New Year, New Parasitic Agenda
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Just a little something I’ve been wanting to share as we head into 2019. Enjoy!
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New Year, New Parasitic Agenda
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Just a little something I’ve been wanting to share as we head into 2019. Enjoy!
Download TODAY #grandsolarminimum #magneticstorm #supersolarflares (at Augusta, Georgia) https://www.instagram.com/p/B6pjdJsp6s2DiHAtZs01FaxWZcYiUgRfW8mYcM0/?igshid=1cps83lha37cx
World Wide Storm Havoc & Power Outages
World Wide Storm Havoc & Power Outages
Join us in the chat! Monday Wednesday & Friday Nights 9pm EST Severe thunderstorms slam Eastern United States, over 800 000 customers without power
Severe thunderstorms pushed through the Eastern United States on Thursday, October 31, 2019, knocking down trees and power lines that affected over 800 000 customers. As of Friday morning, November 1, more than 300 preliminary reports of severe…
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Early snowstorm presents huge challenges for ND farming community
New Post has been published on https://is.gd/ImlDgw
Early snowstorm presents huge challenges for ND farming community
The impacts of the storm across western and central North Dakota. Farmers and ranchers across the area were especially impacted. Please continue to share your photos, stories, and snowfall totals.
The early October snowstorm that buried much of the eastern two-thirds of North Dakota is creating an immediate crisis for farmers and ranchers and promising to present problems that will linger into next year’s growing season.
The storm that moved in late Wednesday dropped snow for four days. Harvey had a storm total of 30 inches, and Bismarck a little more than 17, according to the National Weather Service.
Snowdrifts in the Jamestown area in recent days have risen as high as 5 feet, said Ryan Wanzek, who farms land south and west of the city. In his fields, corn and soybean crops sit unharvested after near-historic rainfall late this summer.
It’s a situation farmers across the state are facing, and without a crop to sell, Wanzek is worried many of them will run into cash flow problems.
“If you didn’t get anything off and can’t combine until January, how do you pay your bills?” he said.
There also is concern in ranching country, even with the storm being forecast well in advance.
“It was nice to have a little bit of ahead-of-time notice — people have been in full-speed scramble mode the past few days preparing for the storm,” said Julie Ellingson, executive vice president of the North Dakota Stockmen’s Association. “But the challenge this early in the season, cows are still on grass (pasture), and there’s a lot of cow-calf pairs out there.”
When snowstorms threaten, ranchers get their cattle into farmyards or to other places of shelter, “but it’s a little different this early in the season,” Ellingson said.
Wet weather broke several precipitation records across the western part of the state in September, turning many rural roads into quagmires. That worsens the problem, according to Ellingson.
And now, “we’re talking about some pretty phenomenal amounts of snow,” she said. “There’s only a certain number of places (cattle) can be protected from that.”
State Agriculture Commissioner Doug Goehring and Gov. Doug Burgum expressed support for farmers and ranchers who have been struggling in the midst of the extremely wet weather and the early, heavy snowfall. The state is exploring potential help such as seeking some sort of federal disaster aid.
“In the wake of this storm, we need to keep our agricultural community in mind,” Burgum said. “After an unusually wet late summer and early fall, this current weather pattern will only exacerbate some of the challenges farmers and ranchers are facing. The state is exploring all possible means to assist the agricultural community.”
The most recent crop report from the National Agricultural Statistics Service, released three days before the storm hit, showed that about 10% of North Dakota’s staple spring wheat crop is still in the field. The harvest of all crops in the state is well behind the average pace, as is the development of major late-season crops including sunflowers and corn. Less than one-fourth of the corn crop is even mature.
“We recognize the challenges our producers are experiencing,” Goehring said. “The wet weather has caused much disease in cereal crops and has created an inability to harvest remaining cereal grains and row crops, as well as potatoes and sugar beets.”
Farmers with wheat still in the field are wondering what to do with it, as it’s likely damaged or of poor quality.
Saturated soil makes putting up wheat for hay or silage difficult or impossible.
“Grazing standing mature or ripening wheat is not a common practice; however, it is an alternative that some producers are considering,” said Miranda Meehan, NDSU Extension livestock environmental stewardship specialist.
Quality, along with access to wet or snow-covered fields, also is a concern when it comes to hay for cattle, according to Ellingson.
“There’s probably a lot of quantity out there — that needs to be retrieved, for one. And two, the hay that has been put up, quality is a concern because of the excess moisture,” she said.
Goehring said he has expressed concerns to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency about quality discounts on grain.
“Storage on farms is limited to hold poor-quality grain for an extended period of time in order to take advantage of fewer discounts months later,” he said.
A similar storm struck the Jamestown area about a year ago. It’s still fresh in Wanzek’s mind — but that storm wasn’t preceded by a wet summer.
“The difference is there’s so much moisture underneath,” he said. “We were dry going into last year. The snow had somewhere to go.”
The problem will be on farmers’ minds through the winter, he said, because “planting next year is going to be affected no matter what.”
Goehring urged farmers to take care not only of their farm operations and their livestock but also themselves.
“I know it’s difficult to talk about your situation with family and friends, but please share struggles and concerns with them or with someone else you trust,” he said. “Also, please utilize services available, as they can be a good resource.”
Wanzek said what he and other farmers need is drying weather — a lot of it — or for the blanket of snow to melt away so the ground can freeze. It turns into “a big waiting game” for the rest of the year, he said.
“It’s not easy, but farming never is,” he said. “We’ll get through it.”
TRAVIS SVIHOVEC and BLAKE NICHOLSON Bismarck Tribune
New Post has been published on https://is.gd/uCxqqo
Early planting difficulties could come into play later this year related to the first frost. Monday’s U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Crop Progress continued the run of poor numbers showing the condition of corn and soybeans in the U.S., something the country’s farmers know all too well. For the 7th straight week, the condition of corn and soybeans considered “good” or “excellent” has been 60% or lower. Monday’s USDA report had the good-or-excellent condition of corn at 58% and the condition of soybeans at 54% in 18 key corn- and soybean-producing state.
Earth is about to be strobed by three streams of solar wind–each flowing from a hole the sun’s atmosphere. NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory photographed the gaseous spigots on July 29th These “coronal holes” are places where the sun’s magnetic field peels back and allows solar wind to escape. Coronal holes look dark in extreme ultraviolet images of the sun because glowing-hot plasma normally contained there is missing. These are “coronal holes”–places where the sun’s magnetic field peels back and allows solar wind to escape. Coronal holes look dark in extreme ultraviolet images of the sun because glowing-hot plasma normally contained there is missing. The first of the streams is expected to arrive on Aug 1st, followed by two more in rapid succession on Aug. 4th. Polar geomagnetic unrest and possibly some minor magnetic storms are possible on those dates. High-latitude sky watchers should be alert for auroras, especially in the southern hemisphere where winter darkness favors visibility. http://spaceweather.com/
[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScWQzZxB4IA[/embedyt]
Valentina Zharkova's Statement to Ben Davidson of Suspicious Observers
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Valentina Zharkova's Statement to Ben Davidson of Suspicious Observers
This person Ben speaking nonsense, I am sorry to hear it. I wonder if he can read in plain English, because he twists everything said in our paper. The science is not a religion, it reports real facts despite anybody’s believes.
This person Ben did not understand that the oscillations of the baseline magnetic field are much smaller than the magnetic field variations during normal solar cycles or during grand solar cycles. These oscillations are related to the view of the Sun from the Earth, and not related to the processes on the Sun which produce solar activity of 11 or 22 years and grand cycles reported by us in the paper Zharkova et al, 2015 https://www.nature.com/articles/srep15689.
Our current paper exposes that the Earth came though 60 super-grand cycles of 2000 years . The Earth (and other planets) will be warming by up to 3C and cooling every 2000 years. And despite this warming in the past the Earth is still here as usual rotating around the sun and around its axis, so there are natural mechanisms allowing it to survive these processes without any human interaction. Romans grew grapes in Scotland and England during the Roman Empire times and we might come back to these times.
This steady warming caused by the orbital motion of the Sun and Earth is still to be interrupted twice by the grand solar minima when the solar input will be reduced. These grans solar minima (GSM) are to be generated by double solar dynamo waves inside the sun as it was predicted earlier. The GSMs will occur in 2020-2055 and in 2370-2415 and the solar irradiance will decrease during these periods because not much activity will happen on the Sun. Nowhere here in our estimations is CO2 participated as we did not investigate the terrestrial atmosphere besides using the research by Akasofu, 2010. And if you look at his paper, Fig. 9 he exposed the fault in statistical extrapolation of terrestrial temperature by IPCC https://file.scirp.org/pdf/NS20101100012_47058306.pdf.
Hence, in our paper we provide the proof that our planet can survive much bigger temperature increases than IPCC people scaremongering the humankind. Furthermore, it raises the attention to the fact that we observe solar activity from a celestial body and thus cannot avoid the effects of orbital motion, like Milankovitch cycles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milankovitch_cycles. The solar inertial motion is the additional effect to Milankovitch cycles. I hope, that our paper would advise all these pupils who were brainwashed by the alleged human-made global warming to return to schools and to continue to study better Maths and Astronomy.
This paper also explains that the grand solar minima in the solar activity will be real blessings for the people on Earth allowing them to catch up their breath and to sort out their businesses to embrace the natural chain of events with increasing temperature. Although, they would need to make some arrangements for providing food and heating in these period. But we need to embrace the natural events and adjust our lives to them. May I suggest to read our paper carefully before jumping to any wrong conclusions.
Best regards
V. Zh.
#grandsolarminimum (at Scottsdale, Arizona) https://www.instagram.com/p/ByLXKmFlcQD/?igshid=1wqz6ccb7zsn4
May 11th and I have never skied in so many conditions; bluebird, sleet, thunderstorm, snow and cold. Nothing better to be doing today than skiing in Arizona in May. #grandsolarminimum #snowbowlaz #maysnow #mayskiing #snowbowl #arizona (at Arizona Snowbowl) https://www.instagram.com/p/BxWVg31F4j8/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=2dbeg9ryghix