Food Prices May Increase 200 Per Cent!
July 13, 2002
Posted By: HeraldAp
For more information, contact: Annette Hardman, Payson, AZ
928-474-9371 E-mail: inspirit@uneedspeed.net
ARIZONA MAN LOOKS TO SUN FOR WEATHER REPORT, ISSUES WARNINGS
(Black Canyon City, AZ)-- Forget conventional weather forecasts this yearand
next--look to an earth scientist in Black Canyon City, Arizona, who is using
sunspots to predict extreme weather conditions with higher accuracy than The
Weather Channel and almanacs. He doesn't like what he sees. Michael Mandeville
is skyreading by counting the sunspots and solar storms and their numbers are
telling him to expect the continuation of existing chaotic weather and drought
conditions. He knows there are many more factors influencing the weather
producing the extreme floods and droughts than weather predictors are currently
using. He understands how solar storms displace the jet streams and distort
air circulation patterns to create . And he wants you to know about it because
he can see several more months of hot, dry weather in drought-stricken areas
and a lot more fires in the forests of North America..
"Wells are bone dry and expensive water is already being trucked in. Livestock
herds are already being thinned out. And when the agriculture industry
realizes this weather madness could ruin crops and go on for another 6 to14
months, prices are certain to go up much more than they have," calculates
Mandeville, an earth scientist who is more than an amateur weatherman. "We too
may be faced with food shortages along with the rest of the world which is now
plagued by epidemic human starvation and suffering.it's not a pretty picture."
Mandeville sees Mercury passing by the Earth and anticipates the affect of
Venus will have when it passes by in October 2002. And why would planets in
alignment with Earth be of any concern? Mandeville is quick to reply: "If we
put sunspot and solar flare data in those supercomputers, along with planetary
orbits, we'd be able to better anticipate the weather problems they cause. We
could plan to deal more sensibly with conditions, like today's extreme drought
conditions, which are not likely to abate much this year. Weathermen need to
connect the dots, literally the sunspots and the planets, like scientists do to
predict space weather for satellites and space probes.
"The biggest factor is sunspots. We can't see them but many are as large as
the Earth and their energy is driving Earth's weather. Planets pull energy from
the sunspots, flares, and solar storms, and they bring the energy flowing out
towards the Earth. Since September 1999, the numbers of sunspots have been
very high and they have produced exceptionally large flares, magnetic storms,
and a very brisk solar wind composed of magnetic bursts and ions which are
often traveling millions of miles per second. It is this heavy ionic and
magnetic "solar weather" during this current peak in the Solar Cycle which is
creating chaotic weather conditions worldwide."
Keeping in mind that the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet that crashed into Jupiter a few
years ago was discovered on its collision course by amateur astronomers,
Mandeville wields strong confidence in his current assessments. His advisory
drought prediction for the next six months comes at a time when scientists from
NOAA and NASA can't seem to get it right. "Climatologists," Mandeville
observes, "are looking at heat levels, reflectivity in the atmosphere, and what
they call heat budgets to predict the weather within the normal climate
patterns. But what most of them don't realize is that heat and normal patterns
are irrelevant during a sunspot cycle peak. They are all over-riden right now,
as they have been for the past 34 months, directly by the ionic energy
streaming from the sun, and this energy has temporarily altered climate
patterns all around the globe. There is no normal weather that will return
this year so all of their predictions are being continually upset..new records
are being constantly set and the world's farmers are becoming more and more
confused about what to do."
Mandeville gives his weather advice to internet newsletter subscribers who wish
to stay informed about the potential impacts caused by dynamic changes in the
Earth and solar system. An assessment released on July 8, the "Oak Tree
Memorandum", stands in memory of the massive numbers of oaks which are
beginning to die from the drought in the American Southwest. In that
publication, Mandeville is currently advising little change in North America
related to existing drought conditions for the next several months. For those
concerned about fire dangers in forested areas and all those who are weighing
their seasonal crop and herd management decisions--as well as ag industry
experts who need to understand market dynamics--Mandeville cautions, "Be
pessimistic, assume no relief this year. I expect food prices to increase, and
we could experience economic stress when the world is looking to the American
breadbasket for relief. We need to be informed, watch and navigate this time
very carefully and realize these cycles vary in intensity in 11-year
intervals. The current peak in Solar Cycle 23 started in September 1999 and is
still going very strong. Conditions could change rapidly, for better or worse,
so a week-by-week watch is very important."
Mandeville, who admits that he often misses the mark in his attempt to predict
earthquake activity from the wobbling motions of the Earth, reminds himself
that he has had many bulls-eyes in relating sunspot numbers and weather
patterns to the orbits of the planets as they pass by the Earth. He observes
that it is highly possible that the high level of solar activity will last for
another 5-14 months. With the average monthly number of sunspots remaining
above 100, there could be occasional daily counts of as many as 200. He claims
that predictions supported by NASA are no longer valid and the predicted
decline in numbers for June onwards have failed to materialize.
Mandeville has concluded that the flow of marine air high into the atmosphere
and the positioning of the spiraling jet stream is the cause for the current
chaotic extremes in local weather patterns and the destructive drought/flood
patterns. Jet streams are not where they should be, and Mandeville
simplifies: "These ionic charges from the sun, magnified by high numbers of
sunspots and huge magnetic storms in the Sun's atmosphere, energize the Earth's
atmosphere to carry large amounts of moisture and dust. The more ions in the
atmosphere, the more energetic the air molecules.and the more moisture they
pick up and carry, the faster they move. These charges radically distort how
the air masses move through the latitudes, thus the jet streams are distorted
in direction and elevation and they're out of pattern. They bring gyrating air
masses over the continents that are wildly off their normal course. This
condition will drop off a bit this summer but will return again in October with
a vengence when Venus passes between the Earth and the Sun.
"We've had a century of abundance and this planet has experienced rapid
population growth. We can't really cope well with widespread failures on the
farms. I would like to hope that sunspots radically drop during July 2002 .but
if they stay above 100 a day on average, we'll have little monsoon relief and
the droughts will go on into next year. In that case, man is going to have to
plan to meet world needs in some innovative new ways. Weather forecasting is
not an exact science, not for computers nor star watchers. But combined, we
can do a better job of forewarning people."
For more information on sunspots and the weather, or to obtain his special
report, "The Oak Tree Memorandum" to further explain the importance of nuances
that impact weather, local agri-business, and food supplies, contact Michael
Mandeville at (623) 374-9585 or by e-mail: mwman@earthlink.net. His website
is: www.michaelmandeville.com/earthmonitor/.
~ End ~
Editor Note: Ask Michael Mandeville about global warming. You'll get a
different perspective. Inquire about effects of sunspots on people and he will
show you how the timing of most major wars, including the current War of
Terrorism, coincides with the peaks of the sunspot cycles, Ask him about
volcanism and its effects on climate factors and you'll get an explanation of
El Nino. And about earthquakes, Mandeville can tell you about the vortex
tectonics that drives seismic and volcanic events all caused by slight changes
in the Earth's shape. How does that happen? Earth's wobble around an
off-center axis!
Biographical information on Michael Mandeville is available upon request.
Best Wishes,
Michael Wells Mandeville, The Hills of Arizona USA at mwman@earthlink.net
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