Global Cooling – Major Ice Storm Ahead

A picture of the ice melting in Antarctica
Arctic ice melting at the same time it is beginning to refreeze due to a Mini-Ice Age..

Today, global warming is a trend, but is it accurate?

No.

Our planet is heading into a natural cooling cycle – as a matter of fact, we are entering a Mini-Ice Age.

February 2021 will be one of the best examples of this, so get out your parka and gloves. Prepare to shovel lots of snow off your roof in the higher latitudes.

Head’s Up

A blizzard
The entire Northern Hemisphere will experience record winter storms this week.

There is a BIG winter storm coming this week, and it should cover most of the Northern Hemisphere by the 10th and 11th of February.

We are moving into a mini-Ice Age, and because our magnetic field is weakening, the cold air will start sliding down from the North Pole and cover the continents in the Northern Hemisphere. Ice will form on the continents, forming new glaciers as opposed to forming within the waters of the Arctic.

Right now, it’s winter in the Northern Hemisphere, and summer in the Southern Hemisphere, so warm air will travel north from Antarctica. This balances the Earth’s temperature as the north gets colder.

One side of both the Arctic and Antarctic regions will begin to melt, while the “other” side of these polar areas will form thicker ice sheets due to their position to the Sun and a weakening magnetic field.

This winter storm will be a doozy, and again, is an example of the Earth changes of global cooling.

Stay safe and warm. And get your snow shovel out.

A baby and mother polar bear looking endearing at one another.
This new fad called climate change is steering us in the wrong direction.

Temps Top 130 Degrees In Western US

A picture of the sun.

The power of the Sun is intensifying.

We go about our daily lives giving little thought to the influences of the Sun, but today, we can’t escape noticing that the Earth is getting hotter.

Death Valley, California is expected to top 130 degrees Saturday through Monday, just below the world record high of 134 recorded on July 10, 1913. Temperatures will continue to soar into the 110s and 120s next week across the Southwest.

What’s Going On?

The sun is at the peak of an active solar cycle this year, and we are feeling its intense heat more than we have in the past because human influences have drastically changed the Earth.

Excess carbon dioxide and water vapor from manmade influences, such as pollution, manufacturing, urbanization, and deforestation, have added to the sun’s global warming effect. Human beings have not caused global warming, but we have indisputably accelerated its affects.

Sunspots and Solar Flares

A picture of sunspots on the sun.

Every 11 years, the sun increases sunspots and solar flares that, in turn, heat the Earth.

Sunspots appear and disappear on the sun around the same time every 11 years. Sunspots are around 1,500 degrees Celsius (2,732 degrees Fahrenheit) cooler than the rest of the Sun.  The solar corona, or outer most surface of the sun, is estimated to be about 999,727 degrees Celsius (1,799,540 degrees Fahrenheit).

Today, we are witnessing a natural warming cycle that we cannot stop. As our solar system gets warmer and the Earth’s atmosphere gets thinner, our planet gets hotter. Add man’s industrial influences, and we speed up the process.

I’m hot just thinking about it.