From Drought To Floods In Colorado

Rising water under a bridge in Evergreen, Colorado.

Floodwaters continue to rise in Evergreen, Colorado after days of heavy rain – and it’s still falling.

As of Thursday afternoon, September 12, 2013, Boulder, Colorado had received a record-breaking 9.6 inches of rain, and it is still falling.

Damaging floods in and around Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, and some isolated towns in the foothills of the Rockies have been inundated with flash flooding.

The state has not experienced a “100-year flood” like this since 1894.

Fires and Development

Wildfires in the mountains over the past few years have not yet grown back, and this has left large burn areas in the canyons that are at a very high risk for flash-flooding and wash-outs.

Barren terrain results in fast runoff, and this increases flood and landslide hazards downhill. And, what’s downhill? – housing developments, concreted streets, bridges, and strip malls.

More To Come?

Rain is forecast to continue in the area through Saturday, so this event is, sadlyfar from over.

Typhoon Smacks China With Tidal Wave

The powerful tidal wave in China.

A powerful wave crashed over the levee in China –REX/Sun Fengli

Typhoon Trami is the 12th typhoon to hit China this year. Friday, August 23, 2013, the typhoon hit land in eastern China, bringing huge surges of water onshore.

The fast-rising tide was funneled into a river, which formed an upstream wave that hit Haining City.

The “tidal river bore” was around 20 meters (22 yards) tall and caused several injuries as the protective sea wall gave way under the impact of the water.

Typhoon Trami created a tidal wave.

Typhoon Trami created a tidal wave that hit Haining City – REX/Sun Fengli

 

 

Temps Reach 90 Degrees In Siberia, Russia – In July

A cartoon of a North Pole sign in a mound of snow.

It was 90 degrees in Siberia, Russia this July.

It was 90 degrees in Siberia last week – in July. The record was actually set in 1993 when temps reached 92 degrees in Alaska.

This is hot for the top of the world. And, this heat is melting the polar ice.

Is the ice at both the North and South Poles melting because of “global warming” or because the poles are shifting and the Earth’s axis is wobbling?

Both.

Pole Shifts

It’s inevitable that an increase in volcanoes, earthquakes, violent storms, global warming, and melting frozen sheets of ice will combine to “set the scene” for a major shift at the poles. It’s an Earth cycle that has happened at least five times before, and the last big polar shift was 65 million years ago.

We haven’t seen a dinosaur since …

Pure Energy

When the Earth’s axis is unstable, pure energy ricochets from the equator to the poles, and this sets off a planetary rocking motion, which, in turn, amplifies tsunamis, earthquakes, wildfires and volcanoes around the globe.

Planetary movement always weakens the protective forces of the Earth’s atmosphere and magnetic field, and this allows meteors to rain in like a cosmic hailstorm. Comets, asteroids, and volcanic ash smother the skies.

What’s Ahead?

Earth question symbol represented by a world globe model with a geographic shape of a mark questioning the state of the environment the international economy and political situation.

No one really knows what changes are ahead.

The continents are moving into the North Polar Region today, and as they get closer together, the weight at the North Pole gets heavier. At the same time, the Earth’s rotation is widening and slowing down, and this makes the Earth increasingly unstable.

The warning signs are ever present that a polar shift actually began decades ago, but we are just now realizing this. Bizarre weather changes and violent storms have opened our eyes to the global shifts under our noses.

The current, bizarre climate we are experiencing globally is but a small sample of what a full-blown climate change will bring. There are bigger changes ahead in weather patterns, rainfall rates, the growing season, and global storm patterns.

You never know what the weather in Siberia will be these days … one thing we do know is that it will different.