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Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Calif San Francisco flooding- more amazing footage- Submerged by King Tides, homes destroyed, cars swept away- Severe Weather 20-min Jan 5 video report w transcript at Heating Planet blog

Officials warn this is part of escalating extreme weather and natural disasters, with repeated flash flooding threatening low-lying coastal communities. Major disruption as a powerful storm triggers California flood conditions, with king tides pushing water into streets and transit routes in San Francisco. Flash flooding California event caused widespread flooding, turning roads into waterways. READ & WATCH: California Coastal Flooding! San Francisco Submerged by King Tides, Homes Destroyed, Cars Swept Away transcript below[Severe Weather channel- the unstoppable force of nature, raw, real, and unfiltered.from United States Joined YT Apr 15, 2025 55.1K subscribers 229 videos]

TRANSCRIPT

Oh my gosh. Wow. [Music]

Narrator: San Francisco and the wider Bay Area experienced significant flooding on January 4th and 5th, 2026, after a powerful winter storm coincided with exceptionally high seasonal tides. The combination of sustained rainfall, strong onshore winds, and elevated coastal water levels pushed seawater and runoff into low-lying neighborhoods, waterfront roads, and transit corridors, disrupting daily life across the region at the start of the new year along the city's eastern waterfront, including parts of the Embaradero and Mission Bay. 

Tidal waters overtopped drainage systems and pulled on streets and prominades. In several locations, water spread into parking areas, bike paths, and ground level public spaces, forcing temporary closures. Similar scenes were reported in shoreline communities around San Francisco Bay, where access roads were submerged during peak tides and remained impassible for hours. transportation was among the most affected services.

Flooded roadways slowed traffic throughout the city and neighboring counties, while commuters were urged to avoid coastal routes during high tide periods. Some bus routes were rerouted and travel times lengthened as crews worked to clear debris and drain standing water. Ride hail services and deliveries faced delays, compounding disruptions for residents returning to work after the holiday weekend.

Homes and businesses in low-lying areas reported water intrusion, particularly in basement, garages, and storage spaces. Property owners described damage to flooring, electrical systems, and stored goods, as well as the loss of equipment in small waterfront businesses. Building managers deployed pumps and sandbags while residents moved belongings to higher ground in anticipation of additional high tides. Public services were placed under strain as city crews responded to blocked storm drains, downed debris, and flooded intersections. Emergency management officials issued repeated advisories, warning of hazardous travel conditions, and urging people to keep clear of flooded streets.

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Another source re:

SON 1 San Francisco Terrifying storm, king tides- "A dangerous preview of future"- SON Street Food channel 16-min Jan 4 VERY INFORMATIVE and fascinating video report, w transcript- Heating Planet [Over and over when I'm searching-

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Coastal flood advisories remained in effect through January 5th, reflecting concerns that elevated tides could prolong impacts even as rainfall eased.

The flooding also disrupted daily routines in subtler but widespread ways. Parents navigated altered school dropoff routes. Workers adjusted schedules around impassible streets and outdoor activities along the waterfront were cancelled. Parks and recreational paths near the bay were closed, limiting access to popular public spaces and highlighting the vulnerability of shoreline amenities. Meteorologists attributed the event to a convergence of factors rather than a single extreme downpour. Seasonal king tides, the highest astronomical tides of the year, were amplified by storm surge from persistent winds and steady rain. With the ground already saturated, runoff drained slowly, allowing water to linger in streets and low spots long after peak tides passed.

City and regional officials said the incident underscored ongoing challenges posed by coastal flooding in San Francisco. Aging drainage infrastructure, extensive shoreline development, and rising sea levels have increased the city's exposure to such events. In recent years, authorities have expanded temporary flood defenses and long-term adaptation planning. But the January flooding demonstrated how quickly daily life can be disrupted when multiple risk factors align.

Oh. Oh no. Oh, it's in them. Yeah, they're uh

In neighboring Bay Area counties, particularly Marin and parts of the East Bay, flooding compounded regional disruption. Low-line communities near tidal marshes saw streets temporarily transformed into shallow waterways, cutting off access to residential blocks and shopping areas. Some residents reported difficulty reaching essential services, including pharmacies and grocery stores, as parking lots and connecting roads were inundated during peak water levels. Commercial activity across the waterfront economy slowed noticeably. Port operations faced minor delays as access routes flooded while restaurants and shops along the bayfront closed for portions of the weekend.

Small business owners described lost revenue during what is typically a busy period, noting that cleanup and repairs extended beyond the immediate end of the storm. They slowed down. A [Music] Utilities were also affected, though widespread outages were avoided. Localized electrical and communication disruptions occurred where water reached underground infrastructure, prompting precautionary shutdowns and inspections.

Public works departments worked around the clock to clear storm drains clogged with debris. An effort officials said was critical to preventing more extensive flooding. [Music] Officials emphasized that while January's flooding did not involve a single catastrophic failure, its cumulative effects were significant. The event interrupted transportation, commerce, and daily routines for tens of thousands of people, illustrating how moderate but overlapping hazards can produce widespread disruption. As San Francisco continues to plan for future storms, the January 4th to 5th flooding has become another data point in the city's ongoing assessment of how to protect a dense low-lying coastal metropolis. Thanks for watching Severe Weather, where we break down the facts behind nature's most intense moments. If you found this video helpful, please like, comment, and subscribe. Your support keeps this channel going. Hit the bell so you never miss a real, calm, and clear report. Note, some footage in this video may be used for illustration and may not show the exact event described. See you in the next one. Stay informed. All From Severe Weather Wind https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vpw0a4nkRYc
[KE: Everything scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]

Guardian letter gives Heating Planet blog credibility, courage- blogger empowered

"To truly understand the scale of what we face, we must confront an uncomfortable truth: the Earth will survive this crisis. It is humanity, and countless other living species, that may not. As we edge closer to an irreversible point, the climate is becoming less a 'challenge to manage' and more a hostile environment in which many will struggle to live. The planet is already adapting to its future. The question is whether we will do the same."

Timidly I posted yesterday

Monday, January 5, 2026

It's too late to stop global warming, I think. If we reduce emissions now, we might slow it down, but at this point we have to face reality. Climate change is happening and we need to deal with it, make changes in our lives so we survive. Next few years, weather weirdness is going to affect everyone in different ways, depending on where you live. Ignoring it will leave you ignorant.

But did not feel confident enough to promote that post as it's kind of "out there" but now a letter to The Guardian Jan 4 quoted above says something similar, closing with- "Adaptation funding is not charity. Emissions cuts are not optional. Honesty, courage, and compassion are now survival tools. Anything less is betrayal.Keith Nicholls Swansea"

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I feel more empowered, thanks to The Guardian -ke

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jan/04/it-is-not-the-earths-future-at-stake-in-the-climate-crisis-it-is-ours?fbclid=IwY2xjawPKGCVleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeuqjDMIxlJRGbHYdkKQ8_e5-7ligFNOa3TI2impvW7TqptCOHKsOV8g_qZjY_aem_KNx2zXUfEdMZF1gS9mLyRg

-ke

SON 2 San Diego New Year 2026 Floods- "How quickly 'normal' weather can turn life-threatening" 15-min Jan 2 Street Food channel report w transcript- read & watch at Heating Planet blog

A powerful rainstorm colliding with an extreme king tide has turned San Diego, California, into a dangerous flood zone on the very first days of 2026. Streets, rivers, and low-lying neighborhoods are overwhelmed as nearly a month’s worth of rain falls in hours sending muddy water into homes, businesses, and major roads. This is a real-time lesson in how quickly “normal” winter weather can turn into life-threatening flash floods.READ & WATCH- 1 Minute Ago: Terrifying Rainstorm and King Tide Overwhelm San Diego, USA in New Year 2026 Floods, transcript followsSON 1 San Francisco is here ***TRANSCRIPT***[raw AI-generated words from these videos are already readable, so I can just copy and paste here, saving my hands, gratefully]
Right now, the first days of 2026 are turning the Pacific coast into a live stress test for survival, not just infrastructure. A chain of Pacific storms is piling straight into an extreme king tide, driving seawater up over beaches, parking lots, and seaw walls, and threatening to turn familiar streets into fastmoving brown rivers. In San Diego, nearly a month's worth of rain is trying to fall in a single day, pushing hillsides and storm drains toward their limits. Farther north, some of the highest tides in decades are squeezing every low-lying neighborhood right up against the edge of the ocean. As we move into this first Pacific storm cycle of 2026, the setup along the West Coast is brutally clear. One low pressure system after another is lining up over the ocean, dragging long bands of moisture into the same shoreline that is already facing a rare king tide. According to forecasters, this is not just a stormy weekend. It is a pattern where heavy rain is hitting saturated ground at the exact same time that ocean water is pushed close to record levels around San Francisco Bay and other low-lying coastal zones. Here's the important part. When that happens, the water has fewer exits. Storm drains begin to back up. Creek mouths that normally empty cleanly into the Pacific start to choke. In San Diego, between midnight and early afternoon on January 1st, gauges picked up roughly 2.46 in of rain. turning it into one of the heaviest single day events there in nearly a century of records and triggering fast flooding on streets that usually handle winter storms without much trouble. This is the kind of pattern that can quietly turn an overnight flood watch into a morning where people wake up to find key roots in coastal neighborhoods already underwater. In San Diego, the numbers behind that first storm of 2026 already tell a dangerous story. Between midnight and the early afternoon of January 1st, the gauge at the international airport picked up around 246 inches of rain, putting this New Year downpour into the same league as some of the 15 heaviest single day events on record there since the 19 the 1930s. That much water in that short a window did not just make streets wet. It primed rivers, gullies, and storm drains for fast, messy flooding at the exact moment people were waking up to a holiday morning. Here's the important part. The San Diego River surged to about 12.75 ft early on January 1st, brushing the upper edge of minor flood stage and forcing forecasters to issue a river flood warning that stayed in place into the next day. NBC7 reported at least 11 swift water rescues across the county, including a man pinned in rising water under a bridge in Mission Valley and an adult with a child pulled from a car caught in fast-moving flood water near Fashion Valley. In Mission Hills, cars were partially submerged and at least one business took heavy damage as muddy water pushed into the ground floor. Neighborhoods such as South Crest and Rolando Park again saw flood scenes familiar from previous storms, but with water spreading farther across streets and into low spots than residents expected at the start of the year. The impacts did not stop at the front door. Because of flooding, authorities temporarily shut down several key routes, including the Five Points area near the Coronado Marina and stretches of Interstate 5 near Del Mar and major interchanges around Oceanside. More than 5,000 San Diego gas and electric customers lost power in neighborhoods such as Logan Heights, Mountain View, and Lincoln Park before crews slowly restored service through the day. At San Diego International Airport, a ground stop froze departures for a time and by about in the afternoon, roughly 235 flights were delayed and 49 were cancelled before operations began to recover. At the same time, the National Weather Service issued a beach hazard statement through the end of the weekend for the county's coastline warning that large surf strong rip currents in the next round of high tides could bring more coastal flooding to low-lying areas even after the heaviest rain shifted inland. Next, we move north to see how a colder atmospheric river is lining up to drench central and northern California while the Sierra turns into a deep winter hazard zone. Farther north, central and northern California are bracing for a different but equally dangerous side of this pattern. A colder atmospheric river is sliding over the Sacramento and Sanwaqin valleys and into the Sierra foothills carrying steady rain into communities that sit downstream from burn scars levies and long river systems. According to the National Weather Service, a broad flood watch is in effect for lower elevation areas in the western foothills from late Friday night through Monday afternoon as a series of bands comes onshore and keeps the ground saturated for days rather than hours. Here's the important part. This is not one clean burst of rain and then a break. Forecast through Sunday call for as much as 2 in of rain around Vakavville, Sacramento, and Mary'sville up to about 4 in near Grass Valley. around three inches near Plerville and close to one inch in places like Stockton and Modesto. Across the region, totals from Friday night through Monday could reach one to three inches on the valley floor and 3 to 5 in in the foothills. At the same time, a wind advisory covers parts of the northern Sacramento Valley where sustained winds of 15 to 25 miles per hour with gusts approaching 45 miles hour could topple branches that push already stressed trees and knock out power to scattered neighborhoods. The instability riding on top of that moisture means the threat does not stop at plain rain. Local station KC has flagged Saturday as an alert day with scattered showers capable of briefly turning into stronger thunderstorms. Forecast point to pockets of very heavy downpours, lightning, small hail, and at least a low chance of funnel clouds or a weak short-lived tornado in parts of the central valley in the lower foothills. In a setup like this, one intense cell over a vulnerable spot can overwhelm local drainage in minutes, turning a routine shower into street flooding and sending first responders back into high water rescues just as people are trying to get through a holiday weekend. Higher up the Sierra Nevada is shifting into full winter hazard mode. As colder air digs in, forecasters expect mountain passes to collect feet of new snow with some summits near the crest piling up several feet over the course of the event and key crossings such as Carson and Sonora Pass possibly seeing snow depths approach 5 ft. That kind of loading makes chain control spinouts and long delays on Interstate 80, Highway 50, and other Trans Sierra routes much more likely with white out conditions possible in the heaviest bursts. For anyone planning to cross the mountains, the difference between leaving before the strongest band and leaving during it could be the difference between a long but manageable drive and hours stuck in a line of stopped vehicles while plows fight to reopen the road. Next, we widen the lens to the rest of the West Coast where the same storm chain is spreading heavy rain, intense wind, and dangerous snow from Southern California all the way to Washington and Oregon. This storm chain is not just a local California problem. According to forecasters, the same Pacific systems that drenched San Diego and are now soaking the central valley and the Sierra are part of a broader pattern spreading unsettled weather along much of the West Coast. As each low pressure center moves inland, bands of rain and wind sweep across coastal communities and inland valleys, keeping rivers high soil saturated and travel conditions changeable from Southern California northward. Here's the important part. In this setup, different regions feel different faces of the same system. Farther north, storms that arrive as heavy rain at lower elevations are expected to fall as thick snow in the higher mountains, turning key passes and high routes into winter hazard zones for hours at a time. Even where accumulations at sea level stay modest, the combination of wet ground, gusty winds, and freezing levels that rise and fall can bring down branches, tip weakened trees, and trigger scattered power interruptions. What looks like just another gray, rainy day on the radar can turn in a short window into a dangerous period for drivers, hikers, and anyone caught out in exposed areas. Across the broader region, the message remains the same. This is a coastwide stress test. From commuters in Southern California dodging ponding water and detours to travelers in higher terrain, watching snow and ice stack up along mountain approaches, millions of people are dealing with different pieces of the same storm machine rolling in from the Pacific. And even as this first wave begins to shift inland forecast discussions already point to additional pulses of moisture waiting offshore, lining up to rotate back toward the West Coast in the coming days. Next, we turn back to California and focus on what those next waves could mean for already saturated ground stressed rivers in communities that have just been through one of the first big weather tests of 2026. For California, the most important part of this story is not what has already happened. It is what the next waves could still do to a landscape that is already saturated and a coastline already pressed hard against the edge. Forecasters are tracking additional low pressure systems over the Pacific that are expected to swing more moisture toward the state in the coming days, keeping showers and periods of heavier rain in the picture instead of allowing a clean drying break. That could mean rivers, creeks, and storm drains are asked to carry another round of water while they are still running high from the first hit of 2026. Here is the important part. When storms arrive after the ground has already soaked up as much as it can, the way the system reacts changes. It takes less new rain to produce the same level of runoff. Slopes that held during the first burst become more fragile. Channels that were just high enough to stay within their banks can more quickly spill out into nearby streets and fields. Forecast discussions warn that if the next pulses line up with high tides again, low-lying coastal neighborhoods, areas along bays and estuaries and communities near smaller rivers could see faster, more aggressive flooding than they did during the opening storm. Even if the total rainfall numbers look similar on paper, the concern is not only water standing where it usually does not belong. Each new band of rain and wind can raise the stress on levies, culverts, bridge approaches, and hillside neighborhoods that have been through multiple tough winters in recent years. Forecasters and local officials are watching for signs of additional landslides on steep terrain, more road wash outs on smaller routes, and renewed power outages where saturated soil and gusty winds can bring down trees that have already been weakened. In this kind of pattern, the most dangerous morning for some communities may not be the first one after the headline storm, but the second or third morning when people are tired of alerts and the next round arrives a little stronger or a little less expected than the one before. Next, we step back and close the loop on this storm cycle, looking at what this new year pattern is already telling us about living on a coast where the line between routine winter weather and high impact flooding is getting thinner every year. As this new year storm cycle winds down, it leaves behind more than flooded streets and long travel delays. It leaves a clear reminder that for millions of people along the Pacific coast, winter is no longer a quiet background season. It is a time when king tide stronger storms and aging infrastructure all meet the places where people live, work, and travel. The scenes from San Diego, where a single day brought roughly 2.46 46 in of rain and push the river to minor flood stage. And the warnings for central and northern California and the Sierra are not separate stories. They are different angles on the same simple fact. More of what matters in daily life now sits close to the edge of rising water and fast changing snow lines. Here's the important part. None of what we are seeing guarantees that every winter will look like this. But forecasters and emergency managers have warned for years that when warmer oceans feed stronger storms into familiar coastlines, events that once felt rare can start to show up more often. High tides that barely touched a seaw wall a generation ago now arrive on top of heavy rain and a wind-driven surge. Roads in neighborhoods that were designed for a different climate can be pushed past their limits in a single long weekend. For families, the line between routine winter storm and this time we have to leave can come down to a few extra inches of water arriving at the wrong hour of the morning. What this first big test of 2026 shows most clearly is how quickly conditions can flip when storms, tides, and river levels all line up. In San Diego, that meant swift water rescues and power outages. In the central valley and the foothills, it means days of flood watches, slick highways, and a Sierra that can collect several feet of new snow on the passes. Along the coast, it means low-lying neighborhoods learning again exactly how close they are to the next king tide. The images from this week will fade from the headlines, but the questions they raise about where we build, how we prepare, and how closely we watch the next ban on the radar are going to keep coming back every time the Pacific decides to push hard against the shore again. As this first Pacific storm cycle of 2026 begins to move off the radar, it leaves behind more than flooded streets, damaged roads, and long lines of stranded travelers. It leaves fresh high water marks on rivers and coastlines, new scars on slopes and levies. And one more clear reminder that the line between routine winter weather and high impact flooding along this coast is getting thinner each year. From the roughly 2.46 46 ines of rain that pushed the San Diego River into minor flood stage to days of flood watches in the central valley and deep new snow-loading mountain passes in the Sierra this week has shown how quickly familiar places can flip from normal to dangerous when storms tides and river levels all line up at once. If this update helped you understand what has been happening and what to watch for as the next waves arrive, take a moment to subscribe, turn on notifications, and share this report with someone who lives along the West Coast so they are not caught off guard. Paying attention to official watches, warnings, and local guidance before the water rises or the snow starts to fall is still one of the most powerful tools anyone has in a season like this. Question for you in the comments. Where are you watching this New Year storm pattern from? And what worries you most in the days ahead? ***https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWrVVQNr5SY
RECENT more coming shortly

SON 1 San Francisco Terrifying storm, king tides- "A dangerous preview of future"- SON Street Food channel 16-min Jan 4 VERY INFORMATIVE and fascinating video report, w transcript- Heating Planet

[Over and over when I'm searching for reports about the atmospheric River that is hitting the Pacific coast, this channel comes up. Here is first of four maybe more videos about recent California floods, all of them from SON Street Food, who apparently has changed their focus. Good job, here goes -ke] READ & WATCH: 1 Minute Ago Terrifying Storm Floods and King Tides Turn San Francisco, California- transcript below- Jan 4, 2026 A powerful Pacific storm combined with record king tides has turned parts of San Francisco, California into raging rivers, flooding highways, waterfront neighborhoods and low-lying streets. [SON Street Food Description Welcome to Son Street Food Join us as we explore the most delicious street food from around the world. from United States Joined Mar 19, 2025 1.69K subscribers 37 videos][KE must have changed their focus...] TRANSCRIPT [Music] Right now, Northern California is getting a dangerous preview of its future. King tides and a Pacific storm have turned Bay Area streets into brown fast water, trapping cars and killing at least one person. Here is the important part. This is only the first wave for Northern California. This weekend is not a normal high tide cycle. On January 3rd, local time, a Pacific storm arrived at the same moment as the strongest king tides in more than 20 years, pushing water higher into the San Francisco Bay than many people have ever seen in their lifetimes. Tide gauges near Chrissy Field in San Francisco measured some of the highest water levels since 1998, placing this event in the near historic category, according to local media and forecasters. The impact has been felt first along the low-lying edges of the bay. Counties such as Marine, Soma, Alama, and San Monteo, as well as parts of central San Francisco, have seen neighborhoods and business districts turn into shallow lakes. Along Highway 101 between Saucelo and San Raphael, underpasses and stretches near Marshand filled quickly, trapping cars and water up to chest level as rescue teams pulled drivers and passengers to safety. In RV parks and waterfront communities near Corta Madera and Mil Valley, residents woke up to find their steps and walkways underwater with kayaks and small boats suddenly becoming the safest way to move around the block. According to the National Weather Service and local reports, this first surge of flooding is not the end of the story. Forecast call for an additional 40 to 50 millimeters of rain across many lowland areas and up to 100 millimeters along the coastal mountains including Mount Tamal Vampas in the Santa Cruz range over the next couple of days. That extra rain will run off into rivers, creeks, and storm drains that are already stressed by today's high water, turning this from a one-day headline into a multi-day test of levies, pumps, and drainage systems around the bay. In the next minutes, we will move from the shoreline into the storm itself and see how the cold side of this system is building a different kind of risk in the Sierra Nevada. While low-lying neighborhoods around the bay are dealing with flood water, the cold side of this storm is reshaping the Sierra Nevada. From Donner Pass to the high ridges above Lake Tahoe, heavy wind-driven snow has turned major routes into narrow corridors of white. Chain controls are in place on key highways. Visibility drops to just a few car lengths in the strongest bands and snow plows are working in rotating shifts simply to keep the lanes open. The National Weather Service has issued winter storm warnings for the higher elevations with several feet of new snow expected on the highest peaks. On exposed ridge lines, gusts over 100 miles per hour have been recorded by resort stations and highway sensors, blasting fresh snow sideways across roads, parking lots, and ski area access points. Here's the important part. This is not just a typical weekend system for the mountains. When snow falls this fast, with wind this strong, officials are urging people to delay all non-essential travel. For mountain towns and ski communities, the concern is not only the hours during the storm, but the days that follow. Deep drifts, downed branches, power outages, and rising avalanche danger can linger long after the radar echoes fade. And every new inch that piles up on the Sierra Crest tonight is future runoff for the rivers and reservoirs that sit downstream from the already flooded shores of the bay. In the next part of this report, we will follow this winter system as it stretches inland into Nevada, Idaho, and Wyoming, turning a coastal flooding story into a full western storm corridor. As the storm leaves California, it does not simply fade out over the desert. The same winter system is now stretching deep into the interior west, turning parts of Nevada, Idaho, and Wyoming into the next targets on the map. According to local forecasts, a second pulse of winter weather is sliding across the northern Great Basin and into the northern Rockies, bringing fresh snow, strong winds, and rapidly changing road conditions. In eastern Idaho and western Wyoming, snow returned during the afternoon and evening of January 3rd. According to Local News 8 and National Weather Service updates, the heaviest snow is focused on the higher terrain where totals could reach around 20 cm on some ranges by the time this round is finished. Lower valleys see a mix of light snow and cold rain. But every new centimeter that sticks on mountain passes makes driving more difficult and extends the window for slick icy conditions after dark. Here is the important part. Farther east along the Salt River in Wyoming ranges, a winter weather advisory from the National Weather Service in Riverton calls for 15 to 30 cm of new snow with wind gusts that can reach about 65 kmh. In exposed spots where the wind funnels through gaps and over ridge lines, drifts can deepen quickly and visibility can drop to near zero as blowing snow sweeps across open stretches of highway. For drivers, that means even a short trip between small towns can turn into a slow, tense crawl behind plows in emergency vehicles. North of there, the same storm energy arcs into Yellowstone National Park and the Northern Rockies. According to forecasts, most of the park can expect around 10 to 20 cm of new snow, while Southwest pockets could see much higher totals approaching half a meter in the most favored terrain. On top of existing snow pack, that extra weight combined with wind gusts near 70 kilometers per hour creates a recipe for slick roads, hidden ice, and building avalanche danger on steep slopes. For visitors, rangers, and local workers, the message is clear. This is a night to check advisories twice, rethink non-essential plans, and prepare for a west that will wake up even more deeply buried under winter by morning. In the next part, we will step back once more and look at what all of this means for the week ahead. From travel plans and power grids to the slow rise of rivers fed by every flake that is now falling. By now, this storm is no longer just a single swirl on the weather map. It has become a chain of impacts that runs from the edge of the Pacific to the high spine of the Rockies. Around the San Francisco Bay, low underpasses and frontage roads are still drying out after hours underwater. In the Sierra Nevada, fresh snow and wind have turned mountain passes into moving tunnels of white. Farther inland in Idaho and Wyoming, plow convoys and salt trucks are crawling along two-lane highways that normally feel routine. For millions of people, the message is simple. This is a week when travel, deliveries, and daily routines are all at the mercy of the weather. Airports and freeways are where that pressure shows up first. When a few hundred meters of coastal road near a major bridge flood, detours ripple out to freight trucks, commuter buses, and emergency vehicles at the same time. Inland, strong winds and heavy snow trigger spinouts, chain requirements, and temporary closures on key routes that carry food, fuel, and medical supplies across state lines. Here's the important part. This combination of coastal flooding and mountain snow does not just slow down individual trips. It reveals how much the western transport network depends on a few critical corridors staying open. The same pattern is playing out in the power grid and basic services. Wet, heavy snow on tree branches, saturated ground root systems, and gusty winds over long stretches of line. It are a classic recipe for scattered outages. Utility crews can replace poles, rering wire and move generators, but they cannot control the terrain or the weather window they have to work in. For some neighborhoods, a short outage is an inconvenience. For others, especially where people depend on electric heat, home medical equipment, or well pumps, even a few hours without power can quickly become a serious risk if backup plans are not ready. All of this is happening while the background level of water in the system keeps rising. Every new layer of snow in the Sierra Nevada and the northern Rockies is future runoff when temperatures climb. Every round of rain on soil that is already wet shortens the distance between a normal storm and the moment when small creeks begin to spill over their banks. That is why forecasters keep repeating the same advice. Do not just watch what the storm is doing today. Watch how much water the landscape is being asked to hold over the next several days. In the next part, we will step down from the regional map to the neighborhood level and look at what this evolving pattern means for homes, local roads, and communities that live close to floodprone slopes and rivers. For individual households, this kind of week is not just a weather story on a screen. It is a set of decisions that start the moment you look outside and see water in places it usually does not reach. Along the low-lying edges of the Bay Area, in small towns below the Sierra Nevada, and in neighborhoods across Idaho and Wyoming, the margin for error is smaller than it was at the start of this season. Driveways, parking lots, and side streets are now acting as part of the drainage system, whether they were designed for that role or not. Here is the important part. Most serious problems in events like this do not begin with a dramatic wall of water. They begin when ordinary systems quietly stop working the way people expect. A storm drain clogs with leaves and a shallow puddle outside a garage in Marinine or Alama turns into a slow sheet of water that seeps under the door. A roadside ditch near a county road in the central valley fills and overflows. And suddenly, a car that seems safe on the shoulder is sitting in moving water deep enough to stall the engine. A small slide above a backyard or a rural lane in the foothills brings down just enough mud and rock to block a route that emergency vehicles might need later in the night. For families, the most important tools are often simple and low tech. Knowing in advance which streets tend to flood first in your area, where the nearest higher ground or dry parking lot is, and which neighbors might need help if the power goes out can matter more than any single radar image. In many western communities, local officials and emergency managers now urge people to keep basic supplies and a small go bag ready. Not because a mass evacuation is guaranteed, but because a few hours of blocked roads or a short notice evacuation order can arrive quickly when the ground is already saturated. These storms also expose quiet inequalities. People who live in newer elevated buildings with secure parking and backup power experience the same weather very differently from those in older homes, mobile parks near riverbanks or dense neighborhoods with limited drainage. Renters in basement units, night shift workers who must commute along low-lying routes and families without easy access to a car are often the first to feel the full impact when a forecast turns into a flooded street or a dark, cold apartment. For them, official maps and advisories only help if they are clear, trusted, and delivered in time in the languages and channels they actually use. That is why forecasters and local agencies keep returning to the same message in different words. Do not wait for a dramatic siren to think about what you would do if water rose quickly on your block or if the lights went out for several hours during the coldest part of the night. Talk through a simple plan, check the routes you depend on, and follow updates from trusted local sources instead of relying only on short social media clips. In the final part of this report, we will step back to the wider map again and look at what the next few days of forecast suggest and how weeks like this fit into a longer pattern that is quietly changing the way the West has to think about winter storms, flooding, and the shifting line between land and water. Over the next several days, the weather map over the western United States will stay active. Forecast models continue to show a conveyor belt of Pacific energy brushing the coast with smaller lows and frontal waves following the same corridor that just brought flooding to the Bay Area and deep snow to the Sierra Nevada. Some of these systems may be weaker, others may arrive as short, sharp bursts, but together they will keep the atmosphere unsettled from the shoreline to the high country. For people who have already lived through one long weekend of disruption, this is not a week to count on an instant return to quiet blue sky winter. For California, the key question now is not only how strong each new storm is, but what it falls on. Along parts of the coast and in many valleys, soils are already saturated. Rivers and creeks have risen once and have only partially receded. In the Sierra Nevada, the snow pack has taken a sudden jump with fresh layers stacked on top of older, colder snow. When the next rounds of rain and mountain snow arrive, even if totals are lower, runoff will respond more quickly than it did at the start of the season. The window between a normal rainy day and water reaching problem levels on small streams, culverts, and low crossings can shrink to just a few hours. Farther inland from Nevada into Idaho, Wyoming, and the northern Rockies, the pattern is similar. Short breaks between waves give road crews time to clear passes, utility workers time to repair lines, and communities time to restock. But each new band of snow and wind rebuilds the risks that had just been reduced. In some basins, cold air trapped in the valleys will hold snow and ice in place for days, while higher terrain continues to collect new layers with every passing disturbance. When a warmer, wetter storm eventually arrives later in the month or later in the season, that deep uneven snow pack can turn into fast runoff, rising streams, and a new round of flood watches far from the ocean. Here's the important part. What the West is seeing this week is not just an odd tangle of tides, storms, and snow. It is a clear example of how different pieces of the water cycle can now stack on top of each other more often, testing coastlines, river systems, roads, and neighborhoods at the same time. King tides that reach farther inland, storms that carry more moisture, and winters that swing more sharply between dry spells, and very wet weeks all add up to a landscape where once in a decade patterns can appear more than once in a single generation. In the end of this report, we will pull these threads together, look at what this means beyond the next 7-day forecast, and talk about how communities along the West Coast and across the interior can use weeks like this as both a warning and an opportunity to prepare for the next test. In the end, this week's storms will move on and the maps will calm down. But the marks they leave on roads, river banks, and mountain slopes will last much longer than the headlines. Each flooded underpass around the Bay Area, each snow choked pass in the Sierra, and each wind carved drift in the Interior West is a reminder that the line between land, water, and weather is shifting, and that the next test may arrive sooner than we expect. If this report helped you understand what is happening and what to watch for, please subscribe to the channel and turn on notifications so you do not miss our next update. Question for you in the comments. Where are you following these storms from? And what has this winter week looked like in your area? ***https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wSwMgEP2LM
[KE: Everything scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]

Monday, January 5, 2026

Landslide (lyrics) Fleetwood Mac

I climbed a mountain and I turned around, and I saw my reflection in the snow-covered hills, 'Til the landslide brought me down[Verse 1] I took my love, took it down I climbed a mountain and I turned around And I saw my reflection in the snow-covered hills 'Til the landslide brought me down [Verse 2] Oh, mirror in the sky What is love? Can the child within my heart rise above? Can I sail through the changin' ocean tides? Can I handle the seasons of my life? Hmm-hmm, hmm-hmm [Chorus] Well, I've been afraid of changin' 'Cause I've built my life around you But time makes you bolder Even children get older And I'm getting older too [Guitar Solo] [Chorus] Well, I've been afraid of changin' 'Cause I've built my life around you But time makes you bolder Even children get older And I'm getting older too Oh, I'm getting older too [Verse 3] Oh-oh, take my love, take it down Oh-oh, climb a mountain and turn around And if you see my reflection in the snow-covered hills Well, the landslide bring it down [Outro] And if you see my reflection in the snow-covered hills Well, the landslide will bring it down Oh-ohh, the landslide bring it down

It's too late to stop global warming, I think. If we reduce emissions now, we might slow it down, but at this point we have to face reality. Climate change is happening and we need to deal with it, make changes in our lives so we survive. Next few years, weather weirdness is going to affect everyone in different ways, depending on where you live. Ignoring it will leave you ignorant.

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AI-created film: When the Ice Breaks: How Earth Is Changing Faster Than We Think- 5-min beautiful climate change documentary- Heating Planet

Collapsing ice sheets are reshaping Earth’s climate, economies, and future, right now. Using satellite data, science, and cinematic storytelling, short film shows glacial ice loss accelerating and triggering rising seas. This isn’t a story of the distant future; it’s about changes happening now, and the narrow window left to respond. The world’s ice is melting faster than scientists once believed. Dec 31 READ & WATCH transcript follows

[National Geographic Next is an independent, AI-generated documentary channel delivering cinematic explorations of Earth, wildlife, science, history, and space; not affiliated with, endorsed by, or associated with National Geographic; from United States Joined YT Dec 24, 2025 9 videos]

***TRANSCRIPT***

There are places on Earth where time feels frozen, where the land has remained unchanged for thousands of years. But even here, something is shifting. The ice is no longer silent. It's cracking, breaking, and moving faster than we ever imagined. This isn't a warning from the future. It's happening now. Ice doesn't just exist at the edges of the world. It quietly protects everything in between. For thousands of years, these frozen surfaces reflected sunlight away from Earth. Inside this ice lies most of the planet's fresh water. A balance builds slowly over time. But as the ice fades, the planet absorbs more heat, and that balance begins to slip. 

For a long time, scientists believed ice sheets would respond slowly. That even with warming, change would take centuries. But the data told another story. 

Satellite images began showing retreat. Year after year, glaciers thinning, edges collapsing. What once seemed permanent is now changing within a single human lifetime. As ice disappears, something darker takes its place. [Music] Open ocean. 

Unlike ice, water doesn't reflect sunlight. It absorbs it, holds it, and releases it slowly back into the atmosphere. This extra heat, melts more ice, which exposes more ocean, creating a cycle that feeds on itself. A loop that accelerates change, even if humans stop tomorrow. What happens at the poles doesn't stay there. 

Melting ice alters ocean currents and weakens jet streams, the invisible systems that guide weather across the planet. Storms linger longer. Heat waves grow hotter. Rain falls where it never used to. The climate isn't broken. It's responding in ways we're struggling to keep up with. 

When glaciers melt, the water has to go somewhere. And slowly, it moves toward the coasts. At first, the change is barely noticeable. But over time, high tides creep higher. Storm surges push farther inland. For coastal cities, the line between land and sea is becoming harder to draw

Climate change carries a price tag and it's already being paid. Insurance premiums rise. Infrastructure repairs multiply. Ports, roads, and supply chains face growing disruption. What begins as melting ice spreads through economies, quietly reshaping markets and livelihoods. 

Statistics can feel distant, but for millions of people, climate change is lived daily. In the Arctic, ancestral lands are disappearing. Along the coasts, families watch the ocean inch closer each year. This isn't about numbers on a chart. It's about home and what it means to lose one. 

Nature doesn't always change slowly. Sometimes it waits, then shifts all at once. 

Ice shelves can collapse in hours. Once gone, they may never return. The danger isn't just warming. It's crossing thresholds we don't yet fully understand. 

This story isn't without hope. Human innovation has always risen in moments of challenge. Renewable energy, smarter cities, artificial intelligence guiding climate models. The solutions exist. What remains uncertain is whether we act quickly enough

The next decade matters more than any before it. 

Every fraction of a degree counts. 

Every delay compounds the cost. 

This is the narrow window where choices still shape outcomes. where the future remains flexible. When the ice breaks, it doesn't argue. It doesn't negotiate. It simply responds to the choices already made. And long after the noise fades, Earth will remember what we decided to do next. [Music] END***https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iegxDyrlxH8
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[KE: Everything scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]

Translated: In Himalayan mountains, indigenous man speaks about climate change- Jan 4 report w transcript in English & Hindi- Heating Planet blog

In this episode a farmer shares his firsthand experience of rising temperatures, climate change, and the urgent need for environmental action. This video is part of a special awareness series under the leadership of Prof. Ashok Kumar, Founder-Chairman of the Global Foundation for Advancement of Environment and Human Wellness, bringing grassroots voices to the forefront of the climate dialogue. The environmentalist, author, TED speaker, and climate expert travels to Aryan Valley, Ladakh, uncovering powerful climate stories from corners of India- READ & WATCH- 2 transcripts follow- ***[The.Climate Chronicles, not just a YouTube channel, it's a global movement, from Grand Valley State University, USA. Joined 2024 242 subscribers 40 videos]
***TRANSCRIPT GOOGLE TRANSLATED:

In the Himalayan mountains, an indigenous person speaks about Climate Change*****Hello Namaskar, we have brought a new episode of Climate Chronicles. In this season because we are covering Iron Valley, we are talking to Aryan people about how climate change has impacted their lives. 

Look, our only aim is to spread awareness. To create awareness. To create education. To make people understand that climate change is real. Climate change is happening, it is happening every minute, every second, every hour and we all can see it very clearly, we can see it but we should not ignore it. This is the aim of Climate Chronicles and because Aryan people are an indigenous community, we have come to Darchik village in Kargil district of Ladakh. 

A Baba ji is present with us. Let us talk to him. Join your name- 

my name is sir ji 

tell me it is sona mor sir what do you do?

I just do zamindari work sir and it is not good sir I do zamindari work sir.

How old would you be grandfather? 

I am 70 sir ji I am 70 sir-

So you have 70 years of experience, in all these 70 years what changes have you seen in the environment, in the weather?

There is a lot of difference sir. Earlier there used to be a lot of snow.

There used to be a lot of snow. There used to be two-three feet of snow sir. Yes. It is not visible now sir. This year with difficulty there was some effort this year sir. Otherwise it has been a lot of years sir. It has been at least 20 years sir. There has not been so much snow. There is not so much rain either sir. If it rains less then the snow also comes less sir. 

Because you do the work of landlord, then how are the trees and plants getting affected in it, this lack of water and excess heat has a lot of effect, 

Sir, water reaches at least once a month, Sir, if water reaches in 20 days, then this has an effect, the insect gets there, it does not ripen properly, it gets spoiled, Sir, due to equal water supply, the plant does not get good results, Sir, the crop gets good, there is a lot of difference due to less water, Sir, even if there is some snow or rain in the houses, it would have been very good. It hasn't rained either, Sir, this year it has rained a little, otherwise we have been facing drought for many years, Sir, the village is barren. 

So tell me, have you been farming for so many years, what did you do earlier?

50 years ago, there was a huge field, Sir, two, three, one, two, three feet.

so what crops did you grow in farming?

This is what happens, Sir, I forgot wheat, the other crop is maize, Sir, it is a very good crop, look, Sir, it is very expensive, the maize here is very expensive, sir, it is good, right now I don't know, Sir, it is not available, there is a lot of problem due to lack of water, Sir, you are saying that the maize crop that you grow in your area is not ripening because of lack of water and it does not get enough time, so it is not ripening, Sir, it does not get enough water, so it does not ripen again, even if we do not give water, Sir, where will it go, it does not come,

When you see that the rain is decreasing and so many problems arise, then how do you feel, what is in your heart?

Sir I am very sad, sir. I am very sad. Why is farming not good? Water is not good. Farming is also not good. I am very sad. 

Sir, have you made any changes in your farming in the last ten or five years? Have you planted any new crops or made any changes?

The vegetables have changed a little, sir. They are not even vegetables because water grows. Growing water doesn't make vegetables, sir. It has to be said that everything happens because of water. Sir, first everything happens, everything gets cooked, but nothing happens to water.

Sir, have you heard about the term climate change? Anywhere? Have you heard about climate change? I haven't heard about climate change, sir. It doesn't seem like that, sir. I don't know. No, 

but you have deviated a little, sir? 

Earlier, everything happened due to excessive water. You haven't heard about it, but what you are feeling, what you are experiencing, is climate change. So, you can see this change with your own eyes and you are experiencing it yourself. Your experiences, your farming, your life, all the changes that have occurred are solely due to climate change and environmental degradation. Grandfather, thank you so much for speaking with us. Thank you, Sir.

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IN HINDI

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In the Himalayan mountains, an indigenous person speaks about Climate Change*****हेलो नमस्कार क्लाइमेट क्रोनिकल्स का एक नया एपिसोड लेके आए हैं इस सीजन में क्योंकि हम लोग आयरन वैली को कवर कर रहे हैं। आर्यन लोगों से बात कर रहे हैं आके कि कैसे क्लाइमेट चेंज ने उनकी लाइफ को इंपैक्ट किया है। देखिए हमारा मकसद सिर्फ एक जागरूकता फैलाना है। एक अवेयरनेस क्रिएट करना है। एजुकेशन क्रिएट करना है। लोगों तक ये बात जाए कि क्लाइमेट चेंज इज रियल। जो जलवायु परिवर्तन है यह हो रहा है हर मिनट हो रहा है हर सेकंड हो रहा है हर घंटे हो रहा है और हम सब उसको बहुत अच्छे से देख पा रहे हैं हम देख पा रहे हैं लेकिन हमें उसे नजरअंदाज नहीं करना है यही मकसद क्लाइमेट क्रोनिकल्स का है और आर्यन लोग क्योंकि इंडजीनस कम्युनिटी है लद्दाख की कारगिल डिस्ट्रिक्ट में हम दार्चिक गांव में आ चुके हैं। एक बाबा जी हमारे साथ मौजूद है। चलिए उनसे बात करते हैं। जुड़े आपका नाम मेरा नाम है सर जी बताएं सोना मोर है सर आप क्या करते हैं बस जमींदारी काम करता है सर और अच्छा तो है नहीं है सर जमींदारी काम करता है सर आपकी कितनी उम्र होगी दादा 70 हो गए सर जी 70 हो गए सर तो 70 साल का अनुभव है आपके पास 70 साल में ये सब एनवायरमेंट में वातावरण में मौसमों में क्या परिवर्तन देखा आपने में बहुत फर्क हो गया सर। पहले पहले बहुत बर्फ आता था। काफी बर्फ आता था। दो एक दो फुट आता था सर। जी। अभी तो दिखाई नहीं दे रहा सर। इस साल मुश्किल से इस साल थोड़ा एफर्ट आया सर इस साल। बाकी बहुत साल हो गया सर। कम से कम 20 साल हो गया सर। इतना बर्फ नहीं आया। इतना बारिश भी नहीं आता सर। कम आता है तो बर्फ भी कम आता है सर। क्योंकि आप जमींदारी का काम करते हैं तो उसमें पेड़ों को पौधों को किस तरह से असर आ रहा है ये पानी कम होना और गर्मी ज्यादा होने से पानी कम होने से असर बहुत आता है सर कम से कम महीना में पानी पहुंचता है सर 20 दिन में पानी पहुंचता है तो ये असर पड़ता है कीड़ा पड़ता है उसको ठीक से पकता नहीं है खराब होता है सर इसको पानी बराबर मिलने से इनका पौधे को अच्छा नहीं मिलता है सर फसल अच्छा मिलता है पानी कम होने से बहुत फर्क पाता है सर जी घरों में थोड़ा बर्फ आने से भी बारिश आने से भी काफी अच्छा होता था। बरी भी नहीं आया सर इस साल थोड़ा काफी आया है सर बाकी बहुत साल से हम सुखा है सर बहुत गांव फेंका हुआ है तो ये बताएं कि आप इतने साल से खेती किसानी कर रहे हैं पहले क्या करते थे आज से 50 साल पहले खेती में इसमें तो बहुत बड़ा पत था सर दो तीन एक दो फुट तीन फुट प था तो नहीं आप खेती में क्या कौन सी फसल करते थे फसल तो यही होता है सर गेहूं भूली वो इस दूसरा फसल मक्का जो फसल आता है सर बहुत बढ़िया आता है बहुत फसल अभी देखो सर ये बहुत महंगा महंगा है मक्का बहुत महंगा है यहां का बहुत महंगा है सर बढ़िया है अभी अभी अभी तो पता ही नहीं है सर नहीं मिलता है पानी नहीं आने से बहुत दिक्कत आता है सर आप कह रहे हैं जो मक्के की फसल आपके यहां आप उगाते हो वो क्योंकि पानी की कमी से और उतना समय नहीं हो पाता है इसलिए वो पक नहीं पा रहे पक नहीं पा रहा है सर जो इसका पानी बराबर नहीं मिलता है तो इसका फिर से पकता नहीं है तो भी तो पानी नहीं देता है सर तो कहां जाएगा नहीं आता जी जब आप ये देखते हैं कि बरसात कम हो रही है और इतनी समस्याएं आती है तो आपको कैसा लगता है दिल में दिल में क्या सर बहुत दुखी होता है सर बहुत दुखी होता है क्यों खेती नहीं अच्छा नहीं होता है पानी अच्छा नहीं होता है खेती भी अच्छा नहीं होता बहुत दुखी होता है सर जी तो आपने कोई बदलाव किया अपनी खेती में पिछले 10 पांच साल में कोई नई फसल लगाई हो या कोई बदलाव किया है सब्जी बदला थोड़ा होता है सर वो सब्जी भी नहीं होता क्योंकि पानी ग्रो होता है पानी ग्रो होने से सब्जी भी नहीं मिलता सर के पड़ता है जी जो पानी होने से सब कुछ होता है सर पहले सब कुछ होता है जी सब कुछ पक जाता है मगर पानी का नहीं होता है सर आपने आपने ये शब्द क्लाइमेट चेंज के बारे में सुना है? कहीं? क्लाइमेट चेंज के बारे में सुना है? क्लाइमेट चेंज तो कुछ नहीं सुना सर। ऐसे लगता नहीं सर पता नहीं। नहीं बट आप थोड़ा कलम तो अलग हो गए सर। पहले तो बहुत पानीपानी से उनको सब कुछ होता था। आपने सुना नहीं है बट जो आप महसूस

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***पूरा समाचार : https://bbc.in/4pPttfK यो किन चिन्ताको विषय हो? यसले डोल्पामा कस्ता असर पारिराखेको छ?***
Why is this a concern? What impact is it having on Dolpa?***https://bbc.in/4pPttfK*****
KEBLOGGER