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Post by acidohm on Jan 20, 2020 10:06:06 GMT
Blossom, bulbs etc all coming out here, if that's a metric for spring. Didn't really get a 'winter' tho, unless you consider october/November being below average our cold spell.
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Post by Ratty on Jan 20, 2020 11:23:17 GMT
Blossom, bulbs etc all coming out here, if that's a metric for spring. Didn't really get a 'winter' tho, unless you consider october/November being below average our cold spell. If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?
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Post by acidohm on Jan 20, 2020 17:16:42 GMT
But whats he saying about next year??!
Astro, forecast update?? 🙏🙏
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Post by missouriboy on Jan 20, 2020 18:44:21 GMT
But whats he saying about next year??! Astro, forecast update?? 🙏🙏 Indian Summer 2020 will be followed by a late but another short Winter season of 2020-2021 that begins January 8, 2021 and ends on March 24, 2021. So, as we head into the winter 2019-2020 expect an early but short, cold and snowy winter season that will give way to an early and long spring season, followed by a short summer 2020 and then a long extended fall season 2020. Solar year 2020 into the first half of 2021 will provide enough time to get your structures, gardens and farms prepared for the horrendously cold, long and dangerous winter of 2021-2022 that I’ve forecasted. So there you have it. Questions?
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Post by acidohm on Jan 20, 2020 18:52:24 GMT
But whats he saying about next year??! Astro, forecast update?? 🙏🙏 Indian Summer 2020 will be followed by a late but another short Winter season of 2020-2021 that begins January 8, 2021 and ends on March 24, 2021. So, as we head into the winter 2019-2020 expect an early but short, cold and snowy winter season that will give way to an early and long spring season, followed by a short summer 2020 and then a long extended fall season 2020. Solar year 2020 into the first half of 2021 will provide enough time to get your structures, gardens and farms prepared for the horrendously cold, long and dangerous winter of 2021-2022 that I’ve forecasted. So there you have it. Questions? Can we put up with the AGW arm waving gravy train picking up speed till 2021 😬
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Post by missouriboy on Jan 20, 2020 19:22:06 GMT
Indian Summer 2020 will be followed by a late but another short Winter season of 2020-2021 that begins January 8, 2021 and ends on March 24, 2021. So, as we head into the winter 2019-2020 expect an early but short, cold and snowy winter season that will give way to an early and long spring season, followed by a short summer 2020 and then a long extended fall season 2020. Solar year 2020 into the first half of 2021 will provide enough time to get your structures, gardens and farms prepared for the horrendously cold, long and dangerous winter of 2021-2022 that I’ve forecasted. So there you have it. Questions? Can we put up with the AGW arm waving gravy train picking up speed till 2021 😬 Please request they all wear seat belts. It'll make it so much easier to find the bodies. I'm being optimistic.
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Post by Ratty on Jan 21, 2020 2:09:09 GMT
[ Snip ] Can we put up with the AGW arm waving gravy train picking up speed till 2021 😬 There will need to be shoulder reconstructions.
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Post by nonentropic on Jan 21, 2020 3:59:20 GMT
We are coming of the smaller of the two El Nino's and that will put downward pressure on the worlds temperatures but it looks neutral not La Nina going forward.
As a point I remain open to seeing how much of the 170 years 1C warming is natural and a year of neutral should clarify that position.
the point being the first half of that 170 years has a gradient slightly less than the second half but a drop out in the worlds temperatures that pulls the 10 year moving average down a little can level this all up. Joe B sees this as a platforming process.
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Post by Ratty on Jan 21, 2020 11:59:15 GMT
We are coming of the smaller of the two El Nino's and that will put downward pressure on the worlds temperatures but it looks neutral not La Nina going forward. As a point I remain open to seeing how much of the 170 years 1C warming is natural and a year of neutral should clarify that position. the point being the first half of that 170 years has a gradient slightly less than the second half but a drop out in the worlds temperatures that pulls the 10 year moving average down a little can level this all up. Joe B sees this as a platforming process. I've seen it said that the temperature rise of the last 170 years is the natural 'recovery' from the end of the LIA; I am happy to accept natural over CO2-driven.
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Post by missouriboy on Jan 21, 2020 23:58:28 GMT
Perhaps sheep farming. Sig can suggest breeds. It you start now, lots of wool by 2021-22. And Ratty ... y'all have lots of that too, right? Or is that the East Island.
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Post by Ratty on Jan 22, 2020 4:36:42 GMT
Perhaps sheep farming. Sig can suggest breeds. It you start now, lots of wool by 2021-22. And Ratty ... y'all have lots of that too, right? Or is that the East Island. To keep us warm, we'll be able to use the wool that is being pulled over our eyes by politicians. BTW, there are no sheep here, all burnt to death by our unprecedented bushfires ..... or so I hear.
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Post by nonentropic on Jan 22, 2020 5:40:54 GMT
So Ratty chops for dinner.
NZ does not do wool in any major way, its a spin of industry.
But seriously wool prices rubbish lambs are the name of the game and getting pricey given Chinese pig issues and in spite of the hysteria relating meat eating, prices going gang buster.
We export of the order of 50 million per year, happy farmers unhappy sheep, but hay they have short memories.
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Post by missouriboy on Jan 22, 2020 7:36:20 GMT
Perhaps sheep farming. Sig can suggest breeds. It you start now, lots of wool by 2021-22. And Ratty ... y'all have lots of that too, right? Or is that the East Island. To keep us warm, we'll be able to use the wool that is being pulled over our eyes by politicians. BTW, there are no sheep here, all burnt to death by our unprecedented bushfires ..... or so I hear. How much warmth is there in "imaginary" fiber? Mary Greta had a climate lamb Its fleece could not be seen But everywhere that Mary Greta went All thought it thick and green.
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Post by missouriboy on Jan 22, 2020 7:40:45 GMT
So Ratty chops for dinner. NZ does not do wool in any major way, its a spin of industry. But seriously wool prices rubbish lambs are the name of the game and getting pricey given Chinese pig issues and in spite of the hysteria relating meat eating, prices going gang buster. We export of the order of 50 million per year, happy farmers unhappy sheep, but hay they have short memories. In Saudi Arabia, the whole country dines on New Zealand lamb and mutton. I got spoiled. It is expensive over here. Really expensive.
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Post by acidohm on Jan 22, 2020 10:29:14 GMT
Thank you for your forecast Astro. A particular thanks for the Mid-West blizzard you have forecast in November for my birthday. Did this pan out Missouri??
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