The Ice Age Cometh! Forget Global Warming!

GSM Update 10/31/17 - Record Snow, Flooding, Rain & Cold - Quake Watch French Alps - Dust Storm 11:52

https://youtu.be/bEXVo4g6PGY?rel=0

Winter has come: Temperatures plunge below zero as cold snap grips Britain
Chris Baynes The Independent Mon, 30 Oct 2017 00:00 UTC
https://www.sott.net/article/365940-Winter-has-come-Temperatures-plunge-below-zero-as-cold-snap-grips-Britain

Butter Shortages, Black Death in Madagascar & Massive Hail (476)
Adapt 2030 Published on Oct 29, 2017

https://youtu.be/4D9ZvdwMK-A?rel=0

Moose Lake, Minnesota - Snow Storm B-Roll - October 27th, 2017 (1:47)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt3wyakAj40

November 2017 Temperature Outlook: Colder Than Average in Northwest; Warmer Than Average in the South ( :pinocchio:)
By Linda Lam2 days ago _weather.com
_https://weather.com/forecast/national/news/november-2017-temperature-forecast-the-weather-company
 
Published on Nov 7, 2017


https://youtu.be/qYh1al3MmzI?rel=0
Tropical Storm "Rina" formed at 03:00 UTC on November 7, 2017 (23:00 AST, November 6) as the 17th named storm of the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. Its remnants are expected to reach Ireland and the United Kingdom on Friday, November 10, bringing rain and gale force winds. Only 7 other hurricane seasons on record had 17+ named storms by November 6: 1933, 1969, 1995, 2005, 2010, 2011, and 2012
.
 
Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, Wyoming

Resort to open Friday after historic 100 inches of snowfall Nov 21, 2017
http://www.jhnewsandguide.com/sports/features/resort-to-open-friday-after-historic-snowfall/article_32bc2551-3b13-5896-bc13-4ce077018296.html

After historic early season snowfall, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort is pushing up its opening day.

On Friday, skiers and snowboarders will be able to access the Teton, Apres Vous and Teewinot lifts a day earlier than scheduled. The Bridger and Sweetwater gondolas, and Casper and Marmot lifts, are scheduled to open the following day.

Resort spokeswoman Anna Cole said the early push came to fruition because of the work of the resort’s operations staff and cooperation from Mother Nature.

“The tools were all in place to open up,” she said. “It’s the conditions that allowed it to happen.”

Weather station data available via the Bridger-Teton Avalanche Center reported 53 inches of snow in Rendezvous Bowl, 45 inches at the Raymer plot and 36 inches at midmountain. Over 100 inches of snow have fallen in the upper elevations, with a storm front moving in Monday night expected to drop up to 11 inches at the higher elevations.

Resort business development director Bill Lewkowitz said the amount of snow on the upper mountain is incredible.

“I did comparisons looking at other resorts, and no one has snow like us,” he said. “For the most part in the U.S., we’ve been very, very lucky.”

Cole said that in her tenure at the resort, which spans almost a decade, this is the second-largest amount of terrain that is planned to be skiable on opening weekend.

The early opening announcement also came with news of the resort being ranked the No. 1 ski resort in North America by Forbes Magazine for the seventh year in a row.

In addition to the skiing during opening weekend, other resort offerings are also available. The Aerial Tram will be spinning for scenic rides from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday and Saturday; Cafe 6,311 and the General Store will be open Friday; and Casper Restaurant and Off-Piste will open Saturday. Hoback Sports, Teton Village Sports and Jackson Hole Sports plan to have holiday gear specials and rentals.

There is no date set for the tram to open for skiing, but Cole said to expect more terrain to open by next week. And while there may be record-breaking early season snow, early season conditions do exist, she said.


CHEYENNE, Wyoming – With wind gusts topping 60 miles per hour Monday, semitractor-trailer combinations were tottering and tipping on highways near Cheyenne.

Wind gusts top 60 mph, 9 trucks topple on I-25
http://www.wyomingnews.com/news/local_news/wind-gusts-top-mph-trucks-topple-on-i/article_1bc2dcf6-ce8c-11e7-9dda-5baa8e983b17.html

A wind advisory was out most of the day for light, high-profile vehicles, such as trucks with empty cargo compartments.

But despite those warnings, nine semi-tractor-trailers had blown over on Interstate 25 between Cheyenne and the Colorado border between 9:26 a.m. and 5:15 p.m., according to Lt. David Wagener of the Wyoming Highway Patrol. The interstate was closed for about an hour around 3:30 p.m. to clean up crashes in both lanes, according to emails from the Wyoming Department of Transportation.

Two vehicles also blew over on U.S. Highway 85 between Cheyenne and Colorado, and another tipped farther north at the rest stop at milepost 47 in Meriden, Wagener said.

Camera shots from the Wyoming Department of Transportation on Monday afternoon showed semi trucks parked alongside the highway at many points on Interstate 25.

At around noon, the police scanner came alive with reports of blown-over semi trucks, one of which caught on fire.

Wagener said that in his experience, the number of semi trucks that blew over wasn’t abnormal for an especially windy day.

“I’ve seen that number before,” he said.

But on windy days like Monday, the number of crashes “depends on the wind speeds and folks that are operating those high-profile vehicles to heed warnings,” Wagener said.

According to the WYDOT website, closures to light, high-profile vehicles are issued when wind gusts top 60 miles per hour and where adequate signage is available.

The warnings are targeted at vehicles such as recreational vehicles, moving vans, campers, small trailers and lightly loaded commercial vehicles.

Not heeding the advisory can earn drivers a maximum $750 fine and/or 30 days in prison.
 
Alpes : une neige précoce pour le bonheur des skieurs Vidéo
30 novembre 2017
_https://www.francetvinfo.fr/meteo/neige/alpes-une-neige-precoce-pour-le-bonheur-des-skieurs_2492937.html

Le froid et la neige qui touchent une partie du pays font bien évidemment le plaisir des skieurs, qui ont pu profiter d'une belle couche de poudreuse. Reportage dans les Alpes

10 centimètres de neige au pied des pistes, 30 centimètres en haut... Dans la station des 7 Laux (Isère), les amateurs de glisse ont vite ressorti du placard leurs skis et snowboards. L'ouverture prématurée des pistes a permis à ceux qui avaient la chance de pouvoir se rendre sur place de profiter du domaine skiable dans des conditions privilégiées. Cette station prisée des Grenoblois a ainsi ouvert deux pistes et deux remontées mécaniques.
Une reprise joyeuse mais un peu douloureuse

Ils sont ainsi plusieurs dizaines, ce jeudi 30 novembre, a avoir fait le déplacement. Même si, selon une skieuse, cette reprise fait "un peu mal aux cuisses". Aux 7 Laux, il reste encore beaucoup de travail à accomplir avant de pouvoir ouvrir l'ensemble des 40 pistes de la station et d'accueillir non plus des dizaines, mais des milliers de skieurs.

Google Trans:

Alps: an early snow for the happiness of skiers

The cold and the snow which touch a part of the country are of course the pleasure of the skiers, who could benefit from a beautiful layer of powder. Reportage in the Alps


10 centimeters of snow at the foot of the slopes, 30 centimeters at the top ... In the 7 Laux ski resort (Isère), snowboarders quickly took their skis and snowboards out of the closet. The premature opening of the slopes allowed those lucky enough to be able to go there to enjoy the ski area in privileged conditions. This popular resort of Grenoblois has opened two tracks and two lifts.

They are thus several dozens, this Thursday, November 30, to have made the trip. Even if, according to a skier, this recovery is "a little sore thighs". At 7 Laux, there is still a lot of work to do before you can open all 40 tracks of the station and accommodate not tens, but thousands of skiers.


Ice Age Farmer Published on Nov 25, 2017
12:44

https://youtu.be/MibhvGD9-PY?rel=0

Cody Lane Teton Village, WY 83025 (11-30-17)
snowfall 1” 24 Hrs 128” This Season
_https://www.jacksonhole.com/live-mountain-cams.html
_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhH2cqsGBpw
codybowl.jpg


Got Wood?

Edit add:
Taken last night.
 

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'Cold Times' Indeed; Grid Down for 480,000; Folks Waking Up as Grand Solar Minimum Intensifies / 3:29
Ice Age Farmer Published on Dec 10, 2017

https://youtu.be/DzwM14N_NbQ?rel=0

UK Rare Heavy Snow London & 120 MPH Snowstorms Spawning Snow Devils / 6:07
Adapt 2030 Published on Dec 12, 2017

https://youtu.be/E3nBKIf4ENk?rel=0

GSM Update 12/13/17 - Arctic Fear Mongering - Volcano Update - Geminid Meteors / 16:06 (Links within)
Oppenheimer Ranch Project Published on Dec 13, 2017

https://youtu.be/ICwv7yWZUjw?rel=0

http://icecream.me/uploads/0bfab1ddc5488fe8261ce0afb24c6262.png
 

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It is getting pretty cold in the middle part of Canada and the North - seems like snow almost across Canada. https://globalnews.ca/news/3131773/saskatoon-weather-outlook-extreme-40-wind-chills-on-saturday/

Environment Canada has continued an extreme cold warning for Saskatoon, Regina, and all of central and southern Saskatchewan for a period of extreme cold conditions expected widespread across southern Saskatchewan.

Temperatures of minus 30 to minus 35 combined with light westerly winds of 10 to 15 km/h created extreme windchill values of minus 40 to minus 45 early in the day.

-50 was what it felt like in Val Marie with wind chill Saturday morning, Saskatoon and Regina’s wind chill values fell into the -40s during the overnight period and into the day.

Winters weather seems more entrenched and uniform at this time. It is supposed to continue - from coast to coast, with the worst of it being later around the Great Lakes and East, according to the Weather Network's prediction made earlier.

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Semi-interrupting this thread's message, here is brief way to deal with ice on your vehicle, especially if you have always been an ice-scrapper. If living in these cold conditions, have a look and see if this could work for you - you can keep it in your car at the ready just in case, and it might save some aches and pains.



https://youtu.be/T_vNeawn4M8?ecver=1
 
This is a live temperature map for the U.S. - It looks like one-third of the U.S. in minus temperatures?

http://vortex.plymouth.edu/uschill.gif

International Falls, Minnesota woke up to a temperature of -36F at 6 a.m. Wednesday morning breaking the previous record low for Dec. 27 of -32F set in 1924, according to the National Weather Service office in Duluth. That -36 is the actual temperature, not a wind chill!

International Falls, Minnesota drops to record low -36F Wednesday Dec 27 2017
http://www.fox9.com/weather/international-falls-record-low

According to state records, the -36 morning in International Falls is only about halfway to the state record low temperature of -60 in Tower, Minnesota on Feb. 2, 1996. The all-time record low for International Falls is -55F, set in January 1909.

Wednesday morning, low temperatures in the Twin Cities metro ranged from -7 in St. Paul to -13 in nearby Lake Elmo. Minnesota is stuck in a deep freeze with single-digital highs and subzero lows hanging around into next week.


If you plan on ringing in the new year at the annual ball drop in Times Square, expect to be cold.

Near-record cold New Year's Eve expected in New York City
http://www.fox5ny.com/news/near-record-cold-new-years-eve-expected-in-new-york-city

A severe blast of Arctic air has descended on the New York City region and temperatures will stay below the freezing mark around the clock for the rest of the year.

On New Year's Eve, the temperature is expected to drop to around 12 degrees, about 12 degrees below normal and one of the coldest on record. High temperatures leading to the holiday are expected to be colder than the typical low temperatures for those days.

Despite the cold, it is not expected to be a record for that date. In 1962 the temperature plunged to 2 degrees on New Year's Eve but that fact is little comfort for the upwards of one million people expected to spend hours outdoors waiting to ring in 2018.


How's this for a white Christmas? Erie, Pennsylvania broke a one-day snowfall record with 34 inches of snow on Christmas Day. The previous record for Dec. 25 was 8.1 inches, set in 2002, and the previous single-day snowfall record was 20 inches, set on Nov. 22, 1956.

Erie, Pennsylvania gets record 34 inches of snow in 24 hours (Video)
http://www.fox5ny.com/news/erie-pa-snow-record

By Tuesday morning, Erie International Airport had accumulated 53 inches of snow since Christmas Eve. The monthly total of 73 inches is now the most snow for December, smashing the previous record of 66.9 inches set in 1989.

But wait, there’s more! According to the National Weather Service, “additional snow accumulations of 8 to 16 inches are expected through this evening, heaviest from portions of Lake County east through northern Ashtabula and Erie County PA. Expect another 4 to 8 inches of snow from tonight through Wednesday evening with locally higher amounts possible. Snowfall rates up to 3 inches per hour are expected. This will bring the additional forecast snowfall to 1 to 2 feet now through Wednesday evening.”

Erie, Pennsylvania still fell short of the national records. Silver Lake, Colorado holds the Lower 48 record for most snowfall in 24 hours, with 75.8 inches – that’s 6.3 feet on April 15, 1921. In the mountains of Alaska, Mile 47 Camp saw 78 inches of snow in a 24-hour period ending Feb. 9, 1963.


On Tuesday, the city of Erie, Pennsylvania signed a declaration of disaster emergency, after a two-day storm dumped 5-feet of snow. Heavy lake-effect snow set record-setting snowfall totals in the snow belts to the east of Lake Ontario and Lake Erie.

Snowmageddon Dumps Record 60 Inches Of Snow On Erie, PA; "Declaration Of Disaster" (Photos)
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-12-27/snowmageddon-dumps-record-60-inches-snow-erie-pa-declaration-disaster

From 7 p.m. on Dec. 24 to 6:02 p.m. Dec. 26, Erie had received 60.0 inches of snow, which shattered numerous records for the region. Nearly all of the snow fell on Monday and Tuesday.

AccuWeather Meteorologist Bill Deger said, “this is now the biggest two-day snow total on record for Pennsylvania, besting the old record of 44 inches, which was set in Morgantown from March 20-21, 1958.”

Dale Robinson, the county’s emergency management coordinator, said that the declaration will allow the National Guard to respond to the paralyzed region. Robinson adds the National Guard deployment is “really for precautionary measures for the additional amount of snow we think we’re going to get.”

As of Wednesday morning, NWS Cleveland reports additional snow will accumulate through the day with temperatures ranging from -5 and -10 degrees F. So far no sign of global warming...
 
Canada continues to get hammered by this cold weather system.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/cold-weather-edmonton-alberta-new-year-meteorologist-1.4465452?cmp=news-digests-edmonton

Extreme weather warning issued for Edmonton, much of northern and eastern Alberta

Edmonton is among a lengthy list of Alberta communities facing an extreme cold weather warning.

As of 3:34 p.m. Wednesday, Environment Canada had issued extreme cold weather warnings for communities across northern Alberta, including the provincial capital, St. Albert and Sherwood Park. The extreme cold warning stretches north to High Level and Wood Buffalo, then down the eastern part of the province, through Lloydminster to Medicine Hat in the south.

An Arctic air mass is expected to cover Alberta Wednesday night, causing temperatures to plummet to around the –40 degree mark, according to Environment Canada. Extreme cold warnings are issued when the temperature, or the wind chill, reaches the -40 C mark.


http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/wind-weather-warnings-newfoundland-1.4465041?cmp=news-digests-canada-and-world-evening

Whiteout conditions hit Newfoundland's west coast as wind and snow batter island, coastal Labrador

Much of Newfoundland and parts of Labrador remain under wind and blizzard warnings from Environment Canada.

In the St. John's area, winds were between 100 and 120 km/h Wednesday, with the coast of Labrador getting the same blast.


http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/gta-under-extreme-cold-warning-1.4465156

Deep freeze numbs GTA as Environment Canada issues extreme cold warning

Environment Canada issued a slew of extreme cold warnings on Wednesday as temperatures plummet below -15 C and a wind chill of -30 numbs the Greater Toronto Area.

The frigid temperatures and wind chill in Toronto, along with Durham, Halton and Peel regions, creates an elevated risk to health, such as frost bite and hypothermia, the federal weather agency says.

High winds will bring a low of -22 C Wednesday night, though it will feel more like -30.

Peter Kimbell, warning preparedness meteorologist for Environment Canada, predicts tonight's cold snap will edge into record-breaking territory at Toronto Pearson. The 57-year-old record for Dec. 27, measured at the airport, is -18.9 C.

Environment Canada is asking people to watch for cold-related symptoms, including shortness of breath, chest pain, muscle pain and weakness, numbness and a change in the colour of the fingers and toes.
 
In Montreal we have had fierce cold for the past four days, between -18 and -30 Celsius considering the wind chill factor. It is looking like we will have the same for another week or so!

At present, in the heart of the city it reads -18 which will go down to -24 tonite... It's really cold here. There are warnings issued for frost bite and also problems of electricity consumption. The 10 day ahead projections do not seem to be any warmer.
 
romochar said:
In Montreal we have had fierce cold for the past four days, between -18 and -30 Celsius considering the wind chill factor. It is looking like we will have the same for another week or so!

At present, in the heart of the city it reads -18 which will go down to -24 tonite... It's really cold here. There are warnings issued for frost bite and also problems of electricity consumption. The 10 day ahead projections do not seem to be any warmer.

The Canadian side of Niagara Falls is an icy, winter wonderland!

Icy Delight: Partly Frozen Niagara Falls Has Fans Gasping (PHOTOS, VIDEO)
https://sputniknews.com/viral/201712301060423469-partly-frozen-niagara-falls-leaves-fans-gasping/

Meteorologists weren't kidding around when they said it was going to be a cold holiday weekend.

The beyond-chilly weather has already triggered a slew of headaches for Americans in the Midwest and East Coast dealing with weather-related car accidents and deaths.

According to AP, in central Michigan more than 30 collisions involving roughly 40 vehicles took place Friday. And while residents in South Carolina were forced to stay put after freezing rain shut down bridges from Charleston to Myrtle Beach, people in Cincinnati went car-less after their attempts to warm up their cars ended in theft.

"And it's just the beginning," Diann Wears of Toledo, Ohio, told the outlet. "I'm sure it will get worse."

Worse, indeed. But it's not only the US that's dealing with the frigid temperatures, folks. Canada, the Land of the Free's northern neighbor, has been also been dealing with record lows as cold air continues to hover across the Ontario province.

"This will end up being the coldest December since 2000 for southern and eastern Ontario, and southern Quebec," Anthony Farnell, Global News chief meteorologist, told viewers Thursday. "With temperatures expected to remain very cold through early next week, we could be in the middle of the coldest week [since 1979]."

It's not all bad news, though. The cold front is also offering a picturesque twist on the amazing Niagara Falls.


​Over yonder in Toronto, Canada, a temperature of —22 degrees celsius broke a 57-year-old record and in Kingston a frigid —26 degrees broke a 114-year-old record, Global News reported.
 
I posted this pre-maturely. I was interested in the number of replies per year to this thread so did a quick calculation - the reason being is I'm curious as to whether this is correlated to forum membership number increases or decreases, other outside influences like media hype for big events, or no hype when events don't take place in anywhere determined significant by media, or a representation of real world conditions. I think 2012 had a lot of interest for obvious reasons, and more recently with C references.

The reports posted from around the world, while interesting and locally important I don't think are scientific enough in corroborating actual changes in the atmosphere globally - my gut feel is that although this topic is huge there are people who are getting tired or out of patience and no longer caring. The advert of 'soon' for an ice age to happen is synonymous to the pubs that advertise 'Free beer, tomorrow' - it might occur soon in cosmic terms, but human life terms? Anyway, for interest and perhaps other more senior folk can provide some additional comments, the years and number of posts for each of them are listed below:


2006 9
2007 40
2008 25
2009 2
2010 2
2011 0
2012 342
2013 128
2014 28
2015 86
2016 226
2017 198
 
MikeJoseph82 said:
I posted this pre-maturely. I was interested in the number of replies per year to this thread so did a quick calculation - the reason being is I'm curious as to whether this is correlated to forum membership number increases or decreases, other outside influences like media hype for big events, or no hype when events don't take place in anywhere determined significant by media, or a representation of real world conditions. I think 2012 had a lot of interest for obvious reasons, and more recently with C references.

The reports posted from around the world, while interesting and locally important I don't think are scientific enough in corroborating actual changes in the atmosphere globally - my gut feel is that although this topic is huge there are people who are getting tired or out of patience and no longer caring. The advert of 'soon' for an ice age to happen is synonymous to the pubs that advertise 'Free beer, tomorrow' - it might occur soon in cosmic terms, but human life terms? Anyway, for interest and perhaps other more senior folk can provide some additional comments, the years and number of posts for each of them are listed below:

Why would you take a pie - (Earth Changes) - that at the present moment contains 696 topics (slices) - purposely isolate one small fragment (sampling) - and try to build a case (minus 695 corresponding elements) - to support a personal opinion? How scientific is that gut feeling?

Tunnel vision, perhaps?
 
MikeJoseph82 said:
I posted this pre-maturely. I was interested in the number of replies per year to this thread so did a quick calculation - the reason being is I'm curious as to whether this is correlated to forum membership number increases or decreases, other outside influences like media hype for big events, or no hype when events don't take place in anywhere determined significant by media, or a representation of real world conditions. I think 2012 had a lot of interest for obvious reasons, and more recently with C references.

The reports posted from around the world, while interesting and locally important I don't think are scientific enough in corroborating actual changes in the atmosphere globally - my gut feel is that although this topic is huge there are people who are getting tired or out of patience and no longer caring. The advert of 'soon' for an ice age to happen is synonymous to the pubs that advertise 'Free beer, tomorrow' - it might occur soon in cosmic terms, but human life terms? Anyway, for interest and perhaps other more senior folk can provide some additional comments, the years and number of posts for each of them are listed below:


2006 9
2007 40
2008 25
2009 2
2010 2
2011 0
2012 342
2013 128
2014 28
2015 86
2016 226
2017 198

The thread was never meant to be a scientific compilation but rather a casual repository for interesting situations and reports.

As for people getting tired of things, I can certainly attest to that myself. What I can also see is that this tiredness relates to the apparent "slowness" of movement of things; but, on the other hand, when I think back to say, 1997, I can see how truly dramatic the changes have been. That's one reason I started the "Hyperdimensional Politics" thread: we have to deal with scale and something like the "boiling frog" scenario. Of course, we also know about phase transitions and that when things build up incrementally over time, there can be sudden tipping points where everything goes really bad seemingly all of a sudden.

But yeah, more than anything, I think that emotional exhaustion from being on the roller coaster is taking its toll and, as the Bible said, "those who endure to the end will be saved..." It's not time to give up yet!!!
 
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