Friday, March 29, 2024

Advanced Dowsing Technique Video

 I posted a video on YouTube on an advanced dowsing technique I have been  using for years. It is about learning to listen to your dowsing rods and it has given me great results, from discovering imprints to discovering, and determining, what Energy Vortices are. A link is below.



Thursday, March 21, 2024

Geomantica Magazine Article

The Spring Equinox issue of Geomantic Magazine is out.  It's focus is on Mother Earth, dowsing, electropollution, Earth Energies, a great article on a mineral to reduce arthritic pain and more. . It is produced by Australian Alanna Moore, an accomplished dowser known for her permaculture work, who now resides in Ireland with her husband.

I have written several articles for the magazine over the last decade plus. In the current issue I have an article titled '* A Sporting Cushion—An Essential Tool for Geomancers and Seekers.'

If you are at all familiar with my work you will know I am a big fan of employing a meditation to jack up your spiritual practices and help with  your geomancy and Earth Healing work. I recently posted a YouTube video explaining the benefits of a meditation cushion. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/pJbm2rxPo40 

You can access the Spring Equinox issue of Geomantica by clicking on the link below.

Click to read   Geomantica.

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Climate Migration, , Bloomberg Says Housing Crisis in Warm Climates is getting Worse

The insurance crisis in climate stricken areas is getting worse and will ultimately affect all of us--the only question is how and the severity. People cannot get homeowners insurance in places like Florida, California, Texas... States may extend themselves by offering cheap homeowners insurance to residents, only to face a huge financial crisis should a major weather event (hurricane, fire...) occur--which is highly likely. Then turn to the Feds. I have been writing about how climate change and rising costs for insurance, help.. will force climate migration north. 

I had written an article  for the March/April issue  Life In the Finger Lakes on how people will begin to leave southern climes in favor of the north. Climate Migration--Is A Change in Store For the Finger Lakes?  It was a followup to a blog post I did for them five years earlier.

I have several posts on Climate Migration

Today on Amanpour and company, a Bloomberg reporter talked about the depth of the crisis and how it is spreading. Link below.

Things are getting very serious and we are in the early stages of what will become the new normal--AND IT IS ONLY GOING TO ACCELERATE!



Sunday, March 17, 2024

Florida Housing Prices Falling--Another Indication that Climate Migration May Pick Up

Back on March 1st I posted an article I had written for the March/April issue  Life In the Finger Lakes on how people are beginning to leave southern climes in favor of the north because of rising temperatures and rising costs for help, insurance... Climate Migration Is A Change in Store For the Finger Lakes? It was a followup to a blog post I did for them five years earlier.

Newsweek just put out an article Prices Fall as Homeowners Desperately Try to Sell on how the price of homes in Florida are starting to fall because of the surge in homeowners insurance, one the factors I mentioned in my article. Saying,

The Sunshine State's number of motivated sellers on Zillow remained much higher than in other states like California and Texas. As of Wednesday morning, California had 1,032 motivated sellers for a total of 74,792 properties listed, while Texas counted 1,829 out of a total of 1818,888.

The high number of motivated sellers in Florida might be explained, in part, by the skyrocketing home insurance premiums in the state. In the past three years, the cost of home insurance has grown by 102 percent, according to the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I), as the risk posed by extreme weather events is rising. Several private insurers have left the state or have stopped offering new policies.

Still early in this trend, we will see.



Friday, March 15, 2024

New Coalition Forms Calling for the End of Wireless Communication

 A new coalition recently formed to end the use to wireless communication because it is killing all of life on Earth, whether the radiation is coming from a cell phone, satellites, cell towers, WiiFi...

You can learn more about them by clicking on Global Radiation Emergency



Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Pentagon Says NO UFOs

The pentagon released a report f few days ago saying they have found no evidence to support extraterrestrial life.  to read the report, Report on the Historical Record of U.S. Government Involvement with Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP)

This does not surprise me as I have always thought that UFO's, aliens, etc.are inter dimensional, or alternative reality inhabitants in the space around us--Nature Spirits, Devas, Pixies, etc...

To that effect a few weeks ago I put a YouTube video about the Hidden Highway that exists in our world that some of these beings travel on. Below is link.



Friday, March 1, 2024

Climate Migration

The following is from the March/April issue of Life in the Finger Lakes.

Climate Migration

Is A Change in Store For the Finger Lakes?

I don’t think many of us were surprised to learn that 2023 was the hottest year on record for the eighth year in a row. Or that we recorded the highest ocean temperature ever last year. What did surprise many of us were the Canadian wildfires last summer that filled our air with smoke for weeks. Clearly climate change is beginning to affect us in unimaginable ways.

How are we in the Finger Lakes going to be affected?

Like most places, our temperatures will rise, weather patterns will become more erratic and there will be a decrease in the biodiversity of flora and fauna.

The biggest change may be a large influx of climate migrants looking to escape stifling heat and flooded coastal areas. For them, the Finger Lakes Region is a climate haven.

Five years ago, I wrote a piece for Life in the Finger Lakes, “Is Population Growth Coming to Upstate New York?” The article predicted a rise in our population from an inflow of climate migrants. So far there continues to be a net outflow of residents from New York State. However, prognosticators and national media have since begun to tout our area as a climate haven.

In his book How to Prepare for Climate Change, CBS correspondent Daniel Pogue recommends moving to cities along the Great Lakes such as Buffalo. “Cold, snowy Syracuse and Buffalo could be shelters from the storms,” Pogue said in an interview. He added, “Florida and Arizona are the worse places for you to retire.” Several other organizations believe the Great Lakes Region will be a climate haven, such as Wisconsin Public Radio, Crains Detroit, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and NOAA.

Gaia Vince, in her book Nomad Century, How Climate Migration Will Reshape Our World, feels the Great Lakes Region in the USA and Canada are climate havens that will see a “huge influx of residents … as the vast bodies of water should keep the temperature fairly temperate.” Believing the 45° N parallel (the very northern tip of NYS) and above will become the 21 century’s “booming haven.”

We need only look to our neighbor to the north of Lake Ontario to see how large inflows of immigrants can flood an area and change its complexion. It seems like there is one housing development after another from Niagara Falls to well on the other side of Toronto, approaching the Thousand Islands. In 2021 Toronto was ranked the 21st most congested city in North America; it spiked to being third in 2022. If we act now this does not need to be our fate.

The case for the Finger Lakes as a climate refuge is compelling. Our temperature is more moderate and we have an abundance of water, both from the Finger Lakes and our proximity to the Great Lakes. There are several factors that are creating climate migrants and drawing them to our area. First, life is becoming increasingly challenging in the south. Second, support networks sustaining hot areas are beginning to fray. Thirdly, the pool of northern havens is not as large as believed.

Climates are not friendly in the South and West
Consider some of last summer’s heat records. Miami, FL; Austin, TX and Phoenix, AZ each had several weeks of temperatures at 100 degrees or more. July was the hottest month on record.


A study by the First Street Foundation in 2022 predicted that the heat index will reach 125 degrees, what it calls “Extreme Danger,” at least once per year within the next 30 years in most Texas counties. As for the rest of the country, it said that 8 million residents in the U.S. experienced Extreme Danger Days in 2022; by 2053, that number will reach 107 million.

Rising temperatures will encourage people to move to cooler climates.

The National Ocean Service predicts that sea levels could rise by as much as a foot by 2050, overwhelming coastal areas. Large swaths of Florida and Louisiana will be below annual flood levels.

Additionally, rising sea levels will pollute fresh water estuaries close to the coast with salt, ruining the source of drinking water for many coastal areas. Then there is the surge of wildfires and the resulting smoke. Last year the UN forecast that wildfires will increase by 50 percent by 2100, and they will be more intense. Higher temperatures will provide more fuel for hurricanes and tornadoes, increasing their intensity, season length and most likely their frequency. All of which will disproportionately affect areas already hard hit by climate change.



 
Support networks are beginning to fray
Climate change is putting pressure on support networks that make home ownership possible in climate-stricken areas.

Consider homeowners insurance. Farmers just joined about a dozen other insurance companies that will no longer underwrite homeowners insurance in Florida. The average cost for insuring a home in Florida jumped 42 percent to $4,200 in 2023, compared to $1,800 the national average. Allstate and State Farm are no longer underwriting homes in Texas and California. Similarly, insurers are leaving Arizona and Louisiana.

Eric Andersen, head of AON, the largest reinsurer (reinsurers help insurers absorb catastrophic losses), testified before the Senate in March 2023. He said there has been
a crisis of confidence in predicting losses, particularly for wildfires and floods. Comparing the current state of underwriting risk to the financial crisis of 2008, Anderson stated “Just as the U.S. economy was overexposed to mortgage risk in 2008, the economy today is over-exposed to climate risk.”

Rising temperatures in the South is making it unsafe to work outside during heatwaves. OSHA recommends extra precautions be taken when temperatures reach 95 degrees. This will reduce when workers can work, and possibly the pool of workers, and raise the cost of home repairs.

Diminishing support networks will add to the climate induced pressure to have people move.

Climate haven locations are nuanced
Finding a climate haven is more than just moving  north. Changing weather patterns and other factors may alter perceptions of where a safe area is located. The Pacific Northwest’s 2021 heat dome, earlier departure of snowpack and infestation of pine beetles (which increase the chance of wildfires) showed it might not be the climate havenmany of us thought.

Last summer, New England saw heavy rainfall that led to flooding.The southern tier in New York is the most flood prone area in the state and has been flooded on several occasions. By 2100, New York City could experience a sea rise of 5 feet, give or take a foot. In August 2014, Toledo, OH faced a water crisis due to algae blooms in Lake Erie.

The good news is that we have time. People continue to leave New York. Surprisingly some of the states experiencing the highest inflow of new residents are also the most vulnerable states to climate change, such as Florida and Texas.

Preserve and protect the earth
Vince believes the world can handle the coming surge of climate migrants. In her book she points out that if we allow 20 square meters of space per person – more than double English planning regulations– 11 billion people would need 220,000 square kilometers. No doubt Vince has compassion for people and the environment, but her perspective is about how we can save ourselves, not how we can save our environment. I would argue that if we instead focus on how we can save the earth, we will in the process save ourselves.

The coming inflow of climate migrates provides an opportunity to help us focus on climate change, do something about it and attract resources.

We should try to protect and preserve as much land as possible. Fortunately, the Finger Lakes Land Trust (FLLT) has been doing so for years, as have the Central New York Land Trust and the Ontario Land Trust whose mandate includes a few areas in the Finger Lakes. Besides acquiring property, their use of conservation easements prevents the development of the land they have underwritten – meaning large swaths of land cannot be developed.

The more land we can lock up and protect from development, the more of our identity we can keep and the less we will look like one massive suburb.

President Biden signed an executive order when he took office that looks to preserve 30 percent of America’s land and water by 2030. Likewise, Governor Hochul signed legislation December 2021 to preserve 30 percent of NY’s water and land by 2030. The state will rely on a variety of measures to secure its ambitious goals from land purchases, to offering grants and encouraging conservation easements.

It will be a challenge to preserve 30 percent of the Finger Lakes by 2030. Max Heitner of the FLLT believes that the current amount of land preserved in the Finger Lakes as a percentage is in the low teens.

The state is beginning to prepare for the inflow of climate migrants. OnMarch 29, 2023 Senator Rachel May (whose district includes part of the Finger Lakes) introduced Senate Bill S6106, the Climate Relocation Planning and Preparation Act, to the finance committee. This is a start. But more needs to be done.

Businesses will also look to move to the Finger Lakes. Politicians need to realize we are a climate haven and not give them all sorts of tax breaks. Instead, they need to start thinking like Tom Sawyer who got his classmates to pay him for the privilege of painting a fence.

Fortunately, the inflow of climate migrants has yet to begin in earnest, so we have time to prepare. I expect very shortly we will see large pools of money looking to invest in our area; possibly even competing with land trusts for property.

Please donate to, or volunteer for, one of our land trusts. If you are a landowner, consider signing a conservation easement.

Madis Senner is an author who lives in Syracuse. You can read his musings at motherearthprayers. blogspot.com. His latest book is Everything Has Karma: Learning to Embrace Our Interconnectedness.