Watch the skies and land and oceans

I took this pic on 26th Feb, felt like it was a sign that the Wave is surely rolling on in.
Two days later US/Israel attack Iran.

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100 years of physics challenged by observation.


I'm 73 and have never seen a crescent moon illuminated on the bottom like the one seen from diverse locations on February 20, 2026. (The one featured in this video was taken at 8:45 in Florida after the sun had set 2 hours earlier.) Traditional astronomy says the illuminated crescent must be on the side facing the sun (i.e. East or West due to Earth's rotational axis orientation). But this recent crescent moon was 135 degrees out of place, and followed a solar coronal hole aimed directly at Earth, with a electromagnetic field fired at 101 (100 times normal) and an historic peak Schumann resonance.

This guy has an interesting theory to explain such an event.

Two comments were especially interesting:
"To humanity you will see things that you never saw before you never were taught any of these phenomenons in science class things have changed drastically you will see things that will be unbelievable do not be fearful don't believe everything you see you are watching The greatest show on Earth"

"Two timeliness have merged and are reporting on this. Some say its normal and some say they never seen it."
 
100 years of physics challenged by observation.


I'm 73 and have never seen a crescent moon illuminated on the bottom like the one seen from diverse locations on February 20, 2026. (The one featured in this video was taken at 8:45 in Florida after the sun had set 2 hours earlier.) Traditional astronomy says the illuminated crescent must be on the side facing the sun (i.e. East or West due to Earth's rotational axis orientation). But this recent crescent moon was 135 degrees out of place, and followed a solar coronal hole aimed directly at Earth, with a electromagnetic field fired at 101 (100 times normal) and an historic peak Schumann resonance.

This guy has an interesting theory to explain such an event.

Two comments were especially interesting:
"To humanity you will see things that you never saw before you never were taught any of these phenomenons in science class things have changed drastically you will see things that will be unbelievable do not be fearful don't believe everything you see you are watching The greatest show on Earth"

"Two timeliness have merged and are reporting on this. Some say its normal and some say they never seen it."
I’ve seen this recently, the crescent at the bottom, it was day time, my toddler pointed it out. I thought may be it was a cloud at first but as I watched it didn’t change then checked the moon phase calendar and confirmed it was indeed the moon.
I decided that there’s been some kind of change too, that reality is getting weird and only gonna get weirder so accepted it and didn’t think any more of it. It really is just one event among multiple things that has convinced me we are definitely not in Kansas.
 
00 years of physics challenged by observation.


I'm 73 and have never seen a crescent moon illuminated on the bottom like the one seen from diverse locations on February 20, 2026. (The one featured in this video was taken at 8:45 in Florida after the sun had set 2 hours earlier.) Traditional astronomy says the illuminated crescent must be on the side facing the sun (i.e. East or West due to Earth's rotational axis orientation). But this recent crescent moon was 135 degrees out of place, and followed a solar coronal hole aimed directly at Earth, with a electromagnetic field fired at 101 (100 times normal) and an historic peak Schumann resonance.
What he's describing is normal in Northern latitudes for that time of the year: February and March.


A wet moon (also called a Cheshire moon) is the visual phenomenon when the "horns" of the crescent Moon point up at an angle, away from the horizon, so that the crescent takes on the appearance of a bowl or smile. A wet moon occurs when the crescent Moon is low above the horizon and at a point more or less directly above the Sun's (invisible) position below the horizon. This in turn is determined by the positions of the Moon and Earth in their respective orbits, the inclinations of these orbits relative to one another and to Earth's celestial equator, and the observer's latitude on Earth. Wet moons occur routinely in the tropics (where the Sun and Moon rise and set nearly vertically), but rarely in the polar regions (where the Sun and Moon rise and set at a glancing angle or not at all).

By contrast, a dry moon is one where the crescent of the moon is at any other angle
The terms wet moon and dry moon originate from Hawaiian mythology, where it was thought that the Moon appeared as a bowl that would fill up with rainwater. The period when this is most common, January 20 to February 18, corresponds with Kaelo the Water Bearer in Hawaiian astrology and makes the Moon known as the "dripping wet moon". As summer comes, the crescent shape shifts, pouring out the water and causing the summer rains. After the "bowl" empties, it dries out and rights itself, creating the "dry moon". However, others say that this is a wet moon because it permitted the water to pour out.

The term Cheshire moon is a reference to the smile of the Cheshire Cat from Lewis Carroll's novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

More info here:


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