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  • noises
    replied
    I've already evacuated, I'm expecting around 4m of water through my house (all of the ground floor, half of first floor flooded) tomorrow night. I've left the city center and I'll be staying with friends on high ground in the lee of a hill, to shield us from some of the wind.

    The cyclone track has been changed, and it going to pass directly over my town. We're in for about 20 to 25 hours of gale force winds, with about 4 to 6 hours of winds in excess of 250kmph.

    Jokes aside, in spite of the fact we do this every year to a lesser extent, this is a pretty insanely disconcerting weather system to have baring down on you. As well as those winds, we have a storm surge of 5 to 6 m coming in too with the storm which will without doubt flood the entire city center and all teh beach suburbs. 9,000 houses have been given a mandatory evacuation order by the emergency service. 300 patients have been airlifted to hospitals 1800km away and the town's two main hospitals have been closed too because of the storm surge. And that's before the 1000mm of rain falls on us out of it (in 24 hours). This thing will just simply flatten buildings. You thought the qld floods made some news around the world, wait for thursday morning's news and the sheer destruction you'll see.

    I'm going to be online for the next several days no matter what (well, there is one way I could lose a connection, two if you count me dieing.) I'll upload images as I can, just to show you guys how "damn you scary" the world can be.

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  • sucahyo
    replied
    Other weird theory:

    Weird weather on Australia happen because there are now too many people building Bedini radiant / coil switching circuit without ever investigating why they get a headache when they turn it on. And turn out that the circuit not just creating headache on human but also changing weather to the extreme.......


    Note: Bedini mention that he specifically tune his ferris wheel to only produce good vibe on early pages of ferris wheel thread.

    Leave a comment:


  • anut
    replied
    Here is another more convincing theory: The power-that-be releases this bull-sh1t on the internet to make you guys believe that they are still almighty. You guys still believe that they are power-that-be, but I choose to believe that they are about to bend over.

    According to Sai Baba, Nikola Tesla and your most hated environmentalists, earthquakes, floods and droughts are caused by soil erosion. And what causes soil erosion? According to Sai Baba (and possibly Tesla), soil erosion may be caused by prolonged bombing, oil production, mining, deforestation, etc, etc.

    The erratic weather patterns which we have been experiencing in this decade has long been predicted by climatologists, environmentalists and (unfortunately) global warming alarmists as well. But so far, I have not seen one harrp alarmists making such a prediction. Have I missed anything?

    The solar activity is causing the erratic weather patterns. I am one of the believers of global warming who believes in this theory. But the extent of damage on earth due to the solar activity also depends on the ozone layer. The ozone layer is designed to filter off the harmful solar radiations from the sun, but the ozone loss in the ozone layer allows more harmful solar radiations to penetrate into the earth core. Shouldn't we look at the damage on the ozone layer as well?

    Tesla once suggested that global consciousness are influencing the solar activity. More disordered sunspots mean more human violence, war, terrorism and self destructive tendencies on earth. The recent solar activity, however, decreases during the solar maximum and this decrease obviously violates the Spörer's law. This decrease is probably a reflection of change in global consciousness. The lack of participation in the global stock market rally is another sign of this change. I hope this trend continues as it is, although this may be a concern for some individuals.

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  • anut
    replied
    message deleted
    Last edited by anut; 01-31-2011, 07:52 PM.

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  • noises
    replied
    Here's a pretty awe inspiring graphic. Black areas on the radar show extremely heavy rain (over 150mm per hour) Winds at the eye, if it gets to cat 4, are predicted to peak at 180 miles an hour. 120 knots. 290 kmph!!!

    MTSAT Infrared Colorized Image Loop - Satellite Services Division - Office of Satellite Data Processing and Distribution

    As beautiful as it is terrifying.

    Tropical Cyclone Threat Map Page (1)

    It's coming right at us!

    Leave a comment:


  • noises
    replied


    1,800km wide Cyclone (hurricane) Yasi which is INTENSIFYING It's currently the size Katrina, and is expected to hit the coast in two or three days. (three or four days after the last cyclone hit us, the one that went out into the pacific then turned around and swung back in, for a laugh.) Two big cyclones in a week... is that anomalous?

    sigh. highway's going to be cut again. Yes, I'll stay safe. And probably a bit drunk, in the company of friends, as we do. Official warnings say prepare for four days without power but I don't need mains power or a phoneline to stay online.

    To be honest, I always find a big cyclone exiting more than worrying. battening down everything, getting things up high in case of storm surge, stocking up on food and water and then everyone goes to one person's place to wait it out for a cyclone party. (usually someone with a generator so we can enjoy our creatuire comforts afterwards. cyclones tend to be more tolerable when you can still nuke your popcorn and have an icy cold beer with your mates.)
    Last edited by noises; 01-31-2011, 08:03 AM.

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  • IndianaBoys
    replied
    Cloudbusters & Atmospheric Chaos?????

    This is an informative article on Oranur from the Orgonomic Ecology Blog:

    This blog is an educational resource for activists concerned about the rapid proliferation of cloudbusters and the often irresponsible misuse of them by persons unfamiliar with ecological ramifications. It presents case histories of weather-related damage to the environment by improper cloudbusting.

    Saturday, November 20, 2010

    Oranur

    Orgonomic Ecology: Oranur

    But while oranur is already a global problem, cloudbusters are still a problem on a small enough scale that it is still possible to sometimes figure out which cloudbuster project is the cause of a particular weather event. At least, so far. But the point is now near when, thanks to the internet making it so easy to spread the word around about how to build cloudbusters, cloudbuster proliferation will be so extensive that it will no longer be practical to bother trying to figure out who caused any given weather anomoly. If there are too many cloudbusters operating all over the place without any of them knowing about each other, it would make little difference if there were a few more or a few less. The result would still be atmospheric chaos.

    IndianaBoys

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  • Aaron
    replied
    2012 Watch: Stressed by storms?

    USGS produced video.

    Cosmic Log - 2012 Watch: Stressed by storms?

    ARK Storm

    Leave a comment:


  • noises
    replied
    Cyclones do the weirdest things, I was looking at some old storm tracks just the other day, in 1956 two TROPICAL cyclones hit New Zealand, one of them hit the bottom end of the south island. (that's south of the tropic of cancer, and then more than halfway to Antartica from the tropics, in perspective it's like a hurricane spinning up east of Cuba, then tooling up through the Atlantic and veering in to land when it reaches New York. Cyclones are freaky by nature.

    If a low sits off the coast for three days and doesn't move more than 3 days, then suddenly jumps another 120km out to sea and forms into a cyclone, that's just business as usual. Will it come back five times stronger? Will it head 500km south in two days and dump another flood rain on top of the already saturated and still partially inundated south east? Don't know. Have to wait and see It's kind of like christmas, only instead of a new bike or a playstation, you might get up and find a coconut palm, or your neighbor's boat in your living room. Oh well, surprises are nice

    Leave a comment:


  • sucahyo
    replied
    Originally posted by Mad Scientist View Post
    Let’s hope that this is just a freak of nature and not the work of some freaky scientists.
    Or misinformed innocent researcher.... The informed one surely fight to help for the better.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mad Scientist
    replied
    Let’s hope that this is just a freak of nature and not the work of some freaky scientists.

    Leave a comment:


  • noises
    replied
    For my sins, I've had a menacing, stationary low pressure system rotating about 75km north east of me for the last three days. It might form into a cyclone, they say. Well, tell that to the wind that blows the rain sideways, and comes and goes in regular gusting surges. And this thing's big, too. It's being fed by the monsoonal trough, which is extremely strong this year, and is building in the warm water near the coast, before the continental shelf. And the rain! Incredible! Just, non stop, and HEAVY. It's the wet season, and I'm surrounded by rainforest, so a bit of precipitation is hardly out of order, but this storm cell sitting there off the coast, not moving, just rotating around it's own center, and pretending it's not a cyclone for days on end thing is just, well, freaky.

    The sea was angry that day, my friends.

    Leave a comment:


  • noises
    replied
    In any case, I'm glad and thankful to live in the lucky country and to have been brought up with the ideals of mateship, charity and community instead of "you can make it to the top if you climb over everyone else to get there." Of course, our government has lost the plot, we're just another puppet two party faux democracy run by the world's reserve banking cartels. But at least we're allowed to protest about it (and our other flaws, which we readily admit to,) without getting detained at an airport. That's a plus.

    Leave a comment:


  • Nadda
    replied
    I know there are areas of this country where the type of stuff you describe happening in Australia would happen, but there are also areas where selfish people would be more the norm. Thanks for sharing the love!
    Also theres much more diversity with larger numbers people, afterall texas alone has a bigger population than australia. It great to see people help each other none the less!

    Leave a comment:


  • noises
    replied
    Originally posted by ImBill View Post
    I know there are areas of this country where the type of stuff you describe happening in Australia would happen, but there are also areas where selfish people would be more the norm.
    Thanks for sharing the love!
    Melbourne and Sydney are the only places where Autralian's aren't very Australian. And even there, the ones who loot and rob and bash are in a very, very small minority. Nothing a volunteer army of misguided racist bogans armed with beer bottles couldn't deal with.

    Leave a comment:

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