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alexei's avatar

And it's not just in New York or the PNW, the cold weather has broken records all over the globe - https://electroverse.co/

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DVD's avatar

I’ve been following this recently. Here in the PNW, the streaks have been so obvious especially compared to days when there is no such activity. I’ve been taking pictures and wondering if everyone else just thinks this is normal. I was seriously going to email Jeff and ask if we could add this cause onto our many others! What are they doing up there? I’m sure it is totally harmless, or something…

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Andrea's avatar

I agree. I've been taking pictures too. Last week we had this strange 'fog' low to the ground two days in a row. We have fog here in the winter, mostly December and January, but this fog was different. By Saturday night I wasn't feeling well. With medicine and rest I was feeling better by Sunday night. I continued taking cold meds all week, acutally felt fine, just a little tired. But others at work were dropping like flies. I noticed them spraying above on Monday and Tuesday as well.

They sprayed our area heavily nearly every day this past May and I came down with the same 'cold' beginning of June that I had last weekend.

I follow the FLCC vitamin protocols and take Ivermectin weekly. This is probably what helped me recover quickly.

The patterns in the skies are noticeable. I really don't understand how no one is doing anything about it. I don't know what to do either except talk about it and point it out to people (who think I'm crazy.) But I'm sorry, if those are 'con' trails then why aren't they there EVERY day? Are there no planes up there on this beautiful clear sky day?

Sorry, I rambled a bit. But this really disturbs me because I feel so helpless in guarding against it.

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Baldmichael's avatar

Sorry to hear that, the powers that be have to have something to boost Covid 19 cases and keep the panic going. One needs to identify who is doing it first. I am in the UK but perhaps others will help.

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Donna Ruth's avatar

Whatever it is, it makes for some spectacular pictures.

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Naomi's avatar

I saw predictions for a colder than usual winter across the Northern hemisphere due to the eruption of a volcano back in January.

It's freezing here in north Florida too. It is 11 am and the outside temperature is 55 degrees. The inside temperature is 66 degrees. It rarely gets this cold before January.

I am resisting turning on the heat. We've had 4 price "fuel adjustment' increases this year.

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Agent 1-4-9's avatar

I once visited my dad in Seminole, Florida for Thanksgiving and it was warm enough to go for a swim in the ocean. We set out traps for blue crab and caught a stingray and a sheepshead while fishing. It was a very non-traditional Thanksgiving for me, but loads of fun. Edit-- On the return trip home, we left about 4:00 in the morning so the kids would sleep for a good portion of the trip. I was wearing a t-shirt and shorts, felt great. Got gas in Georgia, middle of the day, still nice and warm. Filled up again in Tennessee, still not too bad. Got to Kentucky and it was 25° and snowing, and there's me, pumping gas in a t-shirt and shorts. People were looking at me like I was crazy! 🤣🤣🤣

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AngelaK's avatar

Yea the holidays feel different in South Florida, but nice

nevertheless . I tried to mimic our North Eastern Thanksgiving our first year here..we had the adult children, the grandmother, the set table and all the same cooked recipes we loved. But our appetites were not feeling as ravenous, and instead of craving the coziness of leftovers the next day, we all wanted to be outdoors in the gorgeous weather doing something instead.

Now we have established a new tradition. We all (even doggie sometimes) go out to eat our turkey dinner in a beautiful outdoor restaurant venue of choice.

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laura-ann Knox's avatar

I love our Christmas weather here in San Diego. No other part of the world shares our December weather except. . . The Mediterranean! Specifically, Israel. It's dry and clear and cold as heck at night, and you go out and look at the twinkling stars and realize they're the same stars that Jesus, and Mary, and Joseph saw above them. . . Plus, on Palm Sunday, we cut our own palm branches.

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AngelaK's avatar

Sounds delightful. ❤️

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Agent 1-4-9's avatar

Yeah, we went for Christmas one year too. Nice, but I missed having a white Christmas.

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AngelaK's avatar

In New York city suburbs, I think we had maybe 2 white Christmases I can recall, so that isnt an issue for me. A lot of other Christmas season experiences of the north east, too numerous to list, I definitely do miss.

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INGRID C DURDEN's avatar

I remember my first christmas in GA, I had knitted a warm winter sweater LOL. Could sit outside in summer dress ! Used the sweater at Easter though.

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Naomi's avatar

That brings back memories. We spent Christmas in Maryland at my mother-in-law's. We left Florida with the winter clothes thrown in the back of the van. We were in shirts, shorts, sandals. Spent the night at South of the Border in Dillon, SC. In the morning there would be frost on the car and we had to put on our winter coats.

Driving north we left late summer in Florida and by the time we got to Virginia there were no leaves on the trees, and all was gray.

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Genevieve's avatar

Naomi- Same here, where I live in SW Florida. I've been here over 40 years, and the past month has been unusually chilly. I agree it normally doesn't get this cold until late December/January.

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Baldmichael's avatar

They said we would enter a new cold war. Now it has arrived.

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Connie Lemmincakes's avatar

I disagree. Look at the flakes. They aren’t normal snowflakes, they’re just snow blobs. www.geoengineeringwatch.org

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Naomi's avatar

I lived in New York for many years. There are snowflakes that are very large and very wet. Truly. They look like blobs, but they are normal to winter before it gets very cold.

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Baldmichael's avatar

As I said to Lemmincakes it is the 'snowflakes' getting their own back. Look at the evidence, they are very large, wet and look like blobs.

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Betsy Frost's avatar

I grew up years ago in upstate NY. This stuff is nothing new, nor is the amount.

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Naomi's avatar

Exactly. Lake effect snow. It's the way weather is reported now. I became so disgusted with the weather channel over the way they were thrusting climate change propaganda into every bit of their coverage I stopped watching them. Fox Weather channel is superior.

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Baldmichael's avatar

I suppose in all honesty it is the 'snowflakes' getting their own back for all the abuse they have suffered, poor diddums, hurty wurty dare ickle feelings.

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Susie & Security's avatar

Did you move to Germany? 😛

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laura-ann Knox's avatar

And record low amounts of heating oil

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Naomi's avatar

Our utility used to use coal but switched to natural gas. Prices have gone up, because thanks to the idiocy of the Biden administration, supplies have shrunk.

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JW's avatar

It's because of all the young "snowflakes" running around.

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Flo's avatar

Not here in northern Europe. It is VERY mild for November.

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