Global warming or upcoming ice age

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ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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there was a strong elnino in the 1950s

Could be you had a strong one at that time to, what was the winter like that year, do you remember.

Did you have strong hurricanes ?.

Where im going with this is, we could get the biggest ever hurricane ever with cold air trapped.

A super hurricane that grows and covers most of the northern hemisphere
Would trap cold air everywhere.

Followed by more super hurricanes with blizzards.

The constant flow of a super elnino warm air current that could be warmer air than ever, could be how global ice ages start very quickly.

The studies suggest there's no way of knowing just how bad it could get.

There's many theories how global ice ages start.

But I feel with all the avenues I've studied this seems to be the most consistent
We only had two hurricanes hit that town in my life, one when I was in high school and the other was Hurricane Sandy.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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We only had two hurricanes hit that town in my life, one when I was in high school and the other was Hurricane Sandy.
that's interesting,
We only had two hurricanes hit that town in my life, one when I was in high school and the other was Hurricane Sandy.
that's interesting are you on the Pacific coast of the USA
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
36,148
6,528
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that's interesting,
that's interesting are you on the Pacific coast of the USA
Hurricane Sandy hit the East coast, why would you ask if I was on the Pacific coast?
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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Hurricane Sandy hit the East coast, why would you ask if I was on the Pacific coast?
hurricanes have never be known to hit the Pacific coast of the USA, I wondered how accurate that was
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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Hurricane Sandy hit the East coast, why would you ask if I was on the Pacific coast?
generally hurricane flow northwest.

But they do hit the east as well. When you said hurricane sandy, I never knew hurricane sandy hit the east, how could I ?

I have been researching our sun can undergo magnetic flips and I wondered if this could effect the Pacific coast of the usa.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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If our sun underwent a magnetic flip in winter months for the USA, anything could be possible if it happens this year
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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So the night time ora was visible on the south coast of the USA

Do you see now ?
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
36,148
6,528
113
generally hurricane flow northwest.

But they do hit the east as well. When you said hurricane sandy, I never knew hurricane sandy hit the east, how could I ?

I have been researching our sun can undergo magnetic flips and I wondered if this could effect the Pacific coast of the usa.
Hurricane Sandy was one of the biggest and most expensive hurricanes in recent history. I would think anyone who is so focused on this "climate change" would be aware of this hurricane.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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Hurricane Sandy was one of the biggest and most expensive hurricanes in recent history. I would think anyone who is so focused on this "climate change" would be aware of this hurricane.
nope I'm focused on real life experiences like this one

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South_America_hurricanes


A South American hurricane is a tropical cyclone that affects the continent of South America or its countries. The continent is rarely affected by tropical cyclones, though most storms to hit the area are formed in the North Atlantic Ocean. Typically, strong upper level winds and its proximity to the equator prevents North Atlantic impacts.[1] Cyclone Yaku is the only known tropical cyclone to have ever affected the Pacific side of South America on record, albeit its status as a tropical cyclone is unofficial. Although conditions are typically too hostile for many storms to hit the area from the South Atlantic Ocean, there have been a few tropical cyclones to affect land. Based on climatology, northern Venezuela and Colombia have a 1 to 5% chance of a hurricane strike in any given year, while all locations south of 10° N have less than a 1% chance of a direct hit.[2]
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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Hurricane Sandy was one of the biggest and most expensive hurricanes in recent history. I would think anyone who is so focused on this "climate change" would be aware of this hurricane.
I don't care what hurricane sandy was I had never heard of it until you said.

I really don't pay attention to all theese names given to storms

Like Catrina or Desmond

They give them so many I pay no attention to the names 🤣
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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Atlantic hurricane season off to an early start as two named storms form


First time on record that two named storms have formed in June
The Associated Press

Posted: June 23, 2023

1690491270613.png

Tropical storm Cindy has formed behind tropical storm Bret, in the first case of two storms in the tropical Atlantic in June since record keeping began, forecasters said Friday.

The historic event signals an early and aggressive start to the Atlantic hurricane season that began June 1 and whose peak usually runs from mid-August to mid-October. Forecasters blamed unusually high sea temperatures for the rare development.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Miami has forecast 12 to 17 named storms for this year's hurricane season. It said between five and nine of those storms could become hurricanes, including up to four major hurricanes of Category 3 or higher.

ADVERTISEMENT
Record North Atlantic warmth
CBC Nova Scotia meteorologist Ryan Snoddon recently wrote about how record warmth in the North Atlantic is not good news for hurricane season.

WATCH | Above-normal Atlantic Ocean temperatures explained:



Meteorologist Ryan Snoddon says climate change is a factor, but that there's likely more going on. 2:52


Warmer tropical Atlantic Ocean waters typically lead to more tropical storms and hurricanes, with more fuel available for developing systems.





However, a rapidly developing El Niño may help counter any storms that do develop in the tropical Atlantic. El Niño events typically lead to stronger wind shear in the tropical Atlantic. This wind shear can suppress the development and growth of tropical storms.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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Do they know something we don't

Remember the animals acted strange at the ark

Scientist reports of animals acting strange all over the plannet,

 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
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Mean while two days ago
Scientists comfirm Antarctica never regained it's ice last winter.

What could happen as a result of that ?

 

iamsoandso

Senior Member
Oct 6, 2011
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I suppose everyone has a different idea of what's going on and it probably depends on the house they live in and it's location. I mean if they live in an apartment and the lawn is tiny on their patio then they could water it and all their potted plants with a bucket. If they live in a subdivision and their front and back yards are less than a 1000 square foot then a few hours in the morning once a week with a hose would work.

Where I live though in the Big Thicket in Texas the weather is no longer normal at all. We had several acres of land years ago but now I only have one acre left. In 1978 when we first got our land I would plant gardens all over it and grew some real nice crops. Me and my wife were looking at our garden a few days ago and we were talking about how bad it looked because it seemed as if we didn't know the first thing about gardening,it looks real bad,lol. I ask her though about the ones we planted in the 80's and then the ones in the 90's and we were reminiscing where we planted different crops over the years and how well they did.

What's going on is that in the early 1980's you could plant a garden and it rained often enough that you never needed to water it. By the 1990's one year you might need to water once or twice across the growing season but the next year it might rain enough that you didn't need to. Starting in the late 1990's it became worse and worse each year until you had to water every year. Now though 2023 is completely different from the past in that it goes months with no rain at all. That's 45 years of gardening and my gardens have gone from really great gardens to absolutely nothing. I noticed the strangest thing this year though, the few plants I did water enough to keep alive didn't dry up like they used to instead on the days when it got 102 outside the leaves on the plants cooked right on the plants.
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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Meanwhile 10 hours ago antonio guteress indicates drastic immediate change is coming in terms of reducing carbon, what does that mean for countrues signed up to the movement , what could that mean ?

 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
83
I suppose everyone has a different idea of what's going on and it probably depends on the house they live in and it's location. I mean if they live in an apartment and the lawn is tiny on their patio then they could water it and all their potted plants with a bucket. If they live in a subdivision and their front and back yards are less than a 1000 square foot then a few hours in the morning once a week with a hose would work.

Where I live though in the Big Thicket in Texas the weather is no longer normal at all. We had several acres of land years ago but now I only have one acre left. In 1978 when we first got our land I would plant gardens all over it and grew some real nice crops. Me and my wife were looking at our garden a few days ago and we were talking about how bad it looked because it seemed as if we didn't know the first thing about gardening,it looks real bad,lol. I ask her though about the ones we planted in the 80's and then the ones in the 90's and we were reminiscing where we planted different crops over the years and how well they did.

What's going on is that in the early 1980's you could plant a garden and it rained often enough that you never needed to water it. By the 1990's one year you might need to water once or twice across the growing season but the next year it might rain enough that you didn't need to. Starting in the late 1990's it became worse and worse each year until you had to water every year. Now though 2023 is completely different from the past in that it goes months with no rain at all. That's 45 years of gardening and my gardens have gone from really great gardens to absolutely nothing. I noticed the strangest thing this year though, the few plants I did water enough to keep alive didn't dry up like they used to instead on the days when it got 102 outside the leaves on the plants cooked right on the plants.
I heard about Texas being bad for rain, I'll pray for rain, dear father bring a good rain rain season to Texas 😊

you need to look at different plants that can handle less water and hotter conditions 😊

The farming industry is going to be switching to this for veg soon in the uk, there's no other choice for now.

Unless of Course the magnetic flip happens, it is showing signs that it's getting close. Who knows what will happen if it does. Could be for the better,
 

Fundaamental

Well-known member
Mar 17, 2023
3,289
421
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I'm skeptical a full magnetic flip would cause huge radiation to enter from the sun.

But as we know birds rely up on our magnetic polar field for direction, it could explain why they've been fallen out of the sky, as in dramatic changes in direction of our polar changes

How ever our sun is due a magnetic flip soon it happens every 11 years.

We have signs it could be a full one us soon for to

Have a watch but ignore the skepticism that it could wipe us out, I don't think it would and i think it would happen very quick
5 years ago
 

iamsoandso

Senior Member
Oct 6, 2011
8,048
1,609
113
I heard about Texas being bad for rain, I'll pray for rain, dear father bring a good rain rain season to Texas 😊

you need to look at different plants that can handle less water and hotter conditions 😊

The farming industry is going to be switching to this for veg soon in the uk, there's no other choice for now.

Unless of Course the magnetic flip happens, it is showing signs that it's getting close. Who knows what will happen if it does. Could be for the better,

I switched to peanuts,okra and black eyed peas this year. It's amazing how little water black eye peas need to grow and produce. If you water it at all and everything is all dry around it then the insects are drawn to it like a magnet because their the only thing left that's green. I've reduced my bee hives down to only two because of the dearth they will leave unless you feed them(no plants no food for them).. The okra was the ones that the leaves cooked on, strangest thing I've ever seen. I watered them the evening before and they looked just fine the next morning but after it got really hot that day the leaves turned dark, dark green and looked just like spinach looks when you cook it. Ozone hole passed over it,micro burst of radiation? Thank you for the prayers, I'm an old man and ready to go on to a different garden, I pray to God for you people.