Posted on 09/20/2024 5:57:33 PM PDT by ChicagoConservative27
TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — A tropical depression could form next week as an area of low pressure in the Caribbean moves toward the Gulf of Mexico, the National Hurricane Center said Friday.
“A tropical wave likely develops in the western Caribbean early next week. Right now, there’s a 40% chance in seven days,” Max Defender 8 Meteorologist Legh Spann said. “Many of the models drift the system north into the Gulf of Mexico by the middle of next week.”
As of Friday afternoon, most of the models appeared to zero in on a northern Gulf coast landfall. However, Spann said it’s too early to tell where a potential system may be headed or how strong it will be.
(Excerpt) Read more at wfla.com ...
That’s how they start.
OH NO! A tropical storm during hurricane season.......
They need to do a lot better than that if they want to scare people.
Oh, thank goodness. This might be a partially face saving bit of weather!
Hurricane Ian hit my part of Florida in late September.
It sucked part of my porch ceiling down.
Not sure if it was Ian or the one the year before, but heard stories about 200 mph winds sustained for 2+ hours from a guy who worked in a shelter (which had part of its roof ripped off and was flooded). Just the thought of if it ought to put the fear of God in anyone.
Living in Nevada as you do a storm in the gulf would not matter to you one way or another. But let me tell you something, as someone who lived on the gulf for over forty years, any storm that enters the GOM has the potential of life threatening or great potential for property damage.Even a non hurricane tropical storm can kill or flood thousands of people. Any heads up of a potential storm is of great importance to those on the gulf.
We’ll see. A lot of people laughed when Matthew destroyed the bend area of Florida or laughed last year when hurricane Idalia hit Florida hard. I guess it’s a joke to some.
On the one hand, this looks rather insignificant and hyped up. OTOH, aren't those the most symbolically used numbers in the Bible?
In any case, I've got a timestamp from 16 minutes ahead of this thread, with some notes involving what’s hovering in the Caribbean -- an important word of obscure origin from the 1600's.
Maybe I'll have time to explain tomorrow. Or not. It even has a max defender and an 8 involved.
It's a Hebrew voice so it's kind of important. And in the timing loop, here's this "unrelated" message about the weather. Just passing by and thought I'd at least mention it for documentation and reference.
A 40% chance of becoming a tropical depression, a 60% chance of not forming a tropical depression. This is not indicative of the formation of a tropical cyclone— which would be a concern to Coast of Texas all the way up to New Orleans.
No cylone- then it’s just a lot of rain— which Texas coast has been having for months now, and LA is used to it.
I always thought of myself as a he-man but! I was in Slidell Louisiana for Ida and while on the front porch at about 1 AM I heard the proverbial “freight train” in the distance and I cowardly went into the house petrified asking God if this was to be my demise. It wasn’t and I am so fortunate to have been humbled in such a way. The force of Gods creations is beyond our comprehension.
Maybe you don’t remember this.
Tropical Storm Allison and Hurricane Harvey are two storms that caused flooding in Houston, Texas:
Tropical Storm Allison
In 2001, Tropical Storm Allison caused severe flooding in Houston, Texas, that displaced 30,000 people and destroyed 2,744 homes. The storm dropped over 40 inches of rain in Texas, causing $9 billion in damage and killing 41 people. Allison was the costliest tropical storm in US history, with an estimated $5 billion in damages in Harris County alone. It was also the first Atlantic tropical storm to have its name retired without ever reaching hurricane strength
LOL! Oh we know. NOLA for 20 years and east central FL for 24 years. We know.
Anything that develops in the Gulf can be deadly - while we know that they try to get viewers by overstating a lot, we also know we need to be alert during the season.
Just wait until they start blowing the trumpets.
right. just cause they psyop us on everything doesn’t mean there won’t be a big bad storm.
the worst storm to hit this neighborhood was in 1992(ish) and didn’t even have a name.
In wondering if I had your ID correct -- that you are the poster who likes to learn a little something new every day -- I did a quick check of your posts to see if anything clicked/validated, and this was from yesterday:
"Rats can tread water for 3 days, and hold their breath for 3 minutes. Some don’t like water, but like snakes, they apparently can all swim if they have to."
Must have been you then. Therefore, I added you in. 🤓
(I include many links in my posts. That way a reader can at least 'hover' or stab at his phone to see the direction in which these various things lead. Even doing that much is rather informational. For the intellectually curious, however, it's more like when Buzz Lightyear first met Jessie. 😊)
"Right now, there's a 40% chance in seven days," Max Defender 8 Meteorologist Legh Spann said.
There's always a reason right now to employ seemingly insignificant information in order to reflect upon Biblical concepts. (One man's minutia...). Conduits and inspiration aplenty, published for one reason (maybe even for no good reason at all), yet instantly useful for something else entirely that the Dark Side couldn't envision if its life depended upon it. It's a lock-stepping, conformity-controlled, ingenuity-free zone over there. What can you do?
outstretched wings:
On the one hand, this looks rather insignificant and hyped up. OTOH, aren't those the most symbolically used numbers in the Bible?...
...It's a Hebrew voice so it's kind of important...
In the simple case of these two numbers, 40 and 7 first appear together in the Bible (47) in the Creation account. "Ki tov" [כי טוב, that it was good] = 47.
And in a general visual sense, 40 and 7 together (407) is a sign ("ot", also meaning a signal, or letter of the alef-beit). אות
= 407.
Regarding the Hebrew voice:
Aside from its attention on the Caribbean, this article included several other seemingly unrelated reference points from the subject I had been studying at the time this thread had been posted. Thus I'm putting it out there for documentation, and for anyone who might be interested. 🤔... 🤣
(So worth it!)
***
I'm not into the photos of supposedly strange suns, moons and planets that people are getting worked up over (these types of images could have perfectly normal explanations from say lighting effects, or maybe they are fake). But I do tend to cruise by such discussions for whatever might catch my eye. This one is a great example for how the free-flowing process operates.
In this case, it began yesterday with a photo of a hummingbird, hovering over the field and lilliput zinnias, captioned as:
A woman in Belvidere, Illinois took this photo of a hummingbird, but it's not the hummingbird I'm looking at - it's the sun.
Belvidere (from the Latin bellus + videre, meaning "beautiful sight")
The bird had been on my mind at that same time, because while our summer residents have already departed, we still have a few thirsty travelers following the syrup chain south. This will likely be the final week for the bottle, but there are yet many flowers to choose from, including the lilliput zinnias I start from seeds.
Hailing from the Caribbean [ultimately from Proto-Cariban *karipona ("person")], or at least their name (colibri), sort of, hummingbirds were named for the sound of their wings (something definitely to keep in mind here):
colibri, kolibri... קוֹלִיבְּרִי
= 358 = Mashiach = nachash/snake (the quintessential example of the Jewish numeric-spiritual concept of "a thing and its opposite" [דבר והיפוכו], which is also the phrase meaning "oxymoron")
That photo of the hovering hummingbird with outstretched wings had instantly reminded me of this bird that hovers over the waters, variously described as an angel, spirit of peace, bird of the islands, or a representative of painted bird handicrafts.
The hummingbird is the only bird that flies backwards. And like Ingenuity the Mars Helicopter, is attracted to the color red. ("שם חיבה ג'יני" -- nicknamed Ginny, or as shem chai bah, the Messiah i.e. the living name is in her שם חי בה -- Ginny)
They are known as hummingbirds because of the humming sound created by their beating wings, which flap at high frequencies audible to other birds and humans.
>>>
Hummingbirds have compact bodies with relatively long, bladelike wings having anatomical structure enabling helicopter-like flight in any direction, including the ability to hover.[14][15] Particularly while hovering, the wing beats produce the humming sounds, which function to alert other birds.[14]
Curious about the etymology of colibri, I discovered that its origins are obscure. Here's an explanation translated from French:
COLIBRI, subst. masc.
Etymol. and Hist. 1640 colibry (Le Père J. Bouton, Relation de l'establissement des François en l'isle de la Martinique, p. 71 ds Barb. Misc. 17, no. 11). Orig. obsc. Despite the location of its first attests. (see König, p. 73), the word does not seem to be indigenous either in the insular Caribbean or in Galibi (Fried., pp. 199-200; König, pp. 73-74). A derivation of the Occitan colobro, colubro "snake" because of the hummingbird's sudden outbursts of anger (G. Esnault ds R. Philol.fr., t. 26, 1912, pp. 291-312), the word having been conveyed in the West Indies by the French colonists, causes difficulties from the phonic and semantic points of view.
That proposed origin from a snake sure seemed weak and sketchy, that is until I realized that its root is shared by "cobra". And cobras do that flashy thing with their hoods:
Many cobras are capable of rearing upwards and producing a hood when threatened.
At this point I realized why a common hummingbird action scene had always looked vaguely familiar. That's the visual. In defending "their" flowers, or feeders, hummingbirds fan out their wings to hover and swoop in menacingly, then dart after the sip-snatching interlopers. (Would they be amused to know how much entertainment they provide? They are quite serious!)
causes difficulties from the phonic and semantic points of view...
Belvidere (from the Latin bellus + videre, meaning "beautiful sight")
On its own, the name-concept of the birds' supposedly snake-like "outbursts of anger" didn't have any legs. But as the reaction of a threatened cobra ("Max Defender")... the idea made simple, visual sense. Fanning out.
Orig. obsc. Despite the location of its first attests...
Hummingbirds were named in English for the humming sound of their wings, and colibri -- the name picked up by many languages -- came out in Hebrew spelled as:
קוליברי
קוליברי
with the intrinsic value of 358, the same as a snake and the Messiah.
kol [קול]: sound, voice
ibri beginning with a yud sounds like ivri with an ayin [עברי]: Hebrew = "one from beyond"
Here's Google Translate to compare the sound of a hummingbird to the sound of a Hebrew voice, "colibri" versus "kol Ivri".
Not really lost in translation, sound-wise.
"Right now, there's a 40% chance in seven days," Max Defender 8 Meteorologist Legh Spann said.
It's not just the letter chet (ח, 8) from the above link to the living name...
קול עברי (Hebrew voice) = 418, the name of the letter chet, חית.
From yesterday's placemark post:
It's a Hebrew voice so it's kind of important. And in the timing loop, here's this "unrelated" message about the weather. Just passing by and thought I'd at least mention it for documentation and reference.
The Hebrew word for humming, buzzing is zimzum, זמזום
It sounds downright Kabbalistic, even from the very beginning. The year blessing for 5784 ("May it be a year of opening a door", תהא שנת פתיחת דלת, which adds up to a truly banner year in Jewish history -- 2488)... is as a door taking an entire year to open (isn't 2024 something), now paradoxically coming to a close. At least in this last month of Elul, the king is in the field.
Zum zum zum zum gali gali...
Zimzum זמזום reads according to its letters as 7, 40, 7 and 40, because with "or" involved, there are always options.
Genesis 1:4 And God saw the light, that it was good (ki tov): and God divided the light from the darkness.
To anyone who's made it this far -- thanks for hovering along. Sorry for any typos. I've got to move on to a little painting project (actual paint).
God's blessings to you and yours. It's a long, long, journey even while remaining in one place..
"Are you ready? All right, let's make this the one" ~ A. Guy (literally)
There's a new world somewhere
They call The Promised Land
And I'll be there some day if you will hold my hand
I still need you there beside me no matter what I do
For I know I'll never find another you
I'll Never Find Another You ~ The Seekers
A woman in beautiful sight took this photo of a Hebrew voice, but it's not the humming bird I'm looking at - it's the sun.
Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael, Tractate Shirah 3:10-21
(2) "This is my G d and I will extol Him": R. Eliezer says: From where do you say that a maid-servant saw at the Red Sea what was not seen by Ezekiel and the other prophets, of whom it is written (Hoshea 12:11) "And to the prophets I appeared (in various) guises," and (Ezekiel 1:1) "The heavens opened and I saw visions of G d"? An analogy: A king of flesh and blood comes to a province, a circle of guards around him, warriors at his right and at his left, armies before him and behind him -- and all asking "Who is the king?" For he is flesh and blood as they are. But when the Holy One was revealed at the sea, there was no need for anyone to ask "Who is the King?" For when they saw Him, they knew Him, and they all opened and said "This is my God, and I will extol Him"
... with a twinkle in His eye, a spring in His step, and a song in His heart.
What’s brewing in the Caribbean? Tropical depression could form next week
(Keep on the Sunnyside!)
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