The level of anxiety children feel about the world they are growing up in is alarming but warranted. Children should be excited about the future, but instead, they carry the weight of substantial global issues they had no part in creating. Climate change is one of these issues, and the lies they keep telling the public are having its intended negative effect on children. For this, they should never be forgiven for climate change has turned into massive child abuse.
However, the climate is changing. It is getting more violent and certainly colder. Europe has never been so cold and snowy so early in the season. The summer heat has ended abruptly in many parts of the world, throwing serious doubt on the official narrative that we are suffering through the warmest years in modern history. Thus, you will not read anything you see below in the mainstream media.
The Mount Washington Observatory recorded its first measurable snowfall of the season this week, unusually early. While the snowfall was a modest 0.1 inches, it arrived almost a month ahead of last year’s first measurable accumulation and a good three weeks before the average first snow date of around October 1.
Winter is Arriving Early in Europe
Winter in Europe is arriving very early. A potentially record-smashing summer snowstorm has commenced in the European Alps, with a few models predicting as much as 5 feet of snow hitting the highest peaks this weekend. Early-season snow has been hitting Europe’s mountains for weeks, but now it’s intensifying, spreading to relatively low elevations.
On September 12, it’s still summer, yet the Met Office said that temperatures across Scotland would quickly dip to zero, reaching -3C (26.6F) in some isolated spots, which may be lower. Such readings would threaten the U.K.’s lowest-ever temperatures recorded at this time of year: -3.5C (25.7F) is the record for September 13 (set in Kinbrace in 2023), with -3.3C (26.1F) the benchmark for September 14 (set at Lagganlia back in 1981).
The incoming temperature anomalies are pretty astonishing, particularly given what came before. From France to Hungary, Germany to Montenegro, readings some 20C below the seasonal norms are on the cards by Friday, September 13:
Early-season chills continue to grip large parts of the U.S., breaking low-temperature benchmarks in several regions. This week, parts of West Virginia and Indiana experienced historic cold, felling century-old records. In West Virginia, Webster Springs logged its coldest September 9 on record, dropping to 37F (2.8C)—nearly 10 degrees colder than the previous low of 46F (7.8C) set in 2005.
Elkins, another W.V. town, also broke a long-standing record, dipping to 35F (1.7C) and surpassing the 1986 record of 39F (3.9C).
Much of the Allegheny Highlands was under a frost advisory as temperatures across the region hovered flirted around the freezing mark. The Canaan Valley Wildlife Refuge crashed well below, posting an icy 20F (-6.7C)—the lowest temperature in the CONUS on Monday.
Rockville set a new milestone Sunday morning in Indiana with 38F (3.3C), breaking a 124-year-old record set in 1899.
Rest of the World
August 2024 brought cooler-than-average temperatures to several regions across the globe. From the Atlantic islands to the northern extremes, many places experienced a noticeable temperature dip compared to their historical norms.
In Bermuda, the average August temperature was 27.6C (81.7F), 0.3C below average.
Pakistan had a cooler and wetter-than-usual August, with an average temperature of 29.9C (85.8F), 0.36C below the norm.
Ireland saw a cool month with anomalies of -0.7C noted at Markree (vs the 1981-2010 average used there).
Iceland endured a very chilly August, with a nationwide anomaly of -1C below the multidecadal baseline.
North America
Parts of the Eastern U.S. have broken or tied many long-standing temperature records. The NWS issued early-season frost advisories for many, with crops at risk. In Charleston, WV, thermometers dropped to 43F (6C) on Sunday, breaking the previous record of 45F (7C) set in 1944. Parkersburg, WV, tied its record low of 42F (6C), last recorded in 1986. Also, the Sunday morning low at Central Park, NY, rivaled a record set 153 years ago:
Lassen Volcanic Park, August 26, 2024. Heavy snow has continued in parts of Montana, prompting a winter weather advisory from the NWS office in Missoula. According to reports, Glacier National Park (GNP) areas received more than a foot of summer snow on August 30.
Missoula was also under a frost advisory and a freeze warning Thursday morning, with temperatures dropping as low as 28F (-2.2C) due to a descending polar front. Residents were cautioned to protect sensitive crops and vegetables — a first for August.
Conditions were hazardous enough that GNP officials were forced to close Going-to-the-Sun Road between Avalanche Creek and Jackson Glacier Overlook owing to the heavy snow, mostly, but also the ice.
A freezing weather system from the Gulf of Alaska interrupted summer along the West Coast as early as August 24, bringing snow to mountains in California and the Pacific Northwest. Madera County Deputy Sheriff Larry Rich said it was “Definitely unexpected to see snow at Minaret Vista in August. It’s not every day you get to spend your birthday surrounded by a winter wonderland in the middle of summer.”
The war of conflicting narratives continues with climate change, as in every other part of civilization. A recent Dartmouth-led study has revealed that the worst predictions for ocean rise owing to melting ice sheets are not likely to happen, yet the mainstream media keeps talking about massive melts in Greenland and Antarctica.
California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains experienced rare August snowfall and record-low temperatures this past weekend. A “winter-like cold front” is how the NWS described it, one that barreled in from the Pacific.
Temperatures across the state plummeted, setting new records. In addition to the snow in Northern California, mountain ranges in Wyoming, Oregon, and Colorado also received rare August snow this week.
Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, WY, recorded its first 2024-25 winter season snowfall on August 26.
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