A: Just wait for November!
Q: (Joe) So if October was 'interesting', what's November going to be? VERY interesting?!
A: Some surprising solutions to longstanding problems.
Q: (L) Is that personally or globally?
A: Both.
Q: (L) Are we going to like the solutions, at least at the personal level?
A: Mostly.
Q: (L) What about on the global level?
A: Not so much.
Could this be one of the unwelcome surprises the C's had in mind?
Iceland volcano: Emergency declared over volcano Fagradalsfjall eruption concerns
By Adam Durbin
BBC News
Thousands are asked to evacuate from a town over fears magma has spread underground.
www.bbc.com
The chance of a volcanic eruption in Iceland is rising, posing a threat to a now-evacuated town, experts say.
Iceland has declared a state of emergency after a series of earthquakes.
Authorities have ordered thousands of people living in the southwestern town of Grindavík to leave as a precaution.
The Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO) said there was a considerable risk of an eruption.
The probability of an eruption on or just off the Reykjanes peninsula has increased since the morning, IMO says.
An eruption could start at any time in the next few days, according to the statement.
Thor Thordason, professor of volcanology at the University of Iceland, said a 15km-long (nine mile) river of magma running under the peninsula was still active.
"That's why we're talking about an imminent eruption unfortunately. The most likely eruption side appears to be within the boundary of the town of Grinadvik," he told the BBC.
Thousands of tremors have been recorded around the nearby Fagradalsfjall volcano in recent weeks.
They have been concentrated in Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula, which had remained dormant to volcanic activity for 800 years before a 2021 eruption.
In a statement on Saturday the agency said a tunnel of magma, or molten rock, that extends northeast across Grindavik and some 10km further inland, was estimated at a depth of less than 800 metres, compared with 1,500 metres earlier in the day.
On Thursday, the increased seismic activity in the area prompted the closure of the nearby
Blue Lagoon landmark.
More than 20,000 tremors have been recorded in southwest Iceland since late October.
Lest we forget, between March and June 2010 a series of volcanic events at
Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland caused enormous disruption to air travel across Western Europe. See;
2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull - Wikipedia
Scientists are predicting that this eruption will not be as disruptive as that in 2010, but then who knows for sure.