The Ice Age Cometh! Forget Global Warming!

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While parts of southern Montana are dealing with record flooding, it's snow and wind that's hitting the higher elevations of Northwest Montana.

Whitefish Mountain Resort has announced they are closed Tuesday and all activities have been canceled because of wind and snow.

The resort will be providing updates at Whitefish Mountain Resort.


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Looking at the photo provided it appears to be at least 4 inches deep (at the time it was time taken).

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Heavy June snowfall in the mountains of Alberta, Canada - at least a foot deep -


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While much of the province was pummelled by heavy rain on Tuesday, areas in the eastern slopes were covered with a fresh blanket of snow.

Castle Mountain Resort employees woke up to find more than half the mountain covered in a layer of powder.

"Being in the Rockies, anytime of year, you'll for sure see dustings of snow up on the alpine," said guest services coordinator Kelly Dolan.

"But to wake up to close to 30 centimetres at mid-mountain, the snow line's even a little bit lower than that, is unexpected for sure."

Dolan has worked at castle for more than two years, but says this is one of the largest snow dumps they've seen this late into the season.
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Heavy June snowfall in the mountains of Alberta, Canada - at least a foot deep -
Just over the rock into BC, here is the Snow Survey and Water Supply Bulletin – June 15th , 2022.

Flood risk remains high due to delayed melt of the mountain snow pack throughout the province and continued unsettled weather conditions. The June 15th, 2022 snow pack is well above normal, increasing to 198% of normal (the average of all snow measurements across B.C.) over the past two weeks (where June 1st was 165%). All regions of the province with snow measurements have snow basin indices greater than 140% of normal, indicating continued risk throughout the Interior from snowmelt related flooding, especially in combination with heavy rain.
[..]
This year, five stations measured record high snow values for June 15th, including sites in the South Thompson, Upper Columbia, and West Kootenay. Approximately three-quarters of the accumulated snow pack has typically melted by June 15th on average (according to data from automated snow weather stations). Snowmelt was delayed by two to four weeks due to extended cooler weather in April and May, where approximately half of the snow pack at automated snow weather stations melted by June 15th.

Snow pack is only one factor related to freshet flood risk. Weather conditions for June through July will determine the timing, magnitude, and rate of snowmelt, where heavy rainfall events can exacerbate snowmelt-driven flows. Due to the significant delay of snowmelt, the freshet flood risk may extend into late July for some regions.

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Summary

Snow pack throughout the province is well above normal. The provincial average for all snow measurements across the province is 198% of normal, and the Fraser River is 198%. These large snow basin numbers reflect a delay in melt, and not continued accumulation of snow from peak levels. Flood risk remains high due to the delayed melt of the mountain snow pack throughout the province. Snow pack is only one factor related to freshet flood risk. Weather conditions through June and July will determine the timing, magnitude, and rate of snowmelt, and heavy rainfall events can exacerbate the situation. The flood season is not over and may extend into late July for some regions. This is the final snow bulletin for the 2022 season; the first snow bulletin of the 2023 season will be released in early January 2023. Thank you to our partners for their contributions to these bulletins.
 
This is not exactly the IceAge topic, very much related nonetheless. Ben from Suspicious Observers released a video which deals which changes to their projects mostly but at the end he brings on a sobering wake up call for those who still don't take seriously the changes in environment as well as in society and what is about to happen. He's spot on and in accord with findings of this Forum. I put the time mark at the beginning of that part (22:09) so you can listen just to those last 5 minutes.


I am glad he's encouraging his audience to prepare, but his injunction to 'harden' falls flat to my ears. There's a time where hardness is needed, but there's also a time where softness is needed. I think that a more robust preparedness doesn't mean simply hardening - it amounts to establishing oneself in awareness to know the situation, and adapt oneself accordingly.

A balancing perspective:

Tao Te Ching Chapter 76

Lin Yutang

When man is born, he is tender and weak;
At death, he is hard and stiff.
When the things and plants are alive, they are soft
and supple;
When they are dead, they are brittle and dry.
Therefore hardness and stiffness are the companions of death,
And softness and gentleness are the companions of life.

Therefore when an army is headstrong, it will lose in a battle.
When a tree is hard, it will be cut down.
The big and strong belong underneath.
The gentle and weak belong at the top.
 
Below is a link to a large amount of good data regarding Antarctic ice. It doesn't look like it is melting in the way that the 'global warming' crowd describes. And as for global warming or anthropogenic climate change, that is a full-on psyop. It is perhaps one of the most important scams to understand and contemplate - because we are heading into an ice age.


Aside from electroverse, which has a good amount of introductory information, I would also recommend going to sott.net and using the search terms 'grand solar minimum', 'global warming', 'ice age', and 'climate change', and you will find many articles describing the depth of the lie we've been told since Al Gore rolled out this psyop with his sleek presentation.

If you have any further questions, please feel free to post them here.
Thanks!
 
Interesting discrepancies

Thank you for the electroverse.net link, Artemis Luna - always good to bring back links and sites into memory again. I had not visited it for quite a while. There, I looked at the various, interesting charts neatly lined up. So; according to the UHA Satellite Based temperature chart, the global temperature was a mere 0.06°C above average. (Fascinating !)

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While when i looked our the Swedish SMHI Weather service, they published the below shown illustrations, based on ERA5 data, with all the usual suspects of the EU; "Climate Change Service" (what a name !) , ECMWF, Copernicus). There, things looked much hotter, and we are let to believe that it was one of the hottest June months in history in he world. 🧐 (perhaps in Europe, yes)
But the narrative is clearly pushed towards 'a world, far warmer than normal" in the Swedish (and i presume, in most other European countries, in terms of meteorological essays for June 2022)

🇸🇪


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Nuclear War Would Force Earth Into 'Little Ice Age,' Study Shows

A fresh study on the global impact of a nuclear war has concluded that any conflict would plunge the world into darkness, cause temperatures to plummet and wipe out much of the world’s sea life.

Researchers at Louisiana State University ran multiple computer simulations to assess the impact of global and regional nuclear conflicts on the world’s oceans. They found that in all scenarios, firestorms would release soot and smoke into the upper atmosphere, blocking out the sun and forcing temperatures to fall by an average 13 degrees Fahrenheit in the first month.

That, in turn, would cause ocean temperatures to fall and sea ice to expand by more than six million square miles, blocking major ports including China’s Tianjin, Copenhagen and St. Petersburg. Researchers said changes to Arctic sea ice would likely last thousands of years, describing the event as a “nuclear little ice age.”

The study comes after the specter of nuclear war was raised following Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warning in April that there was a “serious” risk of nuclear war.

Lead author, assistant professor Cheryl Harrison, said: “It doesn’t matter who is bombing whom. It can be India and Pakistan or NATO and Russia. Once the smoke is released into the upper atmosphere it spreads globally and affects everyone.”

The simulations examined what would happen to the Earth if the US and Russia dropped 4,400 100-kiloton bombs on cities and industrial areas, and, separately, if 500 of the same-sized weapons were detonated in an India-Pakistan conflict.

In the largest scenario, ocean recovery would likely take decades at the surface, and hundreds of years at depth.
Nuclear War Would Force Earth Into 'Little Ice Age,' Study Shows


Ice Age is going to be Putin’s fault
 
Nuclear War Would Force Earth Into 'Little Ice Age,' Study Shows


Nuclear War Would Force Earth Into 'Little Ice Age,' Study Shows


Ice Age is going to be Putin’s fault

What a strange "funny" little "study" reported by Bloomberg Green.

"A fresh study on the global impact of a nuclear war has concluded that any conflict would plunge the world into darkness, cause temperatures to plummet and wipe out much of the world’s sea life"

Mostly concerned about temperature drops... eh ? "Through smoke" 🤡 - with no mentioning of what the nuclear fallout itself would do to life on earth, as it spreads around the globe. I almost got the impression of that the article had a little "psychological green backdoor" built-in; aimed to give funny ideas to the climate fanatics, that hey - at least earth will then be cooling a notch or two, (unspoken) it must be something positive with nuclear bombs, too. Who cares about fallouts... "it's just smoke".

Bloomberg and the mentioning of "studies" (of any kind) just don't match. Ever !

I heard that the German Military top cock 🦚 resonates in similar wicked ways; trying to subvert the heathy resistance of using nuclear weapons - into that they can be used as mini bombs in defense, and it will not really harm people. Anything goes in order to knock off Putin's pants, right ?

So, how stupid can it really get - and what's next ? EU-Eco label on nuclear weapons ? Well, a title mentioned earlier was, that we live in "An Age Of Maximum Arrogance".

Truly fitting.
 

SUMMER OR WINTER? Minus one degree in Bjelašnica this morning


Cold morning in BiH

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Low temperatures for this time of year were measured in Sarajevo this morning.

According to AccuWeather data, the temperature in Sarajevo this morning was eight degrees Celsius, while in Bjelašnica it was minus one degree for about six hours, Klix portal reports.

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FB post below says:

Frost in the middle of July. In the village of Šabići, between Bjelašnica Visočica and Treskavica, frost was recorded this morning with a temperature of -0.2C at 2m. It must have been a couple of degrees below 0C at the ground.
Although frost can occur in mountain frost areas in the summer part of the year, it is still unusual and quite rare for July.
Photo: Dzemal Velić

 
Dr. Susan Crockford chimes in on the state of affairs' with ice in the Arctic. Some may recall that Crockford was canceled out of UBC for findings they did not want to hear. Polar bears are her research specialty.


POLAR BEARSSEA ICE

Arctic Sea Ice Still Quite Abundant for Early Summer​


From Polar Bear Science
Dr. Susan Crockford,
Despite rhetoric to the contrary, there is still plenty of sea ice over Arctic regions this summer, supplying feeding platforms for polar bears, ice-dependent seals, and walrus cows nursing their young calves. Forget about whether the numbers are below or above some short-term average, there is no catastrophe in the making for marine mammals in the Arctic at this time.

Remember, by early summer, young seals have left the surface of the ice and are in the water feeding; predator-savvy adults and subadults are hauled out on broken chunks of ice moulting their hair-coat. They may look like sitting ducks but polar bears have a hard time catching them because the seals are vigilant and have many escape routes available (due to all the open water). Most polar bears in Hudson Bay are still on the ice (you’ll see why below): the live cams near Churchill set up to watch polar bears are presently showing images of ravens with sea ice in the background, not bears.
This post is predominantly sea ice charts for mid-July, what we in the science field call observational evidence, aka ‘facts’. Keep in mind that satellites used to produce these images have an especially hard time distinguishing ice topped with melt water from open water, which means much more ice useful to these marine mammals is almost certainly present than is shown in the charts (as much as 20% more in some regions).
Arctic-wide levels, NSIDC Masie
For 13 July 2022

Canada (entire and then by region), Canadian Ice Service
Note that regional charts are for the week of July 11, shown here by ‘stage of development’ (ice thickness, with brown being old, multiyear ice and dark green ice >1.2m thick) and in the ‘departure from normal’ charts, dark blue is much more than average and dark red is much less.







Svalbard, Norwegian Ice Service

Chukchi/Beaufort Seas, Alaska Sea Ice Program
By stage of development and then, concentration:


 
Just as a counter to all the heatwave hysteria across western Europe at the moment this report came out of Alaska yesterday.
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An unusually frigid ball of air is spinning through the Bering Strait region, bringing rare July snowfall, high surf advisories in the Norton Sound and wind gusts up to 48 mph in Nome.

"These kinds of things spin around the higher latitudes all year long," said Rick Thoman, Alaska climate specialist at the International Arctic Research Center at UAF. "Usually, this cold would stay farther north. If this was happening on the North Slope, it would be chilly but nothing particularly to write home about. The fact that it's moved so far south is really the news here."

Looking through climate records, Thoman said this airmass will be the coldest one seen during the month of July in the past 70 years.

"I would chalk this particular storm up to one of those random variabilities that are going to happen from time to time, even in a warming climate," he said.


The National Weather Service issued a high surf advisory through Tuesday at noon for the Norton Sound region, including Nome, White Mountain, Golovin, Unalakleet, Stebbins, St. Michael, Elim, Koyuk and Shaktoolik. The agency warned these areas could expect to see waves washing to the top of beaches and minor erosion.

As the low-pressure area spun near Diomede Monday afternoon, wind at the Nome Airport reached 48 mph. Such a speed might be expected for a November storm, but Thoman said gusts of that force have not been seen in the month of July since the start of regular wind gust records in the area, in the mid-1980s.

Pictures posted to social media showed that snow had already fallen on the Diomede islands, Ear Mountain near Shishmaref and mountains near Dexter and Banner Creek. Thoman said he would not be surprised if downtown Nome saw snow overnight Monday, which would be an exceedingly rare event. He could not find a record of July snow, excluding hail from thunderstorms, in Nome's whole climate record, which stretches back more than a century.

He wanted to stress that this bout of cold and gusty weather does not mean that winter is imminent. "It's very likely we'll have more warm weather, and this does not mean that fall is here," Thoman said.
 
An interesting article, highlighting a lot of the intrigue behind the genesis of the global warming narrative.

 
Electroverse is down again, but here is his tweet:

LARGEST SUMMER SEA ICE EXTENT SINCE 2008 TRAPS ARCTIC SHIPS; + COLDEST JULY AIRMASS IN 70 YEARS BLOWS THROUGH THE BERING STRAIT
The MSM has fallen silent re. the Arctic and Greenland in recent months, I wonder why...


I've read the article yesterday evening when the site was still up and is very good.
 

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