It's raining in Los Angeles.

Rains on the way, some predicted to be very heavy. That whole area is pretty much silt, probably from the Grand canyon. Mudslides are the next big worry. After the fires, my first inclination was they will have landslides/mudslides as a result of the fires.

On another front, Edgar Cayce predicted in the 20's and 30's many things, one of which was California sliding into the sea...................He also predicted something would happen regarding the climate..........Hmmm.




Long long ago the place used to be swamps and wet meadows.

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Impose voter ID in California and all this leftist bullshit stops... the elections in CA are dirty... thousands of illegals voting in every district... the unions counting the ballots and setting up ballot centers...
Clean it up California...
Or we can give the state (and the illegals) back to Mexico...


I might actually be willing to fight a civil war to help the idiots on this!!!
 
It rained pretty hard today. It's still raining. It's cold! (50 degrees) :p

It'll help put out the fires. I doubt anything will slide today or tomorrow.
 
Besides homeowners being more vigilant about trimming their vegetation around the house, what is it you'd like residents to learn?
That's really not the problem, Jackie.......the problem is the government not doing their fair share to eliminate fire hazards on public property. Of course residents are going to do everything they can to reduce the chances of brush feeding fires on their property.

Yes fire. Yes rain. It's happened many times.
Not on this scale.
 
LOL....thats people who live on fucking cliffs.....in earthquake country thats kind of stupid....now were has the state fallen into the sea countless times?....
 
Impose voter ID in California and all this leftist bullshit stops... the elections in CA are dirty... thousands of illegals voting in every district... the unions counting the ballots and setting up ballot centers...
Clean it up California...
oh geezus...lol...what unions are counting the ballots?...
 
Rains on the way, some predicted to be very heavy. That whole area is pretty much silt, probably from the Grand canyon. Mudslides are the next big worry. After the fires, my first inclination was they will have landslides/mudslides as a result of the fires.

On another front, Edgar Cayce predicted in the 20's and 30's many things, one of which was California sliding into the sea...................He also predicted something would happen regarding the climate..........Hmmm.

This is the endless cycle of southern California. Fire, followed by rain, followed by mud.
 
Rains on the way, some predicted to be very heavy. That whole area is pretty much silt, probably from the Grand canyon. Mudslides are the next big worry. After the fires, my first inclination was they will have landslides/mudslides as a result of the fires.

On another front, Edgar Cayce predicted in the 20's and 30's many things, one of which was California sliding into the sea...................He also predicted something would happen regarding the climate..........Hmmm.

Just out of curiosity, where did you get that little tidbit as they are almost four hundred miles apart?

Thank you for the post!
 
LOL....thats people who live on fucking cliffs.....in earthquake country thats kind of stupid....now were has the state fallen into the sea countless times?....
You sure about that? Slip into the sea happens at the shore.....where are these cliffs?

California has a history of landslides triggered by rain, including landslides in La Conchita, Montecito, and Bluebird Canyon.


Landslides triggered by rain
  • La Conchita, 2005
    A landslide triggered by two weeks of heavy rain killed 10 people and destroyed 13 homes.

  • Bluebird Canyon, 2005
    A landslide triggered by heavy rain from the previous winter destroyed 17 homes and damaged 11 others.

  • Montecito, 2018
    Mudslides triggered by a winter storm following the Thomas Fire killed 23 people.
  • Rancho Palos Verdes
    A decades-old complex of slow-moving landslides suddenly moved, putting multimillion-dollar homes at risk.


Just out of curiosity, where did you get that little tidbit as they are almost four hundred miles apart?
Damn....................you are so astute. Tell me where did all the dirt in the Grand Canyon go? Was it an ancient strip mine or what? It obviously ended up somewhere.....just happens most of the left coast area sits on silt......
 
You sure about that? Slip into the sea happens at the shore.....where are these cliffs?

California has a history of landslides triggered by rain, including landslides in La Conchita, Montecito, and Bluebird Canyon.


Landslides triggered by rain
  • La Conchita, 2005
    A landslide triggered by two weeks of heavy rain killed 10 people and destroyed 13 homes.

  • Bluebird Canyon, 2005
    A landslide triggered by heavy rain from the previous winter destroyed 17 homes and damaged 11 others.


  • Montecito, 2018
    Mudslides triggered by a winter storm following the Thomas Fire killed 23 people.
  • Rancho Palos Verdes
    A decades-old complex of slow-moving landslides suddenly moved, putting multimillion-dollar homes at risk.



Damn....................you are so astute. Tell me where did all the dirt in the Grand Canyon go? Was it an ancient strip mine or what? It obviously ended up somewhere.....just happens most of the left coast area sits on silt......
Dirt from the Grand Canyon originally washed out into the Gulf of Baja. Now, the water is all used up before it can get there. It's polluted as hell too.
 
Dirt from the Grand Canyon originally washed out into the Gulf of Baja. Now, the water is all used up before it can get there. It's polluted as hell too.
That's a subject of mucho debate. I've seen pretty geologically based info where what is now the Colorado River a gazillion years ago, flowed to the Pacific, draining out on the left coast.....sediment deposits in those areas would tend to support that. So where did all that sediment come from. That's one reason SFO has such severe earthquakes.
 
That's a subject of mucho debate. I've seen pretty geologically based info where what is now the Colorado River a gazillion years ago, flowed to the Pacific, draining out on the left coast.....sediment deposits in those areas would tend to support that. So where did all that sediment come from. That's one reason SFO has such severe earthquakes.
Nope. The path is well known. 200 million years ago there WAS no Grand Canyon. It is only a few million years old. Once the Colorado began cutting the canyon as the Colorado Plateau began to rise, the course was set in stone.

Literally. Originally the colorado flowed into the Gulf. Then, as the water was taken out it petered out in Mexico. Then, they diverted what was left into the American river, and that flowed back north into the US and petered out again in the Salton Sea.
 
Nope. The path is well known. 200 million years ago there WAS no Grand Canyon. It is only a few million years old. Once the Colorado began cutting the canyon as the Colorado Plateau began to rise, the course was set in stone.

Literally. Originally the colorado flowed into the Gulf. Then, as the water was taken out it petered out in Mexico. Then, they diverted what was left into the American river, and that flowed back north into the US and petered out again in the Salton Sea.
I've seen info to the contrary.
 
I've seen info to the contrary.
I don't care. There's lots of nonsense on the internet. That whole region has been studied for well over a century. Hell I did field work there in the 1960's.

But the fact remains, the course of the Colorado River is well established, going all the way back to over 6 million years ago.
 
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