones we have!
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Hah! That's okay if you "Like" my griping posts. (: (:

We do have a slight chance of rain, but not much. It's not nearly as warm here as where you are since I'm a lot farther north. Our next cold nights are going to be I think Thursday and Friday. It's too soon to plant potatoes here. I bought some and also have a lot that I grew last year that are perfect for planting right now. Not sure where to plant them, since no one ever came to help switch out the bad dirt for the good in my outdoor planting containers. (THREE different people said they'd help and all three have made themselves scarce!) I could manage the job myself, maybe one or two containers a day, but it's been too cold for me, when there are actually days when it's not raining and the soil isn't too soaked and heavy.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Jeez, I hit the like button, sorry!

I'm with you there, the coronavirus seems to be gaining steam, and it's beyond concerning. I'm doing what I can to get set for it as much as possible, but there is much to do. I'm pretty much glued to that thread when I'm on.

Our weather has been up and down, today was 80 and downright muggy. Tomorrow another cold front comes in with rain, and we're looking at several inches between tomorrow and Thursday. Not sure if you're getting that, too. Just when it seems it will settle down enough to make gardening possible, we get more rain....we may be heading to mushy territory. I'd like to get more seed potatoes....still haven't planted the ones we have!

If you want to remove a Like- just click the Like button again and it will disappear. You can change to a different one that way, too.

Weather is the main reason I am not getting as much done as I would like. Going into the Spring storm season, I will get even less done. When it is not raining or too windy I over work. Then, I pay for it. This would be easier if I was twenty again.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Adapt 2030 has a new podcast up. Interview with Bob Kudla. Haven't watched it yet so not sure what it's about, probably leans toward economy topic.

Runs 24:36
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Just watched half of this last Adapt 2030 podcast. I was right, it's pretty much just financial stuff. Somewhat interesting, but not what I like to find when I come to this GSM thread.

Sorry.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Yamasa Ana Ranch has a new podcast out; haven't seen that it's been posted:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MTbGNtpc5Q


UNUSUAL ARCTIC ICE | 2020 Crop Fungus Problems

Run time is 25:58

Looking at every possible indicator for spring weather, it would appear that the 2020 Spring will be a wet cold one, which creates a bad season for planting. Cooler damper weather could carry into the summer which may cause fungus issues during the 2020 Crop Season.

ETA: We're colder and wetter now, and more is coming. It's downright boggy out there in all pastures. I'm glad I put in the raised bed planters this past year, but I'm hesitant to get my seed potatoes in. Looks to be another year of 'fingers crossed' gardening.
 
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TxGal

Day by day

Arctic blast moves to Northeast

February 19, 2020 by Robert

Accumulating snowfall is expected for the lee of the central Rockies and the central High Plains through Thursday, the southern Appalachians and across much of North Carolina, northern South Carolina and southern Virginia late Thursday into early Friday. Locally several inches of snow is expected.

The snow could come at the worst possible time Thursday for North Carolina, as 1 to 2 inches of snow is possible during the evening commute.

Light accumulations are forecast from parts of Tennessee to portions of North Carolina and southern Virginia.

Snow is expected from Colorado to Kansas, where locally a half foot of snow is possible, and 6 to 8 inches of snow from the Great Lakes to New England.

Unfortunately, with ongoing major to historic river flooding, another round of precipitation is expected to push eastward from the southern Plains tonight and move east across the Gulf Coast states and Southeast on Thursday. Additional moderate to heavy rainfall is expected across these areas, exacerbating the ongoing significant river flooding across areas of the South.

By Thursday morning, an additional 1 to 3 inches of rain will move into already flooded areas of the South from Mississippi to Alabama.

Meanwhile, Arctic high pressure pushing down across the north-central U.S. today will spread east-southeastward and encompass much of the central to eastern U.S. going through Thursday, keeping temperatures below average for this part of the country.

Wind chills could dip as low as 30 degrees below zero in the Upper Midwest and the Western Great Lakes.


National Weather Service

News - heavy-rain-and-snow-forecast-across-the-south-as-arctic-blast-moves-to-northeast - Weather - msn
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, Yanassa Ama Ranch has posted several in the last few days, after going for quite a while posting nothing.

Thanks for posting the links. I'll have to check it all out tomorrow, cuz today's early morning shopping followed by unloading and wiping down EVERYTHING and putting it in "quarantine" in the back porch, was exhausting on 2 1/2 hours of sleep.

Once the feed store gets in some bedding plants, I'll be done shopping and will only need to go through the bank drive-thru once a month for the foreseeable future. It will be nice to just fall asleep when it happens and be able to sleep until I wake up naturally, even if it ends up being late morning. Hope I can get things tuned around by summer, though. I love watching morning happen and I can't do that very well when I'm away past 3 AM most nights.

Wonder if my sleep problem might be related to the GSM, changing magnetic fields or some such?

Wish IAF would put together his good podcasts a little more often!
 

TxGal

Day by day
TxGal, Yanassa Ama Ranch has posted several in the last few days, after going for quite a while posting nothing.

Thanks for posting the links. I'll have to check it all out tomorrow, cuz today's early morning shopping followed by unloading and wiping down EVERYTHING and putting it in "quarantine" in the back porch, was exhausting on 2 1/2 hours of sleep.

Once the feed store gets in some bedding plants, I'll be done shopping and will only need to go through the bank drive-thru once a month for the foreseeable future. It will be nice to just fall asleep when it happens and be able to sleep until I wake up naturally, even if it ends up being late morning. Hope I can get things tuned around by summer, though. I love watching morning happen and I can't do that very well when I'm away past 3 AM most nights.

Wonder if my sleep problem might be related to the GSM, changing magnetic fields or some such?

Wish IAF would put together his good podcasts a little more often!

You're welcome...I have a lot of catching up to do. I had to run out to pick up some OTC this morning, and I stayed in our small little town, gassed the car, hit the bank drive-thru, then went straight home. I'm not spending a lot of time in the public, and today was wet and chilly. Hard to think about planting when it's like that outside...and I'd still like to get more seed potatoes.

I'm a morning watcher, too :-) I love to be up at first light and watch nature wake up, too.

It could be GSM related, I've often wondered about how subtly it affects us. IAF is my favorite!
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
IAF is my favorite and next is Deep South Bama for a total change of pace.

Lately I'm trying to find things to listen to that I don't have to look at, so I can get some knitting done and not feel like I'm just glued to the computer screen for hours on end. There are just too many various ones to listen to, so I'm just sticking with Chris Martinsen because I don't have to look up when he's talking.

I'll definitely put the knitting down when IAF posts. I've found I know when he has another podcast in the works or even posted by what he's showing on Twitter. Plus there's always a few things there that he doesn't touch on in his podcasts.

Well, time for me to call it a night. Hope I'm not awake past 3 AM again!
 

TxGal

Day by day
Chilly and very wet here today...again....we may be heading into another cold, wet Spring. Makes gardening a challenge.

Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvvfcBhMWNQ


Record Snow Leads To Record Flooding - Polar Vortex Is Back - Cold Weather For The Midwest & East

Run time is 32:29

What happened to winter? And where's the polar vortex? http://bit.ly/38Li4pV
Polar Vortex Grows Arctic Sea Ice to 10-Year High http://bit.ly/2SXMped
An Alaska City Had a Daily Record High and Daily Record Snowfall on the Same Day http://bit.ly/2ufg7TD
Western Snowpack is in Great Shape, Except the Sierra http://bit.ly/32c4gCd
Southern snow: Several inches of snow possible for parts of Carolinas, Virginia http://bit.ly/2Tdn2VZ
Lake snows Thursday morning give way to a quieter Thursday afternoon http://bit.ly/32fUgbk
Now this is what a Polar Vortex is supposed to look like, with a 177 mph wind http://bit.ly/2HJqH8g
Higher-than-normal flood risk expected this spring for some West Michigan rivers http://bit.ly/2ViItYn
Winter weather advisory issued for 10 North Georgia counties; snow expected overnight http://bit.ly/2VdW6bf
Popular 'inla nd ocean' is approaching record water level heights http://bit.ly/2V9Lv0O
Mountains brace for first snow event in more than a year http://bit.ly/2vNU7j1
Finally, Some Cold Weather Is Possible in Midwest and East http://bit.ly/2T00vvp
Lake effect snow warning in effect for Central NY http://bit.ly/2wyWUwX
North Carolina, southern Virginia brace for brunt of winter storm http://bit.ly/2V5FDWo
System Shifts from the Deep South to the Southeast https://www.weather.gov/
GFS Model http://bit.ly/39PeTxl
Red-state Utah embraces plan to tackle climate crisis http://bit.ly/2v0tzuV
Volcano in Ecuador showing signs of 'potential collapse, http://bit.ly/2T1rKpn
Rapid localized flank inflation and implications for potential slope instability at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador http://bit.ly/3bT94Rv
Worldwide Volcano News https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/volc...
Northern Lights put on spectacular show in sky over Finland http://bit.ly/38KNjBo
Estimated Kp Index http://bit.ly/2keiUaE
The Arctic Is Getting Greener. That's Bad News for All of Us http://bit.ly/2P4FWNp
Global Green Up Slows Warming https://go.nasa.gov/32arJUo
Oil and gas production is contributing even more to global warming than was thought, study finds https://cnn.it/37JnVL9
H.R.4586 - Geoengineering Research Evaluation Act of 2017 http://bit.ly/37NrHmp
Increased ionization supports growth of aerosols into cloud condensation nuclei https://go.nature.com/2qmprmy
Colorado sold a record $1.75 billion of cannabis last year https://cnn.it/2SHPhNa
A Major Study That Fueled National Vape Panic Has Been Retracted http://bit.ly/37FrOAJ
The Plasma Universe Overthrows The Mental Cage Of Newton & Revives Planck’s Musical Space Time http://bit.ly/2VbdRYv
Revolution: Ice Age Re-Entry FREE DOWNLOAD https://amzn.to/3bVOIXC
 
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TxGal

Day by day

Global Crop Failures Continue: In Australia This Is Going To Be The WORST HARVEST Ever Recorded

February 19, 2020 by Michael Snyder

Global food production is being hit from seemingly every side. Thanks to absolutely crazy weather patterns, giant locust armies in Africa and the Middle East, and an unprecedented outbreak of African Swine Fever in China, a lot less food is being produced around the world than originally anticipated. Even during the best of years we really struggle to feed everyone on the planet, and so a lot of people are wondering what is going to happen as global food supplies become tighter and tighter. The mainstream media in the United States is so obsessed with politics right now that they haven’t been paying much attention to this emerging crisis, but the truth is that this growing nightmare is only going to intensify in the months ahead.

In Australia, conditions have been extremely hot and extremely dry, and that helped to fuel the horrific wildfires that we recently witnessed.

And everyone knew that agricultural production in Australia was going to be disappointing this year, but it turns out that it is actually going to be the worst ever recorded

Australia’s hottest and driest year on record has slashed crop production, with summer output expected to fall to the lowest levels on record, according to official projections released Tuesday.

The country’s agriculture department said it expects production of crops like sorghum, cotton and rice to fall 66 percent — the lowest levels since records began in 1980-81.

The continent of Australia is considered to be one of the breadbaskets of the world. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 2018/19 Australia exported over 9 million tons of wheat to the rest of the world.

But thanks to relentless crop failures, Australia has started to import wheat, and that is likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

So instead of helping to feed the rest of the world, Australia is now relying on the rest of us to help feed them.

And what is happening this year didn’t just barely break the old records. In fact, one senior economist says that this will be the worst summer crop production the country has ever seen “by a large margin”

“It is the lowest summer crop production in this period by a large margin,” Peter Collins, a senior economist with the department’s statistical body ABARES told AFP.

Of course if the rest of the world was doing great we could certainly survive a downturn in Australia.

Unfortunately, that is definitely not the case.

Right now, billions upon billions of locusts are voraciously devouring farms in eastern Africa and the Middle East. As I detailed the other day, giant armies of locusts the size of large cities are traveling up to 100 miles per day as they search for food. When they descend on a farm, all the crops can be consumed literally within 30 seconds. It is a nightmare of epic proportions, and UN officials are telling us that this crisis is only going to get worse over the next couple of months.

In Uganda, the army has been called out to help fight this locust plague, but it is making very little difference

Under a warm morning sun scores of weary soldiers stare as millions of yellow locusts rise into the northern Ugandan sky, despite hours spent spraying vegetation with chemicals in an attempt to kill them.

From the tops of shea trees, fields of pea plants and tall grass savanna, the insects rise in a hypnotic murmuration, disappearing quickly to wreak devastation elsewhere.

The most effective way of fighting these locust swarms is to spray insecticide on them from the air, but even that only produces very limited results.

However, at least it is better than doing nothing.

The UN is trying to raise a lot more money to get more planes into the air, because if nothing is done the number of locusts “could grow up to 500 times by June”

The U.N. has said $76 million is needed immediately. On Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo during a visit to Ethiopia said the U.S. would donate another $8 million to the effort. That follows an earlier $800,000.

The number of overall locusts could grow up to 500 times by June, when drier weather begins, experts have said. Until then, the fear is that more rains in the coming weeks will bring fresh vegetation to feed a new generation of the voracious insects.

Overall, these locusts are affecting nations “with a combined population of nearly 2 billion”, and the amount of food that these locusts are destroying is unprecedented.

Meanwhile, China has been dealing with the worst outbreak of African Swine Fever in history.

African Swine Fever does not affect humans, but it sweeps through herds of pigs like wildfire. There is no vaccine, there is no cure, and once African Swine Fever starts infecting pigs in a certain area the only thing that can be done is to kill the rest of the pigs to keep it from spreading anywhere else.

Unfortunately, China has not been able to get this outbreak under control, and the losses have been staggering.

According to the New York Times, the number of pigs that have been wiped out in China already is equivalent to “nearly one-quarter of all the world’s pigs”…

The disease was first reported in Shenyang, Liaoning Province, in early August 2018. By the end of August 2019, the entire pig population of China had dropped by about 40 percent. China accounted for more than half of the global pig population in 2018, and the epidemic there alone has killed nearly one-quarter of all the world’s pigs.

But of course China is not the only one dealing with African Swine Fever.

In fact, cases of African Swine Fever have now been identified “in 50 countries”, and U.S. pig farmers are deathly afraid of what would happen if this disease starts spreading here.

As a result of this crisis, pork prices in China have gone through the roof, and many families are no longer able to eat pork at all.

Never before in the modern era have we seen so many major threats to global food production emerge simultaneously.

There are more than 7 billion people living on our planet today, and we need to be able to grow enough food to feed everyone.

If we aren’t able to do that, food prices will start to get really high, and people in the poorest areas simply will not have enough food to feed their families.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
TxGal, Yanassa Ama Ranch has posted several in the last few days, after going for quite a while posting nothing.

Thanks for posting the links. I'll have to check it all out tomorrow, cuz today's early morning shopping followed by unloading and wiping down EVERYTHING and putting it in "quarantine" in the back porch, was exhausting on 2 1/2 hours of sleep.

Once the feed store gets in some bedding plants, I'll be done shopping and will only need to go through the bank drive-thru once a month for the foreseeable future. It will be nice to just fall asleep when it happens and be able to sleep until I wake up naturally, even if it ends up being late morning. Hope I can get things tuned around by summer, though. I love watching morning happen and I can't do that very well when I'm away past 3 AM most nights.

Wonder if my sleep problem might be related to the GSM, changing magnetic fields or some such?

Wish IAF would put together his good podcasts a little more often!

Have you had your thyroid checked? It that is out of whack, sleeplessness happens. Unusual weight gain or loss (depending on whether you are Hashimoto or Graves) is a big dot, too. I am certain the Magnetosphere just makes all of this normal stuff worse.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
There's a new Adapt 2030 podcast out. It is 23 minutes and it's another interview with the economist Bob Kudla.

I'm not going to watch it but thought I'd mention it here for any who are interested.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks, Martinhouse! I saw the one with Bob Kudla and it just didn't seem like GSM material to me, so I didn't post it....if someone wants it, I certainly could.

Here is MIAC #273:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AbBMHOBHAo


(MIAC #273) Is There Enough in the Global Supply Chain to Satiate Everyone’s Need?

Run time is 23:44

•½ Years’ worth of rain in one hour Brisbane Australia Dec 2019
•Atmospheric Compression Event
•Historic winds and snowfall for Iceland 5th bombogenesis to strike the nation 2019-2020 winter
•Iceland 4X entire year total in one bombogenesis extra tropical low
•Icecane / Snowcane
•Citizen journalism vs. corporate media to cover extreme weather events
•Regular spending habits and routines keeps the banking system functional
•Is there enough in the global supply chain to satiate everyone’s need?
•Perception of stability across continents
•Most valuable items in Bosnia during the two-year siege, bleach and medicine
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks for posting the link. I think he's starting to get back to his original GSM routine.

Does it seem to you like his podcasts have more ads in them since he's been back?
-----
Supposed to get down to 21 here tonight and then 24 tomorrow night. I'm NOT looking forward to that! It is so hard to keep warm when the temps get that low!
-----
I've jugged up 20# of lentils. I plan to sprout them for the chickens, so it's almost like I just bought more eggs!

My feed store finally has some plants, but unfortunately no kale. Hoping for that next week. I think I'll go in early Saturday when it's not quite as cold, and get the cabbage and broccoli plants. I can do a last minute stop at Dollar General at the same time, and maybe even top of the truck's gas tank. I have the choice of lots of stops in one trip, or lots of trips, which is wasteful when I can so easily avoid it.

Wonder if I should treat myself to one last box of ice cream? It doesn't do my reflux much good, but I have it about 4 times a year at most. (And I have to use up that bottle of chocolate syrup, don'tcha know?)
 

TxGal

Day by day
TxGal, thanks for posting the link. I think he's starting to get back to his original GSM routine.

Does it seem to you like his podcasts have more ads in them since he's been back?
-----
Supposed to get down to 21 here tonight and then 24 tomorrow night. I'm NOT looking forward to that! It is so hard to keep warm when the temps get that low!
-----
I've jugged up 20# of lentils. I plan to sprout them for the chickens, so it's almost like I just bought more eggs!

My feed store finally has some plants, but unfortunately no kale. Hoping for that next week. I think I'll go in early Saturday when it's not quite as cold, and get the cabbage and broccoli plants. I can do a last minute stop at Dollar General at the same time, and maybe even top of the truck's gas tank. I have the choice of lots of stops in one trip, or lots of trips, which is wasteful when I can so easily avoid it.

Wonder if I should treat myself to one last box of ice cream? It doesn't do my reflux much good, but I have it about 4 times a year at most. (And I have to use up that bottle of chocolate syrup, don'tcha know?)

You're welcome, thanks for posting that it was up.

Yep, I noticed more ads, too...seems like a lot more, but maybe it's just that they bug me :-)

Good for you! It's always good to have more stashed away. And I feel for you on the temps, we're going down to freezing, and thanks for just making me remember I have two spring flowering plants on the front porch I need to bring in due to the freeze - I'd completely forgotten!

Yes, get the ice cream :-)
 

TxGal

Day by day
Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out (freeze in FL-not sure how far along their citrus/other crops are):

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuxzxwXRkz4


Minus 30 For Minnesota - Snow in North Carolina - Freeze Warnings in Florida - Crisis In Cosmology

Run time is 7:40

Whiteout conditions spark deadly 200-vehicle pileup in Montreal http://bit.ly/2V8v050
Temperatures near 30 degrees below zero in northern Minnesota http://bit.ly/2SLJjLc
Uncertainties arise for Spring 2020, as the Polar Vortex starts to behave unusually http://bit.ly/2v7WdKH
All mountains will get snow this weekend http://bit.ly/2BaIPoq
Seattle Had Its First Sunny Day in 80 Days http://bit.ly/3bZkTWb
Winter Storm Nash Bringing Snow and Wind to Carolinas, Virginia http://bit.ly/2SNkG11
Winter storm brings snow to Raleigh https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNR0-...
Lingering Snow and Gusty Winds in the Southeast; Wet Weather Developing Across the Desert Southwest https://www.weather.gov/
Snowfall Analysis https://www.weather.gov/crh/snowfall
GFS Model Snowfall http://bit.ly/3bSpee1 Worldwide Volcano News http://bit.ly/2v9JJhO
'Mini Ice Age' warnings for next 30 years with -50C temperatures http://bit.ly/32cmX8Y
'Astonishing' blue whale numbers at South Georgia https://www.bbc.com/news/science-envi...
There could be meteors traveling at close to the speed of light http://bit.ly/2T6WiGv
The growing crisis in cosmology https://theweek.com/articles/889916/g...
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
There's a new Ice Age Farmer podcast just out.
"Shipping Shutdown: Exporters Warn of Global Food Trade Collapse."
24:37
I just saw that but have not listened to it yet. Dropped in here to see it there were comments.

ETA I just watched the video. It scares me and I don't know whether I'm nuts or all the people around me are just clueless.

Judy
 
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Martinhouse

Deceased
I've only watched half of it and then got a phone call. Just now getting back to being scared the rest of the way.

Did lots of discussing things with my sister who doesn't have a computer any more. She decided not to even do her planned last shopping list today.

I have only one more short run planned, to get bedding plants for spring greens and to top off my truck's gas tank. Then I'll stay home for good.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Here's the IceAgeFarmer podcast, thanks everyone!:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9QcvDaUvtg


Shipping Shutdown: Exporters Warn of Global Food Trade Collapse

Run time is 24:37

Global shipping has dropped off, and exporters are warning that refrigerated container (reefer) shortages pose major problems for food trade. Soil is even wetter than last year in US Midwest, presaging a difficult -- and potentially catastrophic -- 2020 season. UK is under water. China is shutdown. Australia reported record low crops. Grow food. Store it. Prepare for a limited collapse of our food system.
 

TxGal

Day by day
I've only watched half of it and then got a phone call. Just now getting back to being scared the rest of the way.

Did lots of discussing things with my sister who doesn't have a computer any more. She decided not to even do her planned last shopping list today.

I have only one more short run planned, to get bedding plants for spring greens and to top off my truck's gas tank. Then I'll stay home for good.

I'm just about to watch it...sounds ominous. I don't need any help being more scared than I am :-)

Did a feed store and TS run yesterday, and bedding plants are in here. Probably just in the nick of time....
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
The IAF podcast really was pretty disturbing.

My feed store had the broccoli and cabbage plants I wanted this last week (I called them) but they had not gotten in the kale, which I thought was sort of odd. So I've postponed my last trip until they get their kale, at which time I will also gas up the truck, if nothing else.

Looks like the rest of this month is going to be ugly/chilly. NOT looking forward to it. I'm so tired of being cold all the time!

Well, time to go gather eggs.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Interesting about the kale, but there could be many reasons why it wasn't there....hopefully soon.

I saw that, here, too! I thought we'd be warming up a bit more...nope...and more rain. I hate to complain about the rain, because so many areas are in drought, but we're still squishy out there...

Glad you're getting eggs again! We had a hawk attack today, took one bantam (they always get the friendly ones). It's been a long time, though, since we've had a hawk take a chicken. I really hate that....
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
If the people who plant for Bonnie Plants are like about 3/4 of the ones who drive the delivery trucks, they probably don't read or even understand English all that well and misunderstood instructions to plant kale seeds. The guys on the trucks just scowl and ignore me if I smile and say good morning to them.

Sorry you lost a chicken. I don't dare let mine out, since it's been a long time since I've had a dog around to keep the chicken-chomping varmints out of the yard.

I seem to get three eggs one day and four the next, over and over again. Kind of odd from eight hens, but it's early yet, and is already more than my sister and I are using between us, so I'll just wait and see.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out (I don't even like the title!):

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSvOibcsfhE


Big Changes to March 2020 Temperature Outlook Thanks to "Unexpected" Pattern Change

Run time is 20:49

Snow returns to Front Range Sunday http://bit.ly/2PgOGzQ
Combination of Systems Will Bring More Rain to Waterlogged South and Some Snow to Midwest, Northeast http://bit.ly/2vYTB1C
Potential snow Tuesday-Wednesday for Wisconsin http://bit.ly/2TbhriE
Big Changes to March 2020 Temperature Outlook Thanks to Unexpected Pattern Change http://bit.ly/32ixijH
Final week of February to bring multiple chances for snowfall across the nation http://bit.ly/2SOLKgi
Winter Storm Nash brings largest snowfall to North Carolina and Virginia in two years as 13 million people brace for freezing temperatures and up to six inches of snow https://dailym.ai/38PC62A
SNOWFALL ANALYSIS http://bit.ly/37ZQHZh
More Heavy Snow for the Northern Cascades; Heavy Rain Moving into the South-Central U.S. https://www.weather.gov/
GFS Model Total Snowfall USA http://bit.ly/39UWn6J
Photos of abandoned ski lifts and snowless slopes reveal the toll that rising temperatures are taking on winter resorts http://bit.ly/2Vg9Gea
GFS Model Europe Total Snow http://bit.ly/2SSubvy Worldwide Volcano News http://bit.ly/2v9JJhO
and more
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks, Martinhouse!

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vq4O4vXzFnE


Australia Lowest Harvest Ever Recorded Mid-East Ice/Snow Storms (941)

Run time is 12:28

Australia to loose 66%+ crop yield this year taking it below 1980 levels, and importers who rely in Australia wheat will need to look elsewhere. UK warning citizens to brace for cut offs in food as EU exporters need to set up new trade deals. Record cold and ice storms sweep the Middle East with huge increases in precipitation across the Fertile Crescent.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Spain closes airports on Canary Islands due to sand storm
Spanish authorities say they have closed airports on the Canary Islands because of a wind storm that is blinding the archipelago with sand and dust

By The Associated Press
23 February 2020

WireAP_ae13af7fbbd54508bdaa0bc40540493a_16x9_992.jpg

People in carnival dress walk across a street crossing in a cloud of red dust in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain, Sunday, February 23, 2020. Flights leaving Tenerife have been affected after storms of red sand from Africa's Saharan desert hit the Canary Islands and carnival was finally cancelled it was announced. (AP Photo/Andres Gutierrez)The Associated Press

MADRID -- Spanish authorities said Sunday that they have closed airports on the Canary Islands because of a wind storm that is blinding the archipelago with sand and dust.

Spain’s airport authorities said that incoming planes have been rerouted to other destinations and no flights are being allowed to leave airports on the islands’ airports.

The regional government for the Canary Islands says that wind gusts could reach 120 kph (around 75 mph). Authorities have closed schools for Monday.

Television images show palm trees whipping in the wind amid a thick yellow haze enveloping the islands.

The storm phenomenon, locally known as “calima,” is capable of lifting up clouds of sand and dust from the Sahara desert and transporting them across the 95 kilometers (59 miles) separating the islands from the African coast.



Spain closes airports on Canary Islands due to sand storm
 
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