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Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Translation: Higher produce prices are coming

WATERLOO, Calif. — Much-needed rainfall in Northern California has been consistently coming down strong for weeks, leaving many thinking it's too much of a good thing all at once as the high amounts of rain are impacting the state's agriculture and those working it.

The Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF) said that although it's hard to calculate, hundreds of thousands of acres of farms across the state have been impacted since the first storms began in December 2022. Without a final calculation, it's also difficult to put a number on the losses but the alliance is quite sure it's millions of dollars.

16 comments:

  1. Oh fuck these people....
    Been dry as a bone for decades. Now its too fucking wet. Go piss up a rope.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't know much about farming, do you?

      Delete
    2. Kenny, you said what I was gonna say. Try to ignore them but there are so many of them.

      Delete
  2. Kali could become too difficult for leftists to live in.

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    Replies
    1. Sush, I don't want the fuckers moving to my state. We got enough of them asshole Lib retirees invading from NJ, NY, Mich & Mass.

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    2. Didn't you move to North Carolina from New Jersey?

      Delete
  3. 10 am PDST - Atmospheric River #19 coming through NorCal as we speak.

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    Replies
    1. Elmo, I just looked. The center is stagnating, losing energy. The front will occlude and energy loss through latent heat.
      That is relative and insignificant in short term.

      What you can expect is lots of rain but more like spring consitions rather than cold, blustery fast moving cold front.

      Lots of rain because the storm center will linger as it decays. It still has lots of energy. A series of lows should form further south and a bit eastward as a cold front leapfrogs to the south. I'd expect a warm front to develop further south.

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    2. Oh yeah, I see the low is now at 992 Mb. Getting weaker, relatively speaking.

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    3. And now, within the past hour, the center is reported at 988.
      Very strange, I wonder if it is NOAA instrumentation.

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  4. Pressing ahead with removal of 4 Klamath dams. If the tribes are complaining about low flows now (holding it back in Upper Klamath Lake) they just haven't seen nothing yet. Idiots.
    Jerry

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    Replies
    1. So long as the Karuk and Hoopa can gillnet every Salmon out of the Klamath they'll be happy.
      Trad fishermen? No Salmon season for you, you White Supremacists you.

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    2. Elmo, I've been watching it. Last evening the center was 998 Mb. Six hours later it was 980 Mb. I don't know what it is now but it's winding up for a late season punch.

      The center has been stating offshore as it works down the coast. I'll check now.

      Delete
  5. one thing I have done for the last few years is try to get everyone I know to start a garden
    learn how to grow some of your own food anyway. I am going to add a few more beds this year myself. as I don't see the food problem getting any better any time soon here.

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  6. The Karuk and Hoopa are proof inbreeding is a bad thing. Dealt withtem when I lived in Siskiyou County....

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  7. One thing, (just one), about all this water in mexafornia is that the Tulare Lake in the Central Valley is showing up again. After more than a hundred years, the lake is showing up again. So much water.
    The farmlands in the area flooding so no crops can be harvested or planted, too much mud.
    Heltau

    ReplyDelete

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