Positive Changes That Are Occurring

Just stumbled upon the following “natural” disasters trend graph by the EM-DAT, The International Disaster Database, from 1900 to 2011.

http://www.emdat.be/natural-disasters-trends)

https://web.archive.org/web/20140528080808/http://www.emdat.be/sites/default/files/Trends/natural/world_1900_2011/eveyr2_view.jpg

Notice that the number of reported disasters starts to steadily decrease after around 2005. Coincidentally this is the exact moment when the gifter movement kicks in and busts lot’s of death tech and erects lots of cloudbusters. I think you did it ![Laugh]
. They probably don’t dare to update the information up to 2013.

See also:
http://reliefweb.int/report/world/annual-disaster-statistical-review-2012-numbers-and-trends)

Carlos, Edu, thanks for these great stories. Edu, wow, that’s a big one. In 2005, our barely-closeted Dark Masters had a big win with blatantly-augmented-and-steered Hurricane Katrina. You know, back when their scalar weather modification technology still worked, and big hurricanes still existed?

As you note, that was back before the widespread distribution of simple orgonite systematically mitigated, disabled and transformed the malefic, Death Energy-based weather modification and control system that most still mistakenly call ‘our cell tower network’ and ‘weather radar’.

Make no mistake, at least some of those towers actually carry phone traffic, and you can, indeed see the pictures that your local ‘weather radar’ produces…but those are merely the cover functions of those systems, or so I at least have subjectively concluded.

The drop in disasters matching the drop in violent crime, also well documented in this thread.

Here’s another huge blow against the Empire: Dallas, Texas - no small town in some ‘no influence, liberal hippie state’ – bans fluoride! You’ll note how it was efforts by local folks, going to their own local meetings, speaking up, not giving up, that led to the positive change:

http://www.sott.net/article/27……uoridation

Dallas, Texas ends over 50 years of water flouridation

Wed, 07 May 2014 05:45 CDT

http://www.sott.net/article/278670-Dallas-Texas-ends-over-50-years-of-water-fluoridation)

Anti water fluoridation advocates have been successful in the removal of fluoride from the water supply in Dallas, Texas. The ban comes after five decades of water fluoridation, but more and more people around the world have been gathering to put a stop to the practice over the last few years.

“We don’t need it and we’d just save a million dollars that we can use for something else. We’re looking into seeing what we can do immediately so we can get those funds up from now.” – Sheffie Kadane, Dallas City Council Member

“Yeah, this is major big. I knew we would prevail. It only makes sense. We’re spending too much money on an ineffective program.”- Scott Griggs, Dallas City Council Member

The decision was made after activists continually showed up to city council meetings , providing evidence and warning them regarding the risks involved with water fluoridation. As a result, the city could save over $1 million a year that is spent on the industrial chemical, that’s right, an industrial chemical.

“Poor Mother Gaia Not Dying, Crushed by the Virus-Like Burden of Man”, continued…

http://www.timesdispatch.com/news/bay-survey-finds-rebounding-blue-crab-population/article_a4c983d7-185f-516a-a1b5-96c87e6a99e5.html?mode=image&photo=0)

Bay survey finds rebounding blue crab population

4/11/2013

The Chesapeake Bay’s blue crab population is clawing its way back.

The number of blue crabs in the bay has reached 764 million, the most recorded since 1993 , according to the 2012 winter dredge survey results announced Thursday.

This year’s increase is driven by a spike in the number of juvenile crabs, at 587 million from 207 million in 2011.

While the overall numbers are up — 461 million blue crabs were counted in 2011 — the survey did register a drop in the recorded number of spawning-age female crabs.

"The crab population is the highest it has been in the past 20 years , and to see this record production of juveniles is truly remarkable ," Gov. Bob McDonnell said in an announcement.

“Those crabs will grow over the summer, and many will reach market size in the fall. Those that aren’t harvested and brought to the dinner table will become the building blocks for future generations of crabs.”

Chesapeake Bay Foundation Fisheries Director Bill Goldsborough called the results "most heartening."

http://krqe.com/2014/03/18/officials-nm-bat-population-recovering/)

Officials: NM bat population recovering

March 18, 2014

ALBUQUERQUE (KRQE) – There is new evident New Mexico’s bat population is recovering.

Officials at El Malpais National Monument say a recent check of the Junction Cave there shows the bat population has doubled in recent months from about 90 bats to 180.

The Junction Cave and dozens others across the state were closed to the public over the winter to allow the bats to hibernate.

The animals have dwindled in number in recent years because of drought, fire, and disease.

When the animals are in distress it makes them more susceptible.

The goal is to reopen the caves to the public by the end of the month.

You’ll note in the article that follows that it attempts, to spin the positive news as negatively as possible.

But they still can’t omit the kernel of truth: the 60% increase in the Sea Lion population since they were last officially counted ten years previously.

http://en.mercopress.com/2014/04/23/falklands-sea-lion-population-recovering-but-still-a-fraction-of-the-1930s-estimate)

Falklands sea lion population recovering, but still a fraction of the 1930s estimate

In the 1930s the Falkland Islands were reputed to hold the largest population of Southern sea lions, with a staggering 80,000 pups estimated to be born each year. However, a census in the 1960s and again in the 1990s revealed the population had declined by more than 90%.

With support from the Shackleton Scholarship Fund and the Falkland Islands Government Environmental Studies Budget, a team of researchers led by Dr. Al Baylis (Deakin University, Australia & SAERI) have recently completed the fifth census of the Falkland Islands sea lion population.

Over the course of three weeks in January and February 2014, over 4,500 sea lion pups were counted at 73 breeding sites around the Falklands (including seven new breeding sites).

This figure represents a 60% increase in the number of pups born since the population was last counted in 2003 , but it is still just a fraction of the 1930s estimate.

To look for clues as to why the sea lion population declined between the 1930s and 1990s, the researchers also visited the Jane Cameron Memorial Archives and explored 100 years of Falkland Islands natural history.

The real challenge now lies ahead: trying to piece together not only reasons for the population decline, but why the population recovery has been so slow. To answer this long standing question, the researchers will combine census data with recent data collected on the foraging behavior of sea lions and fine-scale population genetic data.

A final report on the 2014 sea lion census will be available later in the year.

Dr Baylis sent his sincere thanks to land owners for assisting with the census and granting access to breeding colonies.

Have you read that the melting ice sheet in Antarctica that’s going to, you know, raise sea levels around the globe is in fact being melted from below geothermally ? It was already pretty funny that they’d continued to push the story in the midst of expanding Antarctic sea ice so intense that a research ship going down there recently to ‘prove’ global warming had to be evacuated by the Chinese - because it got stuck in the ice. But this new geothermal angle makes it even funnier.

And the story that follows makes it even funnier, still. To maintain Cognitive Dissonance, furrow brow, tell self 'it’s an example of the extremes of Climate Change’’ and ''the CO2-driven warming has been hidden in the deep oceans.’

By the way, it’s delightfully cool here in Pittsburgh, in mid June. Gorgeous rains in perfect measure…

http://www.washingtonpost.com/……into-june/

Unprecedented: Parts of Lake Superior covered in ice almost a week into June

June 5 at 3:20 pm

It first arrived in late November and refuses to go away. It’s the ice on Lake Superior and there’s never been so much this late in the year, in 40 years of records.

“There’s still about 0.6 percent [ice cover] on Lake Superior, and that’s around Marquette and Keewanah Bay,” said George Leshkevich, physical scientist at NOAA’s Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory. “We haven’t seen this before, at least this far into June.”

Other years have had ice deep into the spring, but nothing to rival this year. For example, Leshkevich said fractional percentages of ice were observed on May 29 in 1996 and 2003;in 1979, 7.5 percent ice cover remained on the lake on May 14, but no data on how long it lasted.

There may have been ice this late sometime in the mid-to-late 1960s in the Apostle Islands area of Lake Superior, Leshkevich said, but the reports are anecdotal.

This year’s ice has been remarkable in all of its characteristics: duration, extent and thickness.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/nov/19/pollution-down-fish-recovering-in-potomac-river/

Pollution down, fish recovering in Potomac

11/9/2013

The Potomac River earned an overall grade of C on its 2013 State of the Nation’s River report card, a step in the right direction from its previous D, conservationists said, but a score that leaves much room for improvement.

Pollution is down and fish populations are up , according to the Potomac Conservancy’s report, but the growth rate of underwater grass — a key indicator of a healthy river — dropped below 40 percent for the first time in seven years.

“Our 2013 report shows the Potomac River is moving toward recovery,” said Hedrick Belin, president of the Potomac Conservency. “The report also documents some troubling signs that are on the horizon.”

Though still a problem, wastewater levels earned an A-minus from the conservancy for reaching an 82 percent compliancy rate for treatment facilities to meet water quality standards. Nitrogen loads were down, as were sediment loads. Phosphorus levels, however, remain a problem.

And while more than 50 percent of the nontidal streams in the Potomac River Basic had good or fair water quality , nearly 37 percent of those streams were in poor or very poor condition.

“We are still learning what a restored Potomac might look like,” said Claire Buchanan, associate director of Aquatic Habitats at the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin. “We’re finding out achieving one goal of the ecosystem does not necessarily mean achieving the goal of other features.”

“The fate of the nation’s river is in the hands of local planning boards, city council members and commissioners,” Mr. Belin said. “At the end of the day, we need leadership at the local level in terms of solutions. The fight at the local level is where this will either be won or lost.”

Read more:


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In Peter Gabriel’s ‘Biko’ he says ‘you can blow out a candle, but you can’t blow out a fire – once the flame begins to catch, the wind will blow it higher.’ County by county, state by state, the house of cards is crumbling for these scoundrels…

June 12, 2014

Oregon Citizens Overwhelming Vote to Enforce Ban on Cultivation of GMO Crops

Health Impact News Editor Comments:

I think the citizens of Jackson County in Oregon have taken the right approach towards GMOs: forget about trying to force companies to label them, just ban them outright!

The state of Oregon exports a large amount of their organic and non-GMO crops outside the U.S. to places in Asia, where countries like Japan and China either forbid or restrict the import of U.S. GMO crops. Last year, when an Oregon farmer discovered unapproved GMO wheat in his field, presumably the result of field trials by Monsanto many years earlier, several countries banned the import of wheat from the U.S., bringing economic hardship on farmers in Oregon.

Now the farmers and citizens of two Oregon counties have taken political action and passed laws banning the cultivation of GMO crops in their counties.

Oregon counties ban cultivation of GMO crops

Excerpts:

Despite the flood of corporate money poured into two small Oregon counties , local residents voted to ban genetically engineered crops from being planted within their borders.

Although Jackson County itself is home to less than 120,000 registered voters, the measure to ban genetically modified crops (GMOs) made headlines around the nation when it was revealed that large biotech companies like Monsanto were pouring hundreds of thousands of dollars into the area in order to affect the vote’s outcome.

Monsanto and five other corporations spent at least $455,000 in an attempt to defeat the initiative, and opponents of the GMO ban had gained an eight-to-one spending advantage as of April. According to the Associated Press, nearly $1 million of the $1.3 million spent during the campaign was used by opponents.

When the results were tallied, however, 66 percent of Jackson County residents voted in favor of the ban.

Meanwhile, a similar measure in Josephine County passed with 57 percent of the vote, despite the fact that a new Oregon law labeled the state itself as the only regulator of seeds. Jackson’s proposal had already qualified to be on the ballot then, so it was granted an exemption. The initiative in Josephine did not qualify for an exemption since it was proposed later, but residents went ahead with their own vote anyway and have decided to let the courts determine its legality.

Many thanks, Gare. In fact I read about it yesterday, myself, and was close to posting it. Weaponized food is a hugely important asset in our hidden overlords’ war against humanity, alongside energy and etheric weaponry hidden as an underlayer within our telephone and radar systems.

All their scams and cons are falling apart, because rising awareness is causing the mark to not have confidence in the con artist. Confidence being where the ‘con’ name comes from. An con artists fear, above all, the crowd turning on them, for the tarring, and the feathering, and the ride out of town on a rail.

You and me thinking about that same subject at the same time yesterday…how many others, around the globe, thinking the same thing, at the same moment? It’s what Don said about the trim tab on the huge rudder of a vast ship. I also see it as the birds in the flock up at the front who lead that big ball of flying birds that seem to move as one. It’s like with fish in a school, too.

Putin just another Secret Handshake Club member, to be sure, but his talking points, his agenda, must serve the will of the people, you see? The Secret Handshake Club is fighting a rearguard action, in every nation. Rising awareness is drying up and withering the parasite, and the rate of that process will only increase in speed.

http://www.collective-evolutio……bans-gmos/

It’s Official – Russia Completely Bans GMOs

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev recently announced that Russia will no longer import GMO products , stating that the nation has enough space, and enough resources to produce organic food.

If the Americans like to eat GMO products, let them eat it then. We don’t need to do that; we have enough space and opportunities to produce organic food.” – Medvedev

Russia has been considering joining the long list (and continually growing) of anti-GMO countries for quite some time now. It does so after a group of Russian scientists urged the government to consider at least a 10-year moratorium on GMOs to thoroughly study their influence on human health.

“It is necessary to ban GMOs, to impose moratorium (on) it for 10 years. While GMOs will be prohibited, we can plan experiments, tests, or maybe even new methods of research could be developed. It has been proven that not only in Russia, but also in many other countries in the world, GMOs are dangerous. Methods of obtaining the GMOs are not perfect, therefore, at this stage, all GMOs are dangerous. Consumption and use of GMOs obtained in such way can lead to tumors, cancers and obesity among animals. Bio-technologies certainly should be developed, but GMOs should be stopped. We should stop it from spreading. ” – Irina Ermakova, VP of Russia’s National Association for Genetic Safety

Within the past few years, awareness regarding GMOs has skyrocketed . Activism has played a large role in waking up a large portion of Earths population with regards to GMOs. People are starting to ask questions and seek answers. In doing so, we are all coming to the same conclusion as Russia recently came to. In February, the State Duma introduced a bill banning the cultivation of GMO food products. President Putin ordered that Russian citizens be protected from GMOs. The States Agricultural Committee has supported the ban recommendation from the Russian parliament, and the resolution will come into full effect in July 2014.

This just goes to show what we can do when we come together and demand change and share information on a global scale. Change is happening, and we are waking up to new concepts of our reality every day . GMOs are only the beginning, we have many things to rid our planet of that do not resonate with us and are clearly unnecessary . We are all starting to see through the false justifications for the necessity of GMOs, no longer are we so easily persuaded, no longer do we believe everything we hear and everything we’re presented with. Lets keep it going!

I like the post that follows because it demonstrates how large an impact just one, or a mere few people can have on things. In this case one person caring for the bluebird boxes over a twenty year period, as the bird’s numbers dwindled literally to the single digits in areas.

It reminded me of the animated feature ‘The Man Who Planted Trees’, which documents a man name Elzeard Bouffier’s singlehanded reforesting and transformation of a remote, treeless, desolate valley in France near the turn of the last Century. The authorities, of course, dubbed that edenic metamorphosis a ‘bizarre natural phenomenon’, and gave him absolutely no credit at all. I’m sure news accounts at the time used the phrases ‘scientists baffled’ and ‘experts puzzled’.

Funny how ‘the Man Who Planted Trees’ is absolutely never shown in TV, nor in schools, non ?

The story itself is yet another exemplification of how a very small number of individuals can change things in the hugest ways – the trim tab on the rudder of the gigantic ship that is humanity.

And citizens followed the work of the first pioneer bluebird-savers, and repeated it. See how it expands in an organic way, like the orgonite gifting movement has?

And check out, below, how the authorities bend over backwards to not help their own official state bird. They also complained about the bluebird boxes at the airport, and ‘some were vandalized’. You can bet those vandals were stooges on the Secret Handshake Club payroll, much like the folks who set most of the wildfires we see every year.

Oh, by the way, the airport trail that the government said was so dangerous to the citizenry has produced almost half the fledges.

You were taught ‘can’t fight City Hall’ so that the trim tab on the rudder would no longer operate. Too bad for the lying charlatans who profess to have our best interests at heart no one believes them, anymore.

http://easthamptonstar.com/Outdoors/2014226/Nature-Notes-Bluebird-Comeback

Nature Notes: A Bluebird Comeback

2/26/2014

In the early 1980s there were only about seven active osprey nests on the South Fork. The osprey was still on the New York State’s endangered list. But there were even fewer eastern bluebirds on the South Fork and just a pair or two on the North Fork. The state correctly made a big hullabaloo about the sparse osprey population, but did very little to encourage the recovery of the bluebird, which, ironically, at that time had already had the distinction of being New York’s official bird for decades and decades.

Several volunteer bluebird groups sprung up around the state , one of which was formed by the the South Fork Natural History Society. It had been in existence for less than a year when the late Kim Hicks of Montauk advised the club that he was building bluebird boxes of a special design developed in the Midwest, ones with a removable roof so that the box could be periodically cleaned.

Karilyn Jones of SoFo led the effort to bring back the bluebirds locally beginning in 1987 using Kim Hicks’s homemade boxes. At that time we had located two pairs of breeding bluebirds, one in Hither Woods and another in Springs near the Green River Cemetery. Don Ferris had noticed a pair there year after year.

Bluebirds prefer open country, and so under Ms. Jones’ direction we set about starting bluebird trails — one in Hither Woods, one at East Hampton Airport where a bluebird had been spotted, and one on the Sag Harbor Golf Course at Barcelona and, a year or two later, another one at the horse farm in Northwest owned by the Freemans, who own Home Sweet Home Moving and Storage on the highway in Wainscott.

The boxes were mounted on steel stakes about four or five feet above the ground along the edges of open areas and set at about 100 yards apart. The design was a good one because in the first year at least three bluebird pairs found them and nested in them. That’s the kind of encouragement we needed and more boxes and more trails were added in ensuing years. There were several volunteers tending to the boxes and keeping track of the baby bluebirds and their fledging success. Several boxes were occupied by tree swallows, a bonus, a few by house wrens, and even one or two by white-footed mice.

The boxes had to be cleaned and repaired every year and Karilyn handled that responsibility well for almost 20 years. The trails became so promising under her tutelage that early on CBS sent a videographer and a TV journalist out to record the growing population. The segment aired nationally on the weekly Sunday morning news program.

At some point, the ranks of the monitors thinned and the trails began to overwhelm the few that remained to count the young and clean the boxes.  ***The United States Department of Agriculture, which is responsible for animals at Federal Aviation Administration-sanctioned airports, complained about the boxes at the airport. Some others were vandalized.***  But reports from locals who had bluebirds coming to their birdbaths regularly made the time well spent. Raccoons, however, were beginning to raid the nests and there were more and more nest failures in the latter part of the century.

The local population peaked and then began to fall. Enter Joe Guinta, a bird trip guide for New York Audubon early in the 21st century. He picked up on the raccoon problem right away and began installing raccoon guides on each nest pole. Nest failures diminished and the local bluebird population made a second comeback.  **In 2005, 38 baby bluebirds fledged, in 2006, 45, and the population grew and grew until 2012 when a record 143 bluebird babies joined their parents in flight. The airport trail produced almost half the fledges, 67.**

By the same token,  **more and more bluebirds showed up here and there on Long Island during the winter bird surveys. Meanwhile, while the South Fork bluebird populations was prospering** ,  **John Potente, a dentist from the central Suffolk area, also started trails in his neck of the woods, as did many others on Long Island. Soon eastern bluebirds were no longer a thing of fantasy. They were again the official state bird with a capital B.**

In 2013, notwithstanding a drop of bluebird fledges from a record 143 to 67, 29 of which were at the airport, the 15 bluebird trails and the 160 boxes serving them also produced 249 tree swallows, down from 318, 169 house wrens, up from 91 and, for the first time, two crested flycatchers. This last species is famous for including a molted snakeskin in its nest cavity, at times hanging down from the entry hole, not always easy to come up with. No snakeskin, but Jon did find a strip of plastic that apparently served as a snakeskin mimic.

It is no easy job tending to all those boxes on all those trails year after year. But the rewards are great:  **two or three pairs in 1987 more than a 100 last year.**     Tree swallows count mosquitoes among their prey. In the early fall when migrating through, they can often be seen 100 or more at a time, adults and young, perched near salt marshes or hunting over them.

I’m sure Joe and SoFo would be happy to accommodate a few more dedicated volunteers in 2014. If you are interested call the South Fork Natural History Museum in Bridgehampton.

There’s a war on, in case you didn’t notice. Check out the Feds deliberately ruining the livelihoods of recreational fish operations under the guise of ‘protecting the fish’…amidst booming fish numbers well documented in this thread.

Fascism features a seamless melding of government and business, which is why the Commercial fishing interests within our own Fascist dictatorship were placed ahead of those of the populace in this case.

The good news is that you can see the States stepping up to protect themselves as best they can. I think that State secession is going to be the next big blow against the hidden parasitic few who for this moment control the many.

http://www.foxnews.com/science……latestnews

Gulf Coast charter captains say the feds are ruining their businesses by needlessly cutting their fishing season in response to complaints from commercial fishermen , and now their state lawmakers are stepping up to tackle the issue.

This year’s federal fishing season for red snapper was initially set at 40 days long, but then regulators slashed it to just 9 days. Recreational fishing captains say the federal policy is destroying their business for the year and has forced them to cancel hundreds of already-scheduled trips with customers who want to fish.

“I already had the boats sold out for the season and then I had to cancel those trips because I couldn’t provide the service,” Capt. Mark Hubbard, a recreational fishing captain out of Madeira Beach, Fla., told FoxNews.com.

Hubbard and other fishermen point out that the number of red snapper this year is the highest in decades, and say the regulation is purely bureaucratic and not really about protecting fish . The recreational fishing industry employs an estimated 150,000 people along the Gulf and pumps some $7 billion into the local economies, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA. In 2012, more than 3.1 million recreational anglers took 23 million fishing trips in the Gulf of Mexico region.

“I already had the boats sold out for the season and then I had to cancel those trips because I couldn’t provide the service,” Capt. Mark Hubbard, a recreational fishing captain out of Madeira Beach
– Mark Hubbard, recreational fishing captain

Those figures could fall dramatically, thanks to a federal policy that Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., called “reckless” and one that “ severely hurts our fishermen and the Gulf economy … the old system governing recreational fishing for red snapper is unquestionably broken.”

Now, the gulf states are counteracting federal regulations by setting longer fishing seasons in their own state-controlled waters that extend 3 miles off the coast. Florida, Alabama, Louisiana and Texas all have set longer seasons, and last week Mississippi also did.

Some state and federal laws actually conflict, as Mississippi claims control over water going out 9 miles from the shore rather than the 3 miles recognized by the federal government.

Federal regulators told FoxNews.com that they slashed the fishing season because recreational fishermen had routinely fished more than their allowed quota of fish, according to the agency’s estimates. Additionally, commercial fishermen complained about that, since they compete to catch the same fish, and sued in court to force the agency to crack down. The commercial fishermen won the lawsuit.

“The judge said we had to take more effective action,” Roy Crabtree, the administrator of NOAA’s Southeast Region National Marine Fisheries, told FoxNews.com.

Crabtree also noted that red snapper are doing very well and are now relatively plentiful despite being fished nearly to depletion in the 1990s.

“We have made remarkable progress in rebuilding the stock,” Crabtree said. “We have the healthiest population in 30 years.”

Given that, recreational fishermen say there’s no good reason to drastically limit their fishing season at the last minute.

“This agency is completely incompetent to manage fisheries,” said recreational fishing captain Bob Zales, who operates in the Florida panhandle.

Zales is happy with the recent state actions and said he made out well this year by fishing entirely in state waters instead of federal waters. But not all fishermen can do that – Hubbard says that in his part of Florida, near Tampa, almost all of the red snapper are in federal waters and so the regulations have hit him hard.

Environmental groups support the restricted fishing window.

“For many years, there were too many fish being caught – for five of the past six years, the recreational red snapper quota has been exceeded, at times by almost 100 percent. We need to fully rebuild red snapper populations, in order to have greater fishing opportunities,” Ellen Bolen, director of Ocean Conservancy’s Fish Conservation Program, told FoxNews.com.

She added that the fish are currently relatively young and need to be protected until they are old enough to reproduce.

“Right now we have young snapper, but need a mix of the old and young. Just like a town. Right now we have a town full of teenagers. In order to have a functioning town, we need a healthy mix of adults, teenagers and babies,” she said.

Fishermen say they support policies that will lead to more fish, but say there is a healthy balance that regulators fail to strike . I want a healthy fishery as much as anyone. My business depends on that,” Hubbard said.

Fishermen question the accuracy of the government estimates that show fishing over the quota.

“But let’s assume it’s real – tell me what damage it did to the fishery? We have the highest mass of fish we’ve ever seen,” Zales said, adding that some people simply don’t like the idea of recreational fishing and want to stop it.

“Environmental organizations, who have infiltrated our federal government – they are hell-bent on reducing the fleet of fisherman,” Zales said.

Wow! Worth clicking the link to see the utterly massive schools of Anchovies in Southern Cal.

Encouragingly, the mainstream media article is unable to even mouth the words “um, global warming caused it!”, rather having to stick with the standard " scientists baffled ." Notice also, please, how they scrupulously avoid even estimating the number of fish…you know, perhaps using a term like ‘untold millions upon millions’? But I guess that would represent ‘going off message’.

You’ll see the term ‘swarms’ is used in the headline to deliberately create unease. For the record, insects swarm, whereas fish gather, mass, school, swim.

And there’s a link near the story telling about thousands of dead fish nearby – I’ve subjectively concluded that it’s just another one of the inside-job fish kills that are all over the media lately. Have you noticed them? Since they can’t stop the unprecedented explosion of life, they’re creating mayhem and attempting to use it to manipulate public opinion back to ‘poor mother Gaia is dying.’

Too bad for them I’m calling them out.

http://www.latimes.com/local/l……story.html

Massive school of anchovies swarms off La Jolla

July 8, 2014

A massive school of Northern anchovies could be seen migrating off the coast of La Jolla on Tuesday afternoon, baffling scientists who said they haven’t seen anything like it in more than 30 years.

A large crowd formed at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego pier around mid-morning to watch the anchovies , said Robert Monroe, a communications officer with Scripps. Monroe ran down to the pier with a GoPro camera, initially thinking it was a red tide.

“It was remarkable. From a distance it looked like an oil slick and you think ‘What happened?’ and then you get up close and it’s amazing,” he said. “It’s like watching the motion of a lava lamp.” Once he got down to the pier, he threw the camera to three grad students already in the water with the fish.

Worldwide distribution of simple tactical orgonite has broken the back of the weather modification and control system that clandestinely underpins the cell phone networks and weather radar systems around the globe. The orgonite transforms the death energy that the systems utilize into life energy (Wilhelm Reich called it ‘Dead Orgone Radiation’ and ‘Positive Orgone Radiation’, respectively).

As a result, rainfall is up, way up, and the baldfacedly-lying media would have you believe that ‘global warming caused it’ .

That increase in rainfall is making things wonderful in nature, as you can see below - check out the most abundant Sand Eel population the charter captain below has ever seen.

I’ve also seen a number of stories of late saying that global warming is also causing boom bust cycles in marine populations. It’s a lame cover story, part of the rearguard action our hidden, parasitic masters are fighting to cover for the amazing, unprecedented health and vitality we’re seeing everywhere in oceans around the world, as patiently documented in this thread.

‘Global Warming is Causing It!’, ah, mirth. Even the establishment’s own numbers, generated wherever possible by thermometers placed in the middle of swaths of concrete, or next to heat vents, shows almost 20 years of cooling underway. To maintain Cognitive Dissonance, tell self ‘that is merely a pause , and the extra heat is in fact hiding in the deep ocean .’

See how the same thin lies are used, time after time? It’s going to be like in ‘the Boy Who Cried Wolf’ when the bust cycle doesn’t come, and people like me get to point it out.

http://www.corkwhalewatch.com/……west-cork/

Unprecedented sand eel numbers great news for whale watching in West Cork

June 13, 2014

As predicted in my previous log, we now have an intense bloom of plankton in full swing, and the sea is green, far more than blue, with rich phytoplankton. Not predicted, is the incredible amount of lesser sand eels that have assembled to feed on the bloom in West Cork waters. I have never seen them so abundant at any time in the past 40 years.

Having looked at several samples of them, it is very clear that the vast majority of them are two year old fish, showing that the wet summer of 2012 must have suited their spawning activity very well, in some unexplained way. All fish species spawn annually, but very often there is no regeneration, and all the larval fish perish, with no survivors at all. Then, every now and again, all works according to plan, and there are millions of new recruits to add to the stock, such as there is this year.

All this abundance has not gone unnoticed and a good number of minke whales, and a lot of sea birds have been gorging themselves on sand eels, as well as all the predatory fish in the area. It’s a tough life, being a sand eel. There seems to be more minkes about than is usual, with a good showing of calf size animals, as there was last year. It is good to see plenty of young whales about, proving they are still breeding successfully. It is these youngsters that have a preponderance for visiting boats, and will spend up to half an hour, circling the boat and passing under the hull, sometimes upside down, showing off their swimming skills. An absolute delight for whale watchers and the only time you get to see the exquisite, streamlined shape of a minke whale’s tail.

A good showing of basking sharks over the last few weeks, in spite of poor conditions for bringing them to the surface. A combination of strong sunshine and warm, balmy air is the ideal for them, and such weather is forecast for the week ahead. A lot of the sharks are young , relatively small for their species, but here and there you find a whopper……

The last three posts, feature the following quotes:

“I have never seen (Sand Eels) so abundant at any time in the past 40 years.”

“they haven’t seen anything like (the massive Anchovy school) in more than 30 years.”

"We have the healthiest (Red Snapper) population in 30 years.”

Not going back to the largest salmon catch ever, last year, etc., etc.

Juxtapose those quotes against the story that follows:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/……d-of-fish/

The End of Fish

The oceans are stretched, and certain fish species are approaching depletion. Leading scientists project that if we continue to fish this way, without allowing our oceans time to recover, our oceans could become virtual deserts by 2050 . That’s just 36 years from now. Given that demand for seafood – along with the world’s population – is rising, don’t be surprised if this window closes even faster. Make your peace with fish, because it may not last much longer.

We’re not biologists and we’re not scientists, but in 2010 – aboard the TED Prize Mission Blue voyage to the Galapagos – we joined 100 of the world’s leading ocean scholars and advocates. The expedition, led by National Geographic explorer and that year’s TED Prize winner, Dr. Sylvia Earle, made us acutely aware of the overfishing crisis. If this sounds alarmist, look at the data. The Census of Marine Life concluded in 2010 that 90 percent of the large fish are gone, primarily because of overfishing. This includes many of the fish we love to eat, like Atlantic salmon, tuna, halibut, swordfish, Atlantic cod. If we don’t allow for proper recovery, these fish risk total extinction.

The recent experience of Ivan Macfadyen, a famous yachtsman, confirms these findings. In 2013 he sailed from Melbourne to Osaka – the exact path he had taken in 2003. What he noted this time around was the silence of the ocean. “What was missing,” he said, “were the cries of the seabirds, which, on all previous similar voyages, had surrounded the boat. The birds were missing because the fish were missing.”

So I thought I’d take a quick look at how we’re doing on our road to “Ocean desertification” described in the post immediately preceding. The Washington Post, who I’m told are truthful and have my best interests at heart, told me about 'The ‘End of Fish.’

I thought I’d check and see how the fish populations they mentioned were doing on the way to our oceans becoming “virtual deserts”. Poor Mother Gaia is dying, crushed by the virus-like burden of mankind, you see!

But, wait, wow, below you can see how scientists are ‘surprised’ at the ‘amazing bluefin recovery’. You may have noted that, contrary to what you might imagine would take place with someone of that mindset and livelihood, scientists are often either baffled, puzzled, or surprised.

So let’s check out how far along Atlantic salmon, tuna, halibut, swordfish and Atlantic cod are on their road toward “total extinction”:

Atlantic Salmon: are being chowed down by the booming Striped Bass population. January 26, 2014: “Researchers Exploring High Salmon Mortality Rate During Early Migration.”

Re: Salmon, our truthseeking friends at the major news organization somehow ignored what was literally the largest Pacific Salmon harvest in history, last year, but I digress.

Atlantic Bluefin: Sept 26, 2012: “ Scientists surprised at bluefin tuna recoveryAll the models used by the group show a clear recovery of the reproducer tuna biomass.”

May 30, 2014 – Amazing bluefin tuna recovery’ detected - the six authorized Spanish vessels exhausted their quota for bluefin tuna in less than 24 hours, an unprecedented event. Overall, they captured nearly 2,300 tonnes in one day, three times what they had fished in 2011 (800 tonnes) for more than three weeks, MAGRAMA reported.”

Atlantic Halibut – This dense report shows their numbers steadily climbing: http://www.fsrs.ns.ca/docs/FSR……alibut.pdf . And on Aug 18, 2013 – “German fisherman catches world-record 515-pound Atlantic halibut.”

Atlantic Swordfish: 2/6/2014: “Overfished in the 1980s and ’90s, the swordfish stock has since been fully rebuilt.”

Atlantic Cod: July 27, 2011: “Atlantic cod stocks recovering: Study – A 2010 report by the the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization showed that the cod numbers in Newfoundland’s Grand Banks grew 69% since 2007.”

June 30, 2012 – Biologically, ecologically we’re seeing a major shift back to a system that will eventually become dominated by capelin (a staple of the cod diet) and cod. … I think we are seeing the beginnings of a recovery now ."

March 13, 2014: “ Atlantic Cod Showing Signs of Recovery in Newfoundland

Check out how the Japanese fisherman, who’d never caught a single giant squid in his entire career, caught two this year and is ‘puzzled’.

June 29, 2012 – There are so many Spanish Mackerel on the Atlantic Coast between Fort Pierce and Palm Beach that commercial cast-netters are able to catch them by the tons. Mackerel have increased in size as well as number. Twenty years ago, a 5-pound Spanish was a rarity. Today tons of fish reach that size and larger. It takes a 7-pounder to turn any heads, and a 7-pound Spanish is every bit a match for a king mackerel of similar size.

July 30, 2013 – Fish numbers are in and they are amazing. The real bonus this summer has been the presence of Coho Salmon for the first time in 20 years and the creel survey tells the story. The running five-year average of retained hatchery origin Coho for Area 13 in June is 86 fish – in 2013 the assessed total is 5,186! In addition over 17,000 wild coho were released, compared to the previous five-year average of 263, an astonishing change. I’ve caught twice as many halibut in Campbell River this year compared to all the previous years combined that I’ve fished here.

August 1, 2013 – Cardigan fishermen enjoying unprecedented sea bass numbers. Many people in the Cardigan area are enjoying the taste of sea bass after an unprecedented number of the fish entered the tidal region of the River Teifi. The fish have been so plentiful in recent weeks that anglers from various parts of West Wales have been fishing between the bypass bridge and Netpool. In one week there were reports of more than 200 bass caught, many of the fish weighing up to five pounds and a whopper landed from a boat near Cardigan Island weighed in at 10 ½ lbs.

Feb 20, 2014 – Increase in number of giant squid catches seen as omen by puzzled fishermen . Shigenori Goto, a 44-year-old fisherman, caught two squids off Sado Island in Niigata Prefecture. “I had seen no giant squid before in my 15-year fishing career,” he told The Japan Times.“I wonder whether it may be some kind of omen.”

May 2, 2014 – Idaho Expects Strong Spring Chinook Fishing Season; Already More Fish For Harvest Than Last Year . The forecast predicted the 6th highest return in the last 20 years – fishery managers are now fairly certain the run will come in at, or above the pre-season forecast. The Wednesday count at Bonneville – 17,409 adult chinook – is the 17th highest single-day count on record, and the third highest since 2002.

July 1, 2014 – “At Black Butte Lake, the water level is high, and they’re catching a lot of catfish out there, and bass is doing well ,” “They’ve been catching a lot of stripers and trout, and one guy I talked to just caught a 33-pound salmon he had to let go,” Dewberry said.

http://seattletimes.com/html/outdoors/2023287489_razorclammingwashingtonxml.html

In a boom year for razor clams , here’s a guide for new diggers

4/2/2014

It might be the worst-kept secret in the Northwest this spring: Razor clamming is going to be epic in 2014.

“We’ve seen three good waves of successful spawning events this winter,” says state Coastal Shellfish manager Dan Ayres.

“Clamming is strong now and should remain strong over the next couple of years. The ocean is very healthy and there is a lot of food for razor clams.”

6/22/2014 – Lake of the Woods, Minnesota – “ The numbers of slot fish that we are catching is unbelievable .”

6/28/2014 – Sockeye run at halfway point double 10-year average , over 20,000 a day crossing Bonneville Dam. The 2014 sockeye count at Bonneville’s fish ladders reached 224,679 through Thursday, which is more than double the 10-year average through June 26 (108,827) and well ahead of last year when 89,166 sockeye had been counted at Bonneville through that date. That 224,679 count is already the fifth largest on record for an entire season. And half or more of the 2014 return is likely still swimming toward Bonneville.

‘Thriving’…‘Explosive growth’…‘Nearly three times that of the next best year’…

12/2/2013 – Record waterfowl numbers and native fish thriving at Dixon Refuge . Numbers of migratory waterfowl visiting the Wetlands Initiative’s Dixon Waterfowl Refuge at Hennepin & Hopper Lakes this fall are the highest ever recorded , and populations of reintroduced game and native fish are thriving. The 2013 fall migration has exceeded many of our previous records for individual species counts. Single-day counts for Ruddy Duck, Gadwall, Redhead, Green-winged Teal, Blue-winged Teal, Mallard, and Northern Pintail are all higher than they’ve ever been since the first year of restoration in 2002 . The number of coots, a great indicator species for healthy lake vegetation, is nearly three times that of the next best year . Many large-mouth bass, northern pike, and walleye (are) present and rapidly growing. Native fish species such as pumpkinseed and the state-endangered star-headed topminnow were also numerous, and bluegill and bowfin, a rare ancient fish of the Illinois River backwaters, were both found to be reproducing in good numbers. “ All fish observed during the surveys were in excellent condition ,” said Sullivan. “They were averaging around 120 percent of peak condition; that is, they were fat, happy, and growing .”

1/30/2014 – Wild trout thriving and multiplying in Boise River . The river’s trout population has seen explosive growth since the early 1990s. “ It’s remarkable how this river has recovered.”

2/28/2014 – Oregon Minnow Thriving and No Longer Endangered . A tiny minnow called the Oregon Chub was put on the Endangered Species List more than 20 years ago. But the Chub has rebounded, and now officials want to make it the first fish ever taken off the Endangered Species List because of population recovery. When the fish were listed as endangered, biologists could account for less than 1,000 Oregon chub. Now, there are around 160,000 of them.

4/24/2014 – Kokanee thriving in North Idaho . The new Hayden Lake kokanee fishery is a highlight in the North Idaho fishing scene. Lake Pend Oreille’s kokanee continue their rebound, prompting IFG to propose raising the daily limit from six to 16. Surveys indicate there may be two to three million adult kokanee in the lake . Starting Saturday, for the first time since the 1990s, the Lake Pend Oreille Idaho Club’s annual K&K Spring Derby will have a kokanee division along with the rainbow and lake trout divisions.

4/24/2014 – Walleyes thriving in Huron . Port Huron, Mich. — While doom and gloom have dominated headlines about the salmon fishery in Lake Huron since the alewife crash in 2005, some species, like the walleye, have prospered. Natural reproduction of walleyes has soared in recent years, so much so that state fisheries managers have stopped stocking walleyes in Saginaw Bay, where the lion’s share of Lake Huron walleyes are produced and caught.

5/2/2014 – Big tuna thriving off coast . LONG-tail tuna have taken up residence in Nelson Bay and have got anglers racing for their gear, according to Paul ‘‘Ringo’’ LennonThey’re right throughout the bay at the moment, and coming off the headlands around Tomaree,’’

5/24/2014 – Iowa fish populations leap forward . Decades of effort by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, environmental groups and private property owners have resulted in better fishing in Iowa, especially for trout and walleye — two prized game fish. Improvements to watersheds that prevent soil erosion and better upkeep of waterway banks have led to an eightfold increase in the past 30 years in the number of Iowa streams with self-supporting trout populations.

6/9/2014 – Fishing thriving around the New England . Fishing exploded right after Mother’s Day throughout New England’s saltwater fishery and has been hot since. Shad fishing has been excellent on the Merrimack and Connecticut rivers. More than 300,000 shad have passed over the Hadley Falls Fish Lift, along with at least 621 blueback herring, 195 gizzard shad, 10 striped bass, 5,540 sea lamprey and 12 Atlantic salmon.

7/9/2014 – Oyster farming is thriving in Rhode Island

Remember, to maintain Programming, tell self 'it’s a pause’ .

March 6, 2014 – Return of El Nino Could Bring Rain, Heat, Misery

April 14, 2014 – If El Niño Comes This Year, It Could Be a Monster

May 15, 2014 – El Nino’s threat to major food crop yields

June 14, 2014 – El Niño is going to make your 2014 miserable

June 17, 2014 – Doubts Surface Over 2014 El Nino Development

July 6, 2014 – Peru says El Niño threat over, waters cooling and fish returning

July 10, 2014 – Nature Hits the ‘Pause’ Button On El Nino Development

July 11, 2014 – El Nino 2014, Climate Alarmists Disappointed