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6.06.2009

Connect the weather dots...


Ross Romaniuk in the Winnipeg Sun today reports that Friday, June 5, 2009 broke a new record for the coldest for that day in all Manitoba history.

I post this as educational material under Fair Use laws:

Unseasonably-cool weather slows ice cream sales

The Winnipeg Sun
Saturday, June 6, 2009
By Ross Romaniuk
Sun Staff Writer

Winnipeg is shivering through a June cold spell that was expected yesterday to lead to a record low maximum temperature.
The afternoon temperature at Richardson International Airport was forecast to climb no higher than 9 C after reaching only about 8.1 C over the noon hour -- well short of the previous low maximum of 10.8 C, which was set for June 5 at that location in 1992.
Discomfort
Environment Canada meteorologist Dale Marciski said cold arctic air flowing south over the Prairies, northern Ontario and the north-central U.S. is behind the pre-summer discomfort.
The chill was set to possibly bring record low maximums yesterday to Morden, Sprague, Gimli, Fisher Branch and Pinawa in southern Manitoba, and to The Pas in the north.
"I don't think in any case would this be the coldest temperature ever in June," Marciski said. "There are colder highs than this. But for June 5, these could be the coldest high temperatures."
At a time when southern Manitoba's normal high temperature is 23 C and the low is 10 C, last night saw a risk of frost across the region and an expected Winnipeg low of 1 C.
In parts of the Interlake the mercury was forecast to drop last night to as low as -1 C, downright dangerous for plants.
"We have a lot of problems with cold weather and frost -- putting plants away every night and taking them out every morning," said Denis Remillard, owner of the St. Leon Gardens plant store in Winnipeg. "It's been several years since we've had a challenging spring like this."
The plant store is giving workers more days off due to the cold's effect in slowing sales, Remillard said.
At the Bridge Drive-In, fewer than 50 customers had arrived yesterday to buy ice cream or other such snacks by mid-afternoon.
Approach normal
"That's one-eighth of what we should be doing," manager Roger Brisebois said, noting his staff had more idle time. "I sent one girl home, and we're just putting around here."
The low last night at Winnipeg's airport was projected to come reasonably close to the June 5 record of 0 C at that location, set in 1998.
The highs today through Monday will range from 14 C to 16 C, Marciski said, adding they might "approach normal" by hitting close to 20 C on Wednesday and Thursday.
ross.romaniuk@sunmedia.ca


If more and more people connect what is wrong with our weather -- endless days of overcast skies, unseasonably colder than normal temperatures, and supposed to be uncommon (but common now) easterly-winds, then you'll find that this is not nature, but rather man-made weather modification, using chemtrails as the tool for this icky weather.

But I discovered something yesterday. A person created a link to a web page off of Alex Jones' PrisonPlanet.com forum that says YES WE CAN do something about chemtrail vapours.

Chembusters, which use Orgone to clear out the chemtrail vapours and help bring back the blue skies again.

See also:

Youtube - Winnipeg Skywatch - Sunday May 3, 2009
Youtube - Winnipeg Skywatch - Chemtrail Effects
Goodbye Chemtrails, Hello Blue Skies
Chembuster - the remedy for Chemtrail health problems
Youtube.com - How to make an Orgonite Chembuster

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