Massive Crop Planting Delays Due to Extended Winter - Are Poles Shifting?
Even Rome saw snow this year. The winter is giving us extended cold. Where I am in Pennsylvania, it was 37 degrees this morning on April 30 when I woke up. Normally it would be at least 46 degrees. Not a huge difference, but it adds up when it seems to be every day, and the entire northern hemisphere. It affects things like North Korean crop losses and their willingness to talk like a friendly and reasonable nation.
"With the totals from the USDA as 3% of Spring Wheat planted vs 25% in the 30 year average, and corn at 5% vs 16% for the average and descriptions as "despicable" and a "snail's pace" for planting along with cold damage and drought across the central U.S. states they have described it as the "most stress" a wheat crop can handle. I've included a full timeline for crop losses moving forward to 2025 and this weeks incredible lack of planting. If this video doesn't not wake you up, nothing will." https://www.sott.net/article/384255-Adapt-2030-Ice-Age-Report-US-Planting-Report-Delays-cold-damage-drought-and-disease
It's worse in Canada. Expect rises in food crop prices in 2018.
The photo above in from late April 2018 near St. Tropez in the south of France.
Is this the kind of thing we should expect at the beginning of a pole shift?
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1P6obtIZP88&w=854&h=480]