© USDA
The
United States Department of Agriculture has declared natural disaster
areas in more than 1,000 counties and 26 drought-stricken states, making
it the largest natural disaster in America ever.
The
declaration
- which covers roughly half of the country - gives farmers and ranchers
devastated by drought access to federal aid, including low-interest
emergency loans.
Steve
Niedbalski shows his drought and heat stricken corn while chopping it
down for feed Wednesday, July 11, 2012 in Nashville Ill. Farmers in
parts of the Midwest are dealing with the worst drought in nearly 25
years.
4500 record highs broken: Jet stream pulled up towards Canada, ‘out of whack’ says U.S. meteorologist
We are in a global climate change pattern. Europe is colder and wetter. United States is hotter and dryer. The earth's Northern Pole is moving toward Russia and away from the United States. The earth is passing through the galactic center of the the Milky-way Galaxy which has not occurred for many centuries and will not occur for many more to come. The sun is presently in the hottest and most active Solar Maximum (a cycle of the sun that goes in 11 and 22 year cycles). This current very active solar maximum is of the most extreme variety and will peak in 2013 after which it will begin to reverse and decrease in heat and sun spot activity which has been adding to the heat and polar ice melt on earth.
After the 2013 peak one can expect the sun to go back towards a more normal existence and likewise the earth will also begin to cool and return to normal. Morpheus July 8 2012

July 7, 2012 – CLIMATE - It’s
not that the Midwest hasn’t been extremely hot before, and it’s not
that it hasn’t been incredibly dry. But it’s unusual for a vast swath of
the Midwest to be so very hot and so very dry for so very long —
particularly this early in the summer. The current heat wave — which is spurring comparisons to the catastrophic heat of 1936 — is “out of whack,” meteorologist Jim Keeney said Friday in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.
“Even on the East Coast today, temperatures are 100 or above” —
basically, Keeney said, the heat wave extends from Kansas all the way to
the East Coast. “It’s a good chunk of the eastern half of the country,
barring the far northern states, of course. So it’s pretty intense.”
Temperature records are being broken and residents are suffering in what
Keeney called a “corridor of extreme heat,” generally through Nebraska,
Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and into western Kentucky. Heat
records are being shattered as are records for the number of days in a
row the temperature has hit 100 or higher, he said. Take St. Louis, for
example. The last time the city was this hot for this long was in 1936,
said Keeney, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service Central
Region Headquarters in Kansas City, Mo. Then, the city recorded 13 days
in a row of temperatures 100 degrees Fahrenheit or over. That
devastating heat wave of the mid-’30s killed thousands of people and
destroyed many crops. The culprit in the current wave is a dome of high
pressure that has been hovering over the eastern part of the U.S., said
NWS spokesman Pat Slattery in an interview with The Times on Friday. “It’s
kicked the jet stream way to north, in some places into Canada, so
there’s no way for the normal rotation of weather systems to get here
into the middle of the country, which would bring us some moisture. So
drought becomes more and more a major factor.” –LA Times Weather Channel
Planet’s climate unraveling just I warned:
“There are far-reaching implications associated with magnetic polar
migration too. Could the migration of the magnetic north pole towards
Siberia be pulling the jet-stream and rivers of colder air across
northern Europe with it?” –The 7th Protocol, page 131
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