Earth ChangesS


Attention

Five different species of whale and dolphin have washed ashore recently in Donegal, Ireland

dead whale
Five different species of whales and dolphins have been found washed up on Donegal strands since last Monday.

A spokesperson for the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group (IWDG), Gareth Doherty, said the incidents are becoming too frequent.

Sperm Whale

A large 43ft male sperm Whale was found dead on Magheroarty beach on Monday morning.

Mr Doherty said that the animal was found in bad condition and believes it to have been dead for 3 to 4 weeks.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strike at sea kills regional Brazilian surf champion

23-year-old Ceará champion Luzimara Souza was training off the coast of Fortaleza when the lightning bolt struck.
23-year-old Ceará champion Luzimara Souza was training off the coast of Fortaleza when the lightning bolt struck.
The world of surfing is in mourning after the news was confirmed that Brazilian surfer Luzimara Souza was killed by lightning whilst training near the beach in Leste-oeste in Fortaleza (Ceará, Brazil) where she practised with fellow surfers.

A local businessman told local surfing outlet Waves how the lightning struck the sea exactly where Luzimara was training and despite being quickly evacuated to local the Hospital Instituto Dr. José Frota she failed to survive the impact.

Comment: Also recently 4 farmers were killed by separate lightning strikes in Bangladesh.


Ice Cube

Hailstorm destroys 4 million avocados in under 10 minutes, Australia

Aussie Orchards' managing director Colin Foyster holds three of the 4 million damaged avocados
© ABC Rural: Kim HonanAussie Orchards' managing director Colin Foyster holds three of the 4 million damaged avocados.
A hail storm that ripped through an avocado orchard in the Northern Rivers of New South Wales last week has destroyed an estimated 4 million avocados.

Aussie Orchards' managing director Colin Foyster said 80 per cent of the fruit on the 12,000 trees at the Pretty Gully farm was knocked off and onto the ground.

"I wasn't here but some people have said the hail stones were up to three inches [7.6cm] in size and very jagged," he said.

"It only hailed for less than 10 minutes, but [the stones were] big enough to knock the fruit off the tree or damage the remaining fruit.

"It's three months away from harvest, so it's all immature, so it's unsalvageable."

Mr Foyster said the remaining fruit on the trees also had impact marks where the hail hit the fruit, and the trees themselves were also damaged.

"If it's around the stem, or it's severe, it will lead to a rot and that fruit will then drop off," he said.

"But most of the remaining fruit, the 20 per cent, it'll just be downgraded."


Comment: Erratic seasons and extreme weather devastating crops around the world


Attention

Cyclone Idai: Bulawayo in Zimbabwe runs out of fruits, vegetables

Bulawayo runs out of bananas, vegetables
Cyclone Idai's negative effects have turned economic, with severe shortage of fruits and vegetables in Bulawayo, it has emerged.

The hostile weather phenomenon ripped through Manicaland's south eastern districts of Chimanimani and Chipinge leaving a trail of death and destruction as well as overturning livelihoods overnight.

According to vendors in Bulawayo, Chimanimani and Chipinge are the major suppliers of fruits and vegetables to the country's second largest city. The infrastructural destruction by the cyclone has left many a supplier and vendor in a lurch.

Fruits and vegetables such as bananas, onions, avocados and pineapples have run out in Bulawayo and surrounding towns.

Info

Ice Age Farmer Report: Trump to EMP-harden Grid - Greenland Glacier grows - UN: Food scarcity looms

Greenland glacier
Trump signs XO to EMP-harden critical infrastructure. NASA study finds Greenland's Glacier adding mass. Traders "shrug" at 100m bushels lost (although institutional investors are pouring out!) -- even as the UN warns that food scarcity is looming. Christian breaks it all down and encourages you to start preparing.


Sources

Cloud Precipitation

'This is a 100 year event': New Zealand's Westland declares state of emergency after record rainfall

Waiho bridge washed away in the river.
© Brett GrantWaiho bridge washed away in the river.
A state of emergency was declared in Westland at 5.45pm following severe weather which has attacked the region since Sunday.

Torrential rain and strong winds have battered the South Island region, forcing emergency services to close roads and evacuate members of the public. Half a metre to 700 millimetres has fallen in some of the regions catchments.

Earlier this evening, the Waiho Bridge was taken out by rising and rough floodwaters of the Waiho River near Franz Josef.


The river was running at a level of 7.6m, but has dropped back 0.7m from its peak.

NZTA Network Manager for the West Coast, Colin Hey says until water levels drop it'll be hard to tell exactly what damage was done.

"Bailey bridges are usually fairly quick to put back up, so we're confident that we can get it back within a week or two anyway."

Hey says motorist should stay off the roads.

"Travel only if's essential. You won't be able to get along the highway at all, certainly not tonight."

Elsewhere, the Haast River neared a high-level mark but levelled off at 7.6m, which matches its record high. However, the Hokitika River continues to rise, sitting at 5m currently.

Westland Mayor Bruce Smith told Newstalk ZB heavy rain was at the base of their problems but people remain the focus of the council and Civil Defence.

"This is a 100-year event, there is a huge amount of rain. I haven't seen all of the rivers impacted in Westland at exactly the same time," he said.


Comment: Record rainfall has hammered New Zealand's West Coast, with a woman's body found after she was swept away by the floodwaters and a bridge left in ruins.

In the last 48 hours, Cropp Waterfall has recorded 1086mm of rain - the highest level for that time period on record, says Niwa Weather.




Arrow Down

Video: US grain bins collapse under catastrophic Iowa floods

SILO
Flood waters coming from rain and melting snow are causing havoc in some US states and have resulted in an estimated $3 billion in damages so far.

According to online publication Vox, the floods are being caused by rain and melting snow as a result of a "bomb cyclone". Mid-western states that are affected include: Iowa; Illinois; Missouri; Kansas; South Dakota; Minnesota; and Nebraska.

The video below, which was posted to Facebook by Iowa resident Gracie Newman, shows just a fraction of the losses that have been incurred as a result of the flooding.


Info

Ice Age Farmer Report: ALERT: Floods decimate US farms - Stockpiles lost - More to come

map flood
A black swan for modern agriculture, thanks to the Grand Solar Minimum: as damages pass $1bil in Nebraska alone, NOAA indicates record flooding will continue for months more in the US. The time is now to start growing your own food and forming resilient communities. The weather warfare floggings will continue -- how are you preparing?


Sources

Comment: U.S. Government warns of historic, widespread flooding "Through May" - Food prices to skyrocket as 1000s of farms are destroyed


Fish

Massive amount of dead fish wash up in Oceanport, New Jersey

Thousands of dead fish wound up in Oceanport Creek, Parker's Creek and Blackberry Bay
Thousands of dead fish wound up in Oceanport Creek, Parker's Creek and Blackberry Bay
Oceanport residents say a massive amount of dead fish washed up in their waterways within a 24-hour time span.

Heaps of the stinky, dead fish formed a carpet of carcasses among docks and boats off the Shrewsbury River.

Oceanport Creek, Parker's Creek and Blackberry Bay ended up being the final resting place for the dead fish.

New Jersey, as well as others states like Florida, has seen its fair share of fish kills through the years, which typically takes about a few weeks. What make this massive fish die-off a-typical is that it happened within a 24-hour period.

Comment: About a week later in the same region: Sharks, dying and decayed by the dozens, wash up on New Jersey beach


Ice Cube

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Greenland glaciers start to recover as solar activity declines

Greenland glacier
© YouTube/Adapt 2030 (screen capture)
As the Grand Solar Minimum brings us back to the lowest solar activity in 400 years, we should see more snow cover and glaciers recovering. NASA study shows what was Greenland's largest glacier by volume of loss, is now recovering. Record N. Hemisphere snow totals, massive floods USA destroying 38% of stored grains, record snow in Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains, and record rains in the U.S desert S.W. In my opinion these are solar activity and cosmic ray related events.


Comment: Professor Valentina Zharkova explains and confirms why a "Super" Grand Solar Minimum is upon us