The outback community of Lajamanu says fish fell from the sky overnight Sunday
Fish still alive when they fell
Mr Japanangka said the fish, which were at least "the size of two fingers", were still alive when they fell.
"Some are still hanging around in the community in a puddle of water," he said.
"Children are picking them up and keeping them in a bottle or a jar."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-02-21/ ... /102002588
Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
- Boadicea
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
sufferin saccotach
at least they are not doing their youtube adverts 15 secs for a 3 second video. or adverts for an advert video.
at least they are not doing their youtube adverts 15 secs for a 3 second video. or adverts for an advert video.
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
If You Live Closely with Nature then there are Signs Everywhere...
Those that have Disconnected from Them Selves and Handed Their Autonomy Over to the "Experts," are Now Hobbled
Dis Connected from The Same Abilities that All of Nature Posesses.
Many People Think This is 'Woo Woo' but in Fact it is a Sign of the Inversion and Hijacking of Senses that have been Only Recently Stunted by the Usual Suspects via the Technology and Hamster Wheel Enslavement.
The Evil Manipulation of Everything in Order to Hijack Humanity and Enslave us by Making us Dependant on the Beast System.
Saw this Today...
BEN DOMENSINO, Bureau of Meteorology Morons (BOMM)
04 MAR 2023, 1:29 AM AEST
Can Animals Predict Weather?
Australia is full of folklore about animals being able to predict the weather, from ants changing behaviour before rain to dragonflies marking the end of the wet season.
But how reliable are these miniature meteorologists and what is the most popular animal forecaster in Australia?
Animals in Indigenous Weather Knowledge
The relationship between animals and weather has deep roots in Australia.
To the Wardaman people, whose traditional land lies to the southwest of what is now Katherine township, the appearance of march-flies around September and October would be a sign that the dry season was ending.
Indigenous Weather Knowledge is full of stories like this about how plants and animals can be used to identify changes in the weather and seasons. This deep understanding about the environment was built up by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over thousands of years.
Animals and Weather today
Even today, at a time when Powerful Computer Models Simulate Future Weather Conditions with impressive accuracy, people tell stories about how they use animals to predict weather across Australia.
To find out more, we asked our community to share their stories of how animals predict weather in their part of the country.
The response was huge and within a couple of hours, we had more than 160 responses.
Here are a few examples:
“Black Cockatoos with patches of yellow feathers inside their tails, i was standing next to a Indigenous Friend on a property one day admiring the creek below in the valley when a flock of these birds flew by and my friend uttered Rain Coming, and sure enough 3 days later rain came.”
“Ants. When I see them build their mounds tall, it always indicates heavy rain or lots of it.”
“My cousin in Darwin said Dragonflies mean it’s the end of the wet season. Sure enough there were a heap of dragonflies in Victoria around Christmas and it hasn’t rained since!”
“Currawong ~ a couple of years ago came down to use birdbath in late August. Knew then it was warmer than ‘norm!’”
“My Marsh Frog. He lives in and around my pond/yard. When he starts croaking all night for days, rain is on its way.”
“Ants. We had a very reliable ant nest in one of our paddocks. You could tell how much rain was coming by how tall they built the opening up!”
“Cows, a little old lady once told me that if you see a paddock and all the cows are lying down it means rain is coming.... and she has been 100% right every time.”
“Just before the massive Brisbane floods, I was opal fossicking at Yowah, and one of the old miners commented that the local Emus had large clutches that year, meaning that a lot of rain was coming.”
“Our pet sheep started pacing and baa-ing madly before we had a massive dump of snow that lasted for a week!”
“Lizards, when I see them heading for the laundry to get out of the rain, I know it’s raining”
One thing we noticed from our community comments is that a LOT of people seem to have their own story about animals changing their behaviour because of the weather. It was also clear that ants and birds were the two most popular indicators that the weather is about to change.
So, the anecdotal evidence seems pretty overwhelming, but can animals actually predict impending weather?
What the Educated Idiots Have to Say...
Tanya Latty, an associate professor in the School of Life and Environmental Sciences at the University of Sydney, wrote in The Conversation that
“given the diversity of ant species and their well-developed sensory systems, it’s possible that some ant species have evolved a way to detect rain before it falls.
But observational or experimental data showing that ants actually alter their behaviour in anticipation of rain is currently lacking.”
This apprehension about the weather prediction skills of ants was also noted by Wayne Robinson, a lecturer at Charles Sturt University, who told the ABC that
“there is no scientific evidence of any relationship between ants and rain except to say that we know that ants behave in certain ways after rain.”
Another column written by researchers from the University of Sydney points out that
“brush-turkeys are known to protect their mounds from heavy rain.
Much anecdotal evidence suggests brush-turkeys can predict the weather in advance, and reshape their mound accordingly.”
So, Should You Trust Signs From Nature To Predict The Weather?
As a professional meteorologist, My Advice Would Be To Always Check Computer-Based Weather Information, Such As Your Local Weather Forecast, Official Thunderstorm Warnings Or Live Radar Data.
But it won’t hurt to also keep an eye on nature for any signs that a change in the weather might be on the way...
Geez...Thanks Ben...
I'll Continue to Trust My Self Over the MEDEA Authoritay Steering.
'Would-be hurricane fighters hoping to stop a future Katrina before it makes landfall should aim to wound, not kill.
The goal should be to re-route hurricanes and ease their fury, rather than try to stop them forming in the first place.
This is the latest advice from weather modification experts. The field has a colourful history.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, scientists on “Project Stormfury” tried in vain to disrupt the inner structure of hurricanes by seeding them with silver iodide crystals. Various other far-fetched ideas to neutralise storms have been mooted since then, such as cooling the ocean surface.
More recently, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) asked a Stormfury veteran called Joe Golden – now at the University of Colorado at Boulder – to gather experts to evaluate prospects for taming hurricanes.
Last week, the panel reported their findings at an American Meteorological Society meeting on weather modification in Westminster, Colorado."
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg ... uide-them/
Those that have Disconnected from Them Selves and Handed Their Autonomy Over to the "Experts," are Now Hobbled
Dis Connected from The Same Abilities that All of Nature Posesses.
Many People Think This is 'Woo Woo' but in Fact it is a Sign of the Inversion and Hijacking of Senses that have been Only Recently Stunted by the Usual Suspects via the Technology and Hamster Wheel Enslavement.
The Evil Manipulation of Everything in Order to Hijack Humanity and Enslave us by Making us Dependant on the Beast System.
Saw this Today...
BEN DOMENSINO, Bureau of Meteorology Morons (BOMM)
04 MAR 2023, 1:29 AM AEST
Can Animals Predict Weather?
Australia is full of folklore about animals being able to predict the weather, from ants changing behaviour before rain to dragonflies marking the end of the wet season.
But how reliable are these miniature meteorologists and what is the most popular animal forecaster in Australia?
Animals in Indigenous Weather Knowledge
The relationship between animals and weather has deep roots in Australia.
To the Wardaman people, whose traditional land lies to the southwest of what is now Katherine township, the appearance of march-flies around September and October would be a sign that the dry season was ending.
Indigenous Weather Knowledge is full of stories like this about how plants and animals can be used to identify changes in the weather and seasons. This deep understanding about the environment was built up by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over thousands of years.
Animals and Weather today
Even today, at a time when Powerful Computer Models Simulate Future Weather Conditions with impressive accuracy, people tell stories about how they use animals to predict weather across Australia.
To find out more, we asked our community to share their stories of how animals predict weather in their part of the country.
The response was huge and within a couple of hours, we had more than 160 responses.
Here are a few examples:
“Black Cockatoos with patches of yellow feathers inside their tails, i was standing next to a Indigenous Friend on a property one day admiring the creek below in the valley when a flock of these birds flew by and my friend uttered Rain Coming, and sure enough 3 days later rain came.”
“Ants. When I see them build their mounds tall, it always indicates heavy rain or lots of it.”
“My cousin in Darwin said Dragonflies mean it’s the end of the wet season. Sure enough there were a heap of dragonflies in Victoria around Christmas and it hasn’t rained since!”
“Currawong ~ a couple of years ago came down to use birdbath in late August. Knew then it was warmer than ‘norm!’”
“My Marsh Frog. He lives in and around my pond/yard. When he starts croaking all night for days, rain is on its way.”
“Ants. We had a very reliable ant nest in one of our paddocks. You could tell how much rain was coming by how tall they built the opening up!”
“Cows, a little old lady once told me that if you see a paddock and all the cows are lying down it means rain is coming.... and she has been 100% right every time.”
“Just before the massive Brisbane floods, I was opal fossicking at Yowah, and one of the old miners commented that the local Emus had large clutches that year, meaning that a lot of rain was coming.”
“Our pet sheep started pacing and baa-ing madly before we had a massive dump of snow that lasted for a week!”
“Lizards, when I see them heading for the laundry to get out of the rain, I know it’s raining”
One thing we noticed from our community comments is that a LOT of people seem to have their own story about animals changing their behaviour because of the weather. It was also clear that ants and birds were the two most popular indicators that the weather is about to change.
So, the anecdotal evidence seems pretty overwhelming, but can animals actually predict impending weather?
What the Educated Idiots Have to Say...
Tanya Latty, an associate professor in the School of Life and Environmental Sciences at the University of Sydney, wrote in The Conversation that
“given the diversity of ant species and their well-developed sensory systems, it’s possible that some ant species have evolved a way to detect rain before it falls.
But observational or experimental data showing that ants actually alter their behaviour in anticipation of rain is currently lacking.”
This apprehension about the weather prediction skills of ants was also noted by Wayne Robinson, a lecturer at Charles Sturt University, who told the ABC that
“there is no scientific evidence of any relationship between ants and rain except to say that we know that ants behave in certain ways after rain.”
Another column written by researchers from the University of Sydney points out that
“brush-turkeys are known to protect their mounds from heavy rain.
Much anecdotal evidence suggests brush-turkeys can predict the weather in advance, and reshape their mound accordingly.”
So, Should You Trust Signs From Nature To Predict The Weather?
As a professional meteorologist, My Advice Would Be To Always Check Computer-Based Weather Information, Such As Your Local Weather Forecast, Official Thunderstorm Warnings Or Live Radar Data.
But it won’t hurt to also keep an eye on nature for any signs that a change in the weather might be on the way...
Geez...Thanks Ben...
I'll Continue to Trust My Self Over the MEDEA Authoritay Steering.
'Would-be hurricane fighters hoping to stop a future Katrina before it makes landfall should aim to wound, not kill.
The goal should be to re-route hurricanes and ease their fury, rather than try to stop them forming in the first place.
This is the latest advice from weather modification experts. The field has a colourful history.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, scientists on “Project Stormfury” tried in vain to disrupt the inner structure of hurricanes by seeding them with silver iodide crystals. Various other far-fetched ideas to neutralise storms have been mooted since then, such as cooling the ocean surface.
More recently, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) asked a Stormfury veteran called Joe Golden – now at the University of Colorado at Boulder – to gather experts to evaluate prospects for taming hurricanes.
Last week, the panel reported their findings at an American Meteorological Society meeting on weather modification in Westminster, Colorado."
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg ... uide-them/
We Are More Than We Realise...



- Boadicea
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
Big Totals to be Expected and Other Weather Stuff.
Rob D
For Those in the Sights...
Use Your Judgement...
Rob D
For Those in the Sights...
Use Your Judgement...
We Are More Than We Realise...



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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
When I see or hear black cockatoos I predict falling branches up to 3 inches in diameter
If the woop woop birds ever miss a day (or night) of whoop whoopin, of if they stop woop wooping for more than a breaths worth , then i will be worried. that would be like Monty Pythons Jones as the hermit not shutting up once he had spoken after years of silence, and then seeing the mob coming at him, then shutting up for sure. I think those birds know my menacing attitude about them, I have still not been able to spot one.
I am thinking there is something odd.. perhaps with pollination, beans by the acre (almost) but nary a bean pod, and broad beans when they do 'hatch' which is terrific, and unexpected (forget what I planted) if it comes to pass.
no mangoes for three or four years now (apparently I am not the only one)
and found a couple of dozen avocadoes on the avecado tree I 'trimmed' probably 10 years ago, and none seen since until yesterday. made my day. trimmed it to produce more (it has not) and to get it lower and more accessible (it is half in the clouds and longer than my longest bamboo poles). it might be a drone operation Mission Impossible style (but worthy it).
hardly bitten this summer by ants on the ground (the big nasty ones).
best think this summer was a couple of micro bats in the 'cellar' flying around in that small space like a couple of love birds. they are protecting my main food source, canned beans.
If the woop woop birds ever miss a day (or night) of whoop whoopin, of if they stop woop wooping for more than a breaths worth , then i will be worried. that would be like Monty Pythons Jones as the hermit not shutting up once he had spoken after years of silence, and then seeing the mob coming at him, then shutting up for sure. I think those birds know my menacing attitude about them, I have still not been able to spot one.
I am thinking there is something odd.. perhaps with pollination, beans by the acre (almost) but nary a bean pod, and broad beans when they do 'hatch' which is terrific, and unexpected (forget what I planted) if it comes to pass.
no mangoes for three or four years now (apparently I am not the only one)
and found a couple of dozen avocadoes on the avecado tree I 'trimmed' probably 10 years ago, and none seen since until yesterday. made my day. trimmed it to produce more (it has not) and to get it lower and more accessible (it is half in the clouds and longer than my longest bamboo poles). it might be a drone operation Mission Impossible style (but worthy it).
hardly bitten this summer by ants on the ground (the big nasty ones).
best think this summer was a couple of micro bats in the 'cellar' flying around in that small space like a couple of love birds. they are protecting my main food source, canned beans.
- Boadicea
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
Hey, I Nearly was Hit in the face by a Micro-bat 3 nights ago.
So Happy to see them back after a 3 year no Show Also.
Mine lived under the House as well.
Hope I Don't Catch the Wuhan Bat Flu...
Wish I Had Avo's...my Favourite.
Just Can't get Them to Grow.
5 x 3ft Grafted ones Failed over the last 3 Years of Inundation and Chem Bombing.
So No Garlic Guacamole for me...
Although Several Seeds I Planted Directly into the ground have Sprouted...
Be Awhile before I Taste the Fruits of Really Any of my Labours.
SometimesI Think I May be Planting Trees for Other Souls to Sit Under and Eat From...
If So, That's a Nice Thought...
I May Have Been of Some Useful Service.
We Are More Than We Realise...



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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
Poldark Series 4 Ep 4
funny I just looked up the set location on google earth, cornwall and st agnes head coast 2022, like euro 2023 now (golf links game 2000 quality)..
I do wonder (no not really 'they make all the movies' is one of my main lines) why they would focus on a dirty ugly unnatural cloud for a late 18th century show.
funny I just looked up the set location on google earth, cornwall and st agnes head coast 2022, like euro 2023 now (golf links game 2000 quality)..
I do wonder (no not really 'they make all the movies' is one of my main lines) why they would focus on a dirty ugly unnatural cloud for a late 18th century show.
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
the good
https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2023- ... /102073942
"Being isolated for four months is the stuff of nightmares for most people, but for Sally Gray the biggest wet season in 100 years is a welcome chance to dust off her macro camera lens and capture the natural beauty of her backyard.
Piccaninny Plains Wildlife Sanctuary, in the middle of the Cape York Peninsula, is one of the last wild, undeveloped places left in Australia."

the bad bourketown queensland. (whilst there is drought in the south)
and the ugly would be my big belly, so that I leave out.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2023- ... /102073942
"Being isolated for four months is the stuff of nightmares for most people, but for Sally Gray the biggest wet season in 100 years is a welcome chance to dust off her macro camera lens and capture the natural beauty of her backyard.
Piccaninny Plains Wildlife Sanctuary, in the middle of the Cape York Peninsula, is one of the last wild, undeveloped places left in Australia."
the bad bourketown queensland. (whilst there is drought in the south)
and the ugly would be my big belly, so that I leave out.
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-03-15/ ... /102092778
almost 10m above the 1971 record
"By March 9 the Gregory River at Riversleigh, near Lawn Hill, reached 18 metres high — surpassing the 1971 flood record of 10.8m."

almost 10m above the 1971 record
"By March 9 the Gregory River at Riversleigh, near Lawn Hill, reached 18 metres high — surpassing the 1971 flood record of 10.8m."
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Re: Australia - Weather Manipulation and Chem Bombs
funny, but not enough for a joke
today is the 19th, this is posted by the Ahead Media on the 20th. more signs of the end time I suppose
https://www.weatherzone.com.au/news/rec ... ct/1162260
today is the 19th, this is posted by the Ahead Media on the 20th. more signs of the end time I suppose
https://www.weatherzone.com.au/news/rec ... ct/1162260