Arctic, and could not find its way back in time to survive. What will human survivors find, at the shift?
Where extreme cold is descending, the answer is obvious. The Bulge of Brazil will freeze, snow steadily falling,
and no vegetation or animal life indigenous to the area will survive.
Areas now tropical, along the Equator, which move into temperate zones, will experience shock. Where the
temperature change is not severe enough to kill the species, the plants and in particular the animal life will
migrate toward the warmth.
Likewise, where temperate species find themselves in tropical areas, they simply do better along the edges of the temperate zone, and migrate by virtue of surviving there, propagating there.
Oceans and winds carry seeds, and oceans carry fish to zones more in keeping with their biology, and thus are
great disseminators.
Most of the world will be wetter, under continuous drizzle, so deserts will not descend as much as the opposite,
mold and lack of sunlight affecting the vegetation, and lack of food weakening the animal life.
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ZetaTalk: Forcast Seasons
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ZetaTalk: Forcast Seasons
Note: added during the Jan 18, 2003 Live ZetaTalk IRC Session.
We have stated that due to the shift, a new geography will ensure, and a new climate for most lands. The shift happens
within an hour, and rotation starts within a day after the shift, the monster planet causing the shift on its way rapidly.
The largest influence on the climate of any given region is the sun, the degree of sunlight, whether this is experienced through clouds or a cloud-free sky. Thus, should those parts of the globe now experiencing winter get the summer sun, their climate would change rapidly, only being delayed by the frozen ground. The second largest influence is air and
water currents that pass over or near the locale. For instance, where ice masses such as a pole are melting under the
Equatorial sun, this cold water or air might flow over a land, cooling it considerably. A boy, sitting on a block of ice on a warm summer day, will be shivering, not sweating.
Thus, South Africa might find itself with temperatures more like Spring than Summer, though virtually under the new
Equator after the shift, due to the prevailing Westerly blowing cold air and running cold ocean current from the
melting Antarctica. And likewise, Alaska, due to have a virtual tropical climate in the Aftertime, might find this takes a year to settle in firmly due to the melting of the North Pole ice and the prevailing westerly blowing air and ocean
currents in their direction. Third largest influence is the state of the ground, as frozen ground takes some weeks to
warm up, and warm ground days to freeze. Think of Spring, when the warm steady sun melts the ground, seemingly
within days. Or of Fall, when a cold snap can put ice on the ponds and harden the ground, also within days. This
influence is unlikely to last thus, for more than a week or two, with pockets of lingering heat or cold in the ground, not the air. Thus, the climate change should be assumed to be the target climate, not the climate being left behind.
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ZetaTalk: Restart Gardens
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ZetaTalk: Restart Gardens
Note: written during the Nov 2, 2002 Live ZetaTalk IRC Session.
Human survivors should anticipate the shock of season change in accordance with their pre position and anticipated post position. Crops already in the ground may produce in the Aftertime climate if close enough to what they expect, and if pollination has already occurred. However, this should not be counted on, as the number of variables is higher
than man allows for. Most crops will sicken and fail to produce, regardless of man's expectations. The guidelines for
Aftertime planning should be:
1. Wait until after the shift to start new gardens.
2. Plant a test garden, and only when you can grow seed from the plants should you plant for food. If you can't produce seed, the plants too sickly to mature or the insects not viable to pollinate, then you will eventually waste
all your seed.
3. Flocks and herds can be observed, and managed accordingly. Chickens will eat bugs, relish them, and ducks and
geese nibble on plants along the waters edge. If this survive, and propagate, then lean in this direction in your
plans.
4. Anticipate gardens and crops outside of what is usual for your area, in a wider range, so that disappointments in plants that fail to thrive in the new climate can be replaced with surprises.
There are variables mankind does not normally consider that will be affecting life after the shift, such that an assumed plant or animal life would falter and simply die off, and others flourish. These variables have been present in the past, in your ancestors, when they migrated to new lands, but are not usually passed down to offspring. An immigrant to a
new land would bring seed, perhaps even a pair of prized livestock, and find even with the latitude and seasons similar to the home land, all die. Local fauna and flora, bacteria, rodents, affects the immigrants, though often unseen by the humans with high hopes. Thus, the failure is a disappointment but the reasons for failure not grasped. In like manner,
because of factors like acidity of rain, weather shock in insects or even bacteria in the soil, even plants and animals familiar to an area may succumb, and die off. Opportunistic germs today are affecting the biology of the world, such
that pre-existing illness is causing animal life to sicken. Germs are migrating, infecting in areas not usual, and the
immune systems of the affected lowered by the weather extremes and roiling emanations from the Earth's core.
Thus, in addition to the predictable climate you will shift into, you should anticipate failure in restarting your gardens and herds and flocks. The best plan is a broad plan, so that a failure does not devastate.
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ZetaTalk: Crop Adjustments
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ZetaTalk: Crop Adjustments
Note: written prior to July 15, 1995
To a very great extent, adjusting to crop failure depends on the personality of the individual forced to make an
adjustment. We will get specific.
Take, for example, a farm in the Midwest. Prosperous. Several farm hands. Occasional crop failures but in the
main they can smooth their profits to cover these. Now come the crop failures. First year, the usual fallbacks are
relied upon, although with the talk in the news about weather problems all over, they will be nervous. Second