SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Taking Advantage of a Sharply Changing Environment -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Doug R who wrote (4671)3/26/2021 9:27:58 PM
From: Doug R2 Recommendations

Recommended By
3bar
pak73

  Respond to of 5938
 
Coldest Feb. in 30 years.
Must be global warming.



To: Doug R who wrote (4671)4/20/2021 5:26:17 PM
From: Doug R1 Recommendation

Recommended By
3bar

  Respond to of 5938
 
England’s Coldest April since 1922, Germany’s Chilliest since 1917

MAY 1:

GFS 2m Temp Anomalies for May 1 [ tropicaltidbits.com].

The next 14-or-so days look incredibly snowy, too (by April standards).

As it stands, substantial snow is even forecast for the UK in May, with record-accumulations on the cards for Scandinavia and central Europe in particular:


GFS Total Snowfall (cm) for April 28 through May 3 [ tropicaltidbits.com].

The northern hemisphere’s climatic REALITY this “spring” is clearly jarring with the mainstream narrative that extreme cold and snow are things of the past. Instead, the setup is falling in line with the Grand Solar Minimum predictions of an ever-prolonging winter, and the subsequent failure of harvests.

With that in mind, April cold is ravaging North America, too; there, reports are coming in warning that a colder second half of April will slow germination in the western and northern Corn Belt.

According to agriculture.com, widespread colder-than-normal temperatures will remain across much of the Central U.S. and may continue into the final days of April 2021. And while drier weather will help to accelerate planting in the Corn Belt, germination will slow as colder-than-normal conditions prevail. In fact, snow showers cannot be ruled out at times in the northern or High Plains, and maybe even into the central Corn Belt.

As forecast by weathertrends360.com, the Corn Belt is on for both its driest AND coldest close to April in many decades:



[ weathertrends360.com]