Showing posts with label Calgary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calgary. Show all posts

Thursday, February 11, 2016

WEATHER ANOMALIES: Above Average Seasonal Temperatures - Warm Weather Breaks Over A Dozen Records Across Alberta, Canada!

The ice that covered the Bow River just a few days ago has begun to thaw, thanks to consecutive days of above-zero temperatures in Calgary.© Drew Anderson/CBC

February 11, 2016 - ALBERTA, CANADA - Warm weather broke over a dozen temperature records across Alberta on Tuesday, including in Edmonton.

The last record high temperature for Feb. 9 was set at 5.9 C at the Edmonton International Airport in 1995. On Tuesday, temperatures reached 7.9 C, setting a new record.

Temperature records were also broken in Brooks, Calgary, Claresholm, Drumheller, Grande Prairie, Jasper, Lethbridge, Lloydminster, Medicine Hat, Peace River, Sundre and at the Waterton Park Gate.

Colin Fong, meteorologist with Environment Canada, said the above average seasonal temperatures - which normally sit at -3.8 for this time of year - are caused by a ridge of high pressure.

"That ridge is just kind of ushering in that warm air from the south, keeping at bay all of those weather systems from the west," said Fong, keeping skies clear and temperatures warm.

"The highs are definitely on the good side of history, but as we see that ridge breaking down we're going to see that trend towards more of the normal," warned Fong.

Fong said temperatures would hover around 0 C on Wednesday when the ridge of high pressure breaks down, with periods of snow Wednesday night and into Thursday.

"It's going to be a bit of a seesaw between precipitation, in this case snow, and clear skies as we head into the weekend," Fong said.

While the warm weather may be a welcome break for some, for others it couldn't have come at a worse time.

The Canadian Birkenbeiner Ski Festival that was supposed to run this weekend was cancelled - only the fourth time since the festival began in 1985 - leaving around a thousand registered skiers out in the cold when it comes to their registration fees.

However, the Vikings Feast and Birkie Boogie is still going on this Saturday at the County of Strathcona Community Centre, with tickets still on sale until Wednesday night.

Edmonton's Ice Castle is still standing in Hawrelak Park, but organizers warned it may not last as long as expected. The Ice Castle was originally scheduled to be open until March, but warm temperatures have organizers predicting the acre-sized Ice Castle may close to the public by the end of February.

Organizers of the 10-day Silver Skate Festival opening in Hawrelak Park on Friday remain unfazed by recent warm weather, planning to adapt as needed.

Festival producer Erin Di Loreto said it wasn't the first time in the festival's 26 year history where the weather has warmed, adding sunny weather has sometimes helped bring more people out to the festival. Last year, more than 85,000 people attended the Silver Skate Festival.

Students in the University of Alberta's environmental instrumentation course took advantage of the weather to install research-grade weather stations on top of the Tory building, gaining valuable hands-on experience. - Edmonton Sun.




Thursday, December 31, 2015

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: The Effects Of Magnetic Polar Migration - The Latest Incidents Of Plane Crashes Across The Globe!

The South African plane apparently started losing altitude between Barberton and Badplaas and the pilot was forced to land. Picture: ER24


December 31, 2015 - EARTH - Here are the latest incidents of plane crashes across the planet over the last few days.

Two injured in Mpumalanga plane crash in South Africa

Two people have been injured in a plane crash in Mpumalanga.

The incident occurred earlier today.

The plane apparently started losing altitude between Barberton and Badplaas and the pilot was forced to land.

ER24’s Pieter Roussow says the incident is being investigated by police.

“The pilot in the aircraft had critical injuries and was airlifted to Mediclinic Nelspruit. The passenger in the aircraft sustained moderate injuries and was transported by ER24 to Rob Ferreira Hospital in Nelspruit for further treatment.” - EWN.



Small plane crashes outside Republic High School in Missouri

The plane crash into a fence at the school's football practice field shortly before 10:00 p.m. 

Witnesses reported seeing the plane flying low. 

The couple was able to call 911 after the crash. 

Firefighters cut off the roof to get them out safely.  There was a minor fuel leak that firefighters took care of with foam.






(Pictures courtesy Thomas Leonard)

Police describe the woman's injuries as minor. 

Her husband suffered moderate injuries.

Investigators do not know where the couple was traveling. - KY3.



Freak turbulence injures over 20 on Shanghai-Toronto flight, plane diverted to Calgary 

Twenty-five people received turbulence-related injuries on an Air Canada flight AC88 on its way to Toronto from Shanghai. The plane was diverted to Calgary, Alberta to treat those affected. Some had to be taken to hospital, with at least 6 reportedly in serious condition.

EMS confirmed that 25 people had been injured, with 21 transported to hospital, including three children. None of the injuries were life threatening, an EMS official told the media.

Air Canada has confirmed that the plane successfully landed in Calgary after encountering turbulence en route.

Fifteen transport units were dispatched to Calgary airport, and additional help was recruited from outside the city, the EMS official added.

There were 332 passages and 19 crew members on board the flight. According to Air Canada, “some will require hospitalization for assessment.”

Calgary fire department spokeswoman Carol Henke stated that she was aware of around 20 people who received turbulence-related neck and back injuries. It is not yet known how severe the injuries are.






Numerous passengers were seen wheeled out of the aircraft by emergency crews on gurneys. At least six people were evacuated on stretchers, some wearing neck braces, according to CBC Calgary correspondent Meghan Grant. Two other passengers were taken out via wheel chairs.

Several passengers told CBC that they felt a sudden “massive drop.” The seatbelt sign was on at the time.Flight AC88 departed from Shanghai, China and was scheduled to land in Toronto at 6:45 pm EST.

A passenger from the flight described the ordeal as a “flight from hell.”“It was frightening,” Connie Gelber told Calgary Herald. “Honestly we didn’t know if we were going to live or die.”

Gelber described a girl being thrown out of her seat into the aisle during turbulence.

Another passenger said that some people “just flew.”“It was crazy,” Liu Pinzhou said.

Many described lots of screaming once turbulence hit. “I heard lots of people screaming, like what you would hear on a roller coaster,” Bing Feng told CBC News. “When you are in the situation, of course (you fear the worst). You saw all the oxygen masks drop.”Some praised how the crew handled the situation. “It was a little scary but all the crew were professional, handled themselves well, people had minor injuries a little bit shaken up,” Gord Murray said. “It could have been much worse.” - RT.



Monday, December 22, 2014

FIRE IN THE SKY: "It Was Like Daytime Almost" - Calgary Photographer Captures Fireball Over Night Skies Of Mount Rundle!

Calgary photographer Brett Abernethy captured a shot of an apparent fireball streaking across the night sky in Banff over
Mount Rundle on Saturday, December 20, 2014.   © Brett Abernethy / Calgary Herald

December 22, 2014 - CALGARY, CANADA
- Calgary photographer Brett Abernethy was out in Banff shooting aurora over the night sky early Saturday when he captured what appeared to be a fireball zipping over the mountains.

Abernethy said he and a fellow photographer were set up at Johnson Lake taking a shot of Mount Rundle at around 1:22 a.m. when the sky lit up.

"It was like daytime almost. It fragmented into three pieces. We were both in awe. Then I realized my shot was exposing as it was going on," he said, adding he used a 40-second exposure.

When he looked at the photo he snapped with his Canon 5D Mark III, using a Zeiss 21mm f/2.8 lens, he was pleasantly surprised to see he'd captured a bright light streaking over the mountains.

"I got to a whole level of excitement," he said. "When I was a kid, I remember the light, the sky lighting up once. But I didn't see anything like that, that's for sure."

Abernethy says he went online to see if anyone else caught a glimpse of the light show, but couldn't find any chatter about the event, adding it was early in the morning and many Banff residents may have been asleep.

Calgary astronomer Alan Dyer said in an e-mail that by looking at the photo, it appears to be a fireball, "and a bright one at that - a natural meteor entering the atmosphere and burning up."

It's not clear from the photo if fragments might have survived to reach the earth, Dyer added.  - Calgary Herald.



Monday, May 5, 2014

ICE AGE: Weather Anomalies - Cold Stagnant Weather Pattern Turns Calgary Into A Winter Wonderland In May!

May 05, 2014 - CALGARY, CANADA -  Calgarians traded in their slickers and umbrellas for parkas and mittens after rain turned to snow overnight, transforming the city into a winter wonderland Saturday morning.


Five deer were wandering around 90th - Glenmore Landing and Pump Hill area on a snowy May 3.
This one put in the extra effort for a snack.  Alexandra Baker

Heather Smith, a meteorologist with the weather agency, said the snow was being generated by a strong low pressure system in the pacific pushing moisture into the province combined with an arctic high ushering in cold air.

"It's a stagnant weather pattern and not much is changing," Smith said on Saturday. "It will snow on and off for the next few days."

The spring snowstorm forced city officials to cancel the 47th annual pathway and river cleanup event, which had been scheduled for Sunday morning. Approximately 2,900 volunteers had been set to pick up thousands of garbage along 200 kilometres of pathway, the river's edge, and in city parks.

The event has been moved to May 25th.


The city saw 5 to 10 mm of rain Friday and is expecting 5 cm of snow today.  Ted Rhodes, Calgary Herald

Some people took to Twitter to post pictures of snow-covered backyards and branches sagging under the weight of the white stuff, including a few shots of fallen trees on top of vehicles parked outside.

The snow also created challenging driving conditions on some highway roads, with Canmore RCMP warning against travel on Highway 1 due to limited visibility. Highway 1 in the Golden, B.C., area was also closed for avalanche control.


Ward Perrault trudges with his dogs Sadie and Willy through the inches of wet snow at
Nose Hill Park in Calgary on May 3, 2014.  Christina Ryan, Calgary Herald

But in Calgary, city police and EMS said the number of crashes they responded to were relatively typical for a Saturday morning, with three injury collisions and 28 non-injury collisions reported to police between 6 a.m. and noon.

Severe weather can be reported by calling 1-800-239-0484 or emailing storm@ec.gc.ca. Reports over Twitter should include the hashtag #ABStorm. - The Province.



Wednesday, March 12, 2014

PLANETARY TREMORS: Possible Epicenter Of Frost Quake Found In Northwest Schoolyard In Calgary, Canada - After Dozens Of Reports About Loud Booms And Explosions!

March 12, 2014 - CALGARY, CANADA -  The epicenter of what’s now believed to be a ‘frost quake’, has been located in northwest Calgary.


Markers indicate the location of a crack in the snow in the schoolyard of
Captain Nichola Goddard School in Panorama Hills

A group of researchers was able to pinpoint the location with help from an amateur seismologist who recorded the quake’s seismic signature on his home-built basement machine.

On Saturday, a group led by Dr David Eaton, descended on Captain Nichola Goddard School in Panorama Hills, scouring the frozen ground for signs of prior movement. It didn’t take long before they found a jagged tear in the earth several meters long, at least 50 cm deep and possibly up to a meter deep.

The hunt for physical evidence of the suspected frost quake came after dozens of reports to 9-1-1 and to the CTV Calgary newsroom about a loud “boom” heard and felt across northwest Calgary last Tuesday. Some witnesses said it felt like a small earthquake, others described it as an explosion.

A University of Calgary seismic monitoring station, which could have shed light on the mysterious sound, was offline at the time of the boom. That’s when attention turned to Jeff Zambory, who reached out to CTV to say his basement seismograph captured the data the University’s instruments did not. He was put in touch with Dr Eaton, who used Zambory’s data to zero in on the possible location.


Map of felt shaking intensity reports following March 4 seismic activity in Calgary
(map courtesy: Natural Resources Canada)

Natural Resources Canada, which had requested Calgarians fill out reports about what they heard March 4th, says it has received more than 280 responses from witnesses. It has produced a map showing the location of all the reports. An official with the organization, Stephen Halchuk, says the “the evidence at the present time indicates that a frost quake is the likely source of the boom.”

The cracks found by the University of Calgary research group are rare physical evidence of a phenomenon that many say they’ve never heard of before. While this is the first recorded frost quake in Calgary, there were several reports of frost quakes in Eastern Canada this winter, where they’ve also been referred to as “ice quakes”.

Frost quakes, also known as cryoseism, occur when prolonged cold temperatures cause water deep in the ground to freeze quickly. That puts pressure on the bedrock, or surrounding frozen soil, causing it to crack. The sudden movement can create loud noise, especially if it takes place close to the surface. - CTV News.



Tuesday, February 11, 2014

SIGNS IN THE HEAVENS: "The Best I've Ever Seen" - "Magical" Ice Halos Seen Over Calgary, Canada!

February 11, 2014 - SPACE - On Sunday, sky watchers around Calgary, Canada, witnessed a magnificent display of ice halos around the sun. "It was magical--the best I've ever seen," reports photographer Dee Cresswell, who needed four exposures to capture all of the glowing arcs:




"The temperature was around -22 C, with a windchill in the mid minus thirties," she continues. "You could actually see the ice crystals shimmering in the air. There was a 22° halo, a 46° halo, infralateral arcs, tangent arcs, circumzenithal arc, a parhelic circle and more."

Atmospheric optics expert Les Cowley created a diagram labeling the halos: click here. He says they were created by a special kind of ice crystal called "diamond dust."

"Diamond dust--that is, low level ice crystals shaped as hexagonal plates and columns--make the very best halos because the crystals are large and of good optical quality," explains Cowley. "Plates made the bright sundogs and the circumzenithal arc while column crystals generated the upper tangent arc and the rarer supralateral and infralateral arcs. More peculiarly oriented columns gave the not often seen Parry arc. A few randomly tilted crystals produced the faint 22-degree halo and only a hint of the 46-degree circle. Supralateral arcs and the rarer 46° halo can be hard to tell apart."

"Even though wintry diamond dust is the king of halos,ordinary ice crystals in high clouds can give fine displays all year long," he says. "No matter where you live, or what time of year, keep an eye out for halos." - Space Weather.



Sunday, December 22, 2013

ICE AGE NOW: Extreme Weather - December Snowfall Breaks 112-Year Record In Calgary, Canada!

December 22, 2013 - CANADA - December snowfall in Calgary has broken a 112-year record according to the city.


The city brought in some big machines to help clear snow out of some northeast communities. (CBC)


The City made the announcement in a tweet Saturday morning after weeks of on-and-off heavy snowfall left many residents complaining about the lack of snow removal in parts of Calgary.

"A total of 43.8 cm of snow has fallen in #yyc this month. We haven’t seen this much snow in 112 years!" tweeted the City.

Snow removal crews are currently focusing their efforts on Priority 2 routes, which include connector roadways, bus routes and roads that carry 5,000 to 19,999 vehicles per day.

As of 1 p.m. MT Friday, city officials said snow removal on those routes is 42 per cent complete.

Crews are also spreading salt to help melt snow and ice because of the relatively warmer temperatures.

As snow removal in the northeast moves along, the extra resources used in the area will be moved elsewhere to assist with road clearing.

  • In the northeast, crews have now completed snow removal in Saddleridge, Taradale and Marlborough. Crews have completed 80 per cent of snow removal in Coral Springs and Mayland Heights. In Falconridge, Whitehorn, Martindale, Castleridge and Temple, crews are still working on maintaining roads.
     
  • In the northwest, snow removal is complete in North Haven and Tuscany.
        
  • In the southwest and southeast, crews are continuing to flat blade residential routes.

- CBC.



Friday, September 27, 2013

FIRE IN THE SKY: Huge Meteor Flashes Across Alberta Skies In Canada!

September 27, 2013 - CANADA - An incredible fireball shooting across the Alberta sky has been caught on tape.




Around 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, a RCMP officer was driving down the highway near Manning when he saw the bright meteor flash in front of him.

His patrol camera was recording at the time, and it was all captured on video.


WATCH: RCMP officer on patrol captures meteor sighting while on patrol near Manning, Alberta.




A community astronomer at the Telus World of Science confirmed that the sighting was in fact a meteor. - Global News Canada.





Tuesday, September 3, 2013

PLANETARY TREMORS: Powerful 6.0 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes West Of Bella Bella, Canada!

September 03, 2013 - CANADA - A 6.0 Canada earthquake today 2013 has struck west of Bella Bella. The Canada earthquake today September 3, 2013 began within the hour. No injuries have yet to be indicated by local news.


USGS earthquake location.

USGS earthquake location.


Officials tell new that a 6.0 magnitude Canada earthquake today 2013 began just after 3:11 PM local time. The quake, however, was centered out to sea. It began, however, with no depth. USGS indicates to news that the Canada earthquake started 0.6 miles below sea level. As a result the quake was felt to the east.

USGS indicates to news that the Canada earthquake began one hundred nineteen miles west of Bella Bella. The quake as roughly two hundred miles south of Prince Rupbert and west of the Campbell River. The quake was about four hundred miles northwest of Victoria and three hundred miles west of Terrace.


USGS earthquake shakemap intensity.



In May another quake struck the country. That quake was sixteen miles northeast of Shawville. It started thirty-five miles east of Pembroke, forty miles northwest of Gatineau. Officials also tell news that the quake was forty-three miles northwest of Ottawa and forty-six miles east of Petawawa. In January, an Alaska earthquake was across sections of Canada. The quake as also one hundred seventy-nine miles west of Prince Rupert, Canada. - LALATE.





Sunday, June 23, 2013

MONUMENTAL EARTH CHANGES: The Canadian Deluge - Half A Year's Rainfall In JUST ONE DAY In Southern Alberta; At Least 75,000 People Evacuated; Highways, Homes And Whole Neighbourhoods Washed Away; Thousands Without Power; Three Dead!

June 23, 2013 - CANADA - A third person has died in the extensive flooding that has deluged entire towns and threatens even more communities in southern Alberta, Canada, authorities announced Saturday.



The speed and extent of the flooding in southern Alberta has taken people in the province by surprise.

Calgary is completely flooded.

The three victims, two females and a male, were all found in the Highwood River that runs through the town of High River, about 40 miles south of Calgary, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said. Officials did not identify the victims.

High River is one of the worst-affected areas in the flooding that began after torrential mountain rains. At one point, the entire town of 13,000 was covered in brown floodwater and all residents are under an evacuation order, Cpl. Laurel Kading of the RCMP told CNN.

There was "substantial" and "extensive" damage in the town, where waters rose so rapidly Thursday that about 1,000 people had to be airlifted or rescued by boat, the RCMP said. Kading described one man who dropped his keys when the water began rising, and when he stood up, the water was at his waist.

A man carries his dog to safety in High River, Alberta, on June 20.

A house is submerged by floodwater at a park near the Bow River in Calgary on June 22.

A woman walks toward an abandoned and partially submerged police car in Calgary's Sunnyside
neighborhood on June 21.

Floodwater swirls as a street stands empty during the mandatory evacuation on June 21.

The local news site High River Online reported river levels down substantially on Saturday in some parts of the town, but high water remaining in others.
Photographs from the site Saturday showed a large pickup truck entirely caked in mud, indicating how high the water had reached. Another showed a submerged railway bridge covered in tree trunks and tree limbs. More photos showed buildings and roads still submerged.

The RCMP said it was conducting door-to-door checks of homes throughout High River.

There also was severe flooding to the west of the town, in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

"All the little towns all the way along have been affected to some degree or another," Kading said. "There are reports of some farms in rural areas where some people have been stranded as well."

A wide view shows the flooded streets in Calgary's Sunnyside neighborhood on June 21.

A car sits on a flooded street in Calgary on June 21.

Residents watch as floodwaters from Cougar Creek destroy a neighborhood in Canmore,
Alberta, on Thursday, June 20.

The waters of Cougar Creek expand through a neighborhood in Canmore, west of Calgary, on June 20.

To the east, the city of Medicine Hat was preparing for the South Saskatchewan River to burst its banks. City Hall was lined with sandbags.

The city predicted water to spill over the banks overnight Saturday and keep rising until it crests Monday morning.

About 10,000 people in Medicine Hat, population 62,000, were evacuated ahead of the flooding. City spokesman Brandy Calvert said officials expect the flood to eclipse the one they had in 1995, which was the biggest on record.

"We don't want to anticipate the worst, but we're going to be prepared for the worst," Alberta Premier Alison Redford said before visiting the city Saturday. "We know that from what we've seen everywhere else that this is more exceptional than we've ever seen in Alberta before, so we're presuming that that's probably the circumstance that we're looking at (in Medicine Hat) as well."

A number of Calgary neighbourhoods have been evacuated, affecting an estimated 75,000 people.

Several days of heavy rainfall have swelled the Bow and Elbow rivers, carrying fast-moving water through
Calgary and towns such as Canmore, High River, Black Diamond and Turner Valley.

Citizens in High River, which lies about 37 kilometres south of Calgary, are under a mandatory evacuation order. The water trapped residents in their cars and forced others to flee to the rooftops of their homes.

A flooded Calgary Stampede stadium is seen from a aerial view in Calgary, Alta., Saturday, June 22, 2013.

Calgary was still covered in water days after the Bow and Elbow rivers overflowed. The city was under a state of emergency Saturday, though Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the flow of the water was slowing and some people could start returning home Saturday night.

The home of the NHL Calgary Flames, the Saddledome, also was flooded. The team posted pictures on its website showing the darkened interior of the dome with brown water sitting at row eight, blocking the entrance to the players' tunnel.

WATCH: Monumental deluge in Canada.





Downtown Calgary will be closed until the middle of next week at the earliest, said Nenshi's spokesman, Daorcey Le Bray.

30,000 power customers were without power, the city said.

A pedestrian bridge over the Elbow River was damaged and city assessors were trying to determine the state of the dozens of other bridges, Calgary Police said. - CNN.



Friday, June 21, 2013

DELUGE & GEOLOGICAL UPHEAVAL: Canadian Forces Are Called In As Raging Floodwaters Lay Waste To South Alberta - As Many As 100,000 Could Be Evacuated As Rainfall Reach Record Levels; Mudslides Force The Closure Of The Trans-Canada Highway!

June 21, 2013 - CANADA - In B.C., flood watches have been issued for rivers and creeks in the province's west and east Kootenay region and smaller waterways in the upper and lower Columbia regions.

Torrential rains and widespread flooding throughout southern Alberta on Thursday washed out roads and bridges, sent residents scurrying for safety, and delivered up surreal scenes of cars, couches and refrigerators just floating away.


Kevan Yaets swims after his cat Momo to safety as the flood waters sweep him downstream and submerge the cab in High River, Alberta on June 20, 2013 after the Highwood River overflowed its banks. Hundreds of people have been evacuated with volunteers and emergency crews helping to aid stranded residents.© Jordan Verlage, The Canadian Press

The RCMP put out a call for help to the Canadian Armed Forces, which sent in two helicopters and a Hercules aircraft to help extract people stranded by water.

Officials with the City of Calgary said as many as 100,000 people in low-lying neighbourhoods could be forced from their homes due to heavy flooding, an evacuation that would take place in stages over the next few days.

Bruce Burrell, director of the Calgary Emergency Management Agency, said water levels on the Bow River aren't expected to subside until Saturday afternoon.

"Depending on the extent of flooding we experience overnight, there may be areas of the city where people are not going to be able to get into until the weekend," he told a news conference.

Burrell said they suggested that workers in downtown Calgary, which borders on the river, leave work early Thursday if they live in threatened areas, so they could prepare to evacuate.

Other workers were advised to consider staying late so as to lighten the rush-hour load on roads that might be needed for evacuations.

Evacuees were being asked to stay with friends or relatives, though recreation centres were being set up to accommodate those who had no place to go.

The Calgary Zoo, located on St. George's Island, shut down in the afternoon and said it would also be closed Friday.

"Rest assured Animal Care are working closely with our facilities team to ensure the safety of all of our animals during this period of flood risk and are following our established emergency protocols," the zoo said on its website.

The Bow River Basin was battered with up to 100 mm of rain.


There were flashpoints of chaos from Banff and Canmore and Crowsnest Pass in the Rockies, to Calgary and beyond in the north and south to Lethbridge.

"I woke up at about three o'clock in morning to the sound of this kind of rumbling and it was the creek," said Wade Graham, a resident of the mountain town of Canmore, west of Calgary.

"At first it was just intense, pretty powerful, amazing thing to watch. As daylight came, it just got bigger and bigger and wider and wider, and it's still getting bigger and bigger and wider and wider.

"All you can hear is like boulders and trees. I watched a refrigerator go by, I watched a shed go by, I watched couches go by. It's insane."

The flooding was particularly destructive in communities just south of Calgary such as High River, Turner Valley and Black Diamond, where the Highwood River swept away two people.

"One female adult had been stranded on a trailer and also a second adult male had been stranded on a nearby flatbed," said Cam Heke of STARS air ambulance.

"We did respond to the area. The female adult was no longer on the trailer and was missing. We did conduct a search along the river and we were unable to locate that missing person.

"However, the male adult was on the trailer and local emergency services with another helicopter organization ... were able to rescue that man."

In High River, the water trapped residents in their cars and forced others to flee to the rooftops of their homes.

Streets became tributaries, swamping vehicles.

Randy Livie said he came into town to help a friend and almost didn't get out.

"It was over my hood," he said. "There was a jeep in front of me and he stalled out.

"There was a minivan that went in front of me. He stalled out. This other car he came in and he started floating away - he bailed out. He had crutches. A truck pulled up and helped him out. It's just wild down there."

The river carried boats and trees into bridge abutments, he said.

High River Mounties were asking that people with motorboats help rescue at least a dozen stranded homeowners.

"We have people on their rooftops who were unable to evacuate fast enough," said RCMP Sgt. Patricia Neely.

Town spokesperson Joan Botkin said the rescue boats were struggling with a strong current, but added, "that's our priority. Right now it is 'Save the people. Get the residents out of there."'

Danielle Smith, a Highwood resident and Wildrose Opposition leader in the legislature, said she and other residents frantically sandbagged around the hospital, but could not keep water from rushing past the doors, forcing patients to higher floors.

"I've been talking to people who have been here for 35 years or more who saw the 2005 flood, who saw the 1995 flood, and say this is way worse," Smith told CHQR radio station in Calgary.


Canmore residents captured this image of homes along the banks of the dangerously swollen Cougar Creek.© Lauren Wheeler

Alberta Health Services said the emergency department in High River had been closed, though patients already in the hospital were safe and being cared for.

Residents in a seniors care facility were told to leave. Even the original evacuation centre had to be moved as floodwaters threatened.

The province reported that 12 communities were under states of emergency.

Environment Canada issued a rainfall warning for the affected areas, estimating as much as 100 millimetres more rain could fall in the next two days.
The Alberta Energy Regulator reported flooding may have caused a sour gas leak near Turner Valley. The flow of the toxic gas was turned off, but late Thursday a small amount was still seeping into floodwaters submerging the line. The Alberta Energy Regulator said public safety was not threatened.

In the mountain parks, mudslides forced the closure of the Trans-Canada Highway, isolating Banff and Canmore. Campers at Two Jack Lakeside campground were moved to higher ground.

Highways north and south of Banff were also shut down. Later in the evening, the Trans-Canada at the Norquay interchange was opened to single-lane westbound traffic to Lake Louise as well as Field and Golden in B.C.

In Canmore, some homeowners saw the raging Cougar Creek eat away half their backyards, leaving behind crumbling wooden stairwells and twisted fences jutting out over torrents of water. Power and gas were out in some parts of town.

Parks Canada spokeswoman Michelle Macullo said people caught inside the park didn't really have many options.

"Right now, if people are in Canmore, they can get to Banff. People from Banff can get to Canmore," she said. "We just have to wait to see what the weather presents."

A mandatory evacuation order was in effect for Bragg Creek.


In Lethbridge, a few neighbourhoods were evacuated and city officials urged parents to pick up their children early from school. They expected the Oldman River would rise and cut off travel across the city.

In Crowsnest Pass and Okotoks, some residents were ordered out. In Sundre, 80 km northwest of Calgary, dozens of homes were under mandatory evacuation
order along both sides of the swollen Red Deer River.

Municipal Affairs Minister Doug Griffiths said the province was responding to requests as they came in.

"The municipalities have asked for no extra equipment or resources except in relation to some evacuations, which we've managed to acquire a few helicopters to help with those isolated evacuations," he said.

Premier Alison Redford was returning home to Alberta from a conference in New York.

"I plan to visit the affected areas as soon as possible on Friday to see the situation firsthand and to thank those who have been working so hard at keeping everyone safe," she said in a news release.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a statement saying the federal government would offer "any and all possible assistance to the Province of Alberta in response to the situation." - Ottawa Citizen.





Wednesday, April 10, 2013

ICE AGE NOW: Welcome To "Springter" - Record Cold Grips The Canadian Prairies, -20 Degrees Celsius, Lowest Since 2002!

April 10, 2013 - CANADA - Recent weather in the Prairies is being described by many as 'Springter,' a mix of spring weather and stubborn winter conditions.

Many residents in the Prairies are dealing with what seems to be like a never ending winter.


Record cold temperatures early Tuesday. © TheWeatherNetwork

After temperatures climbed to nearly 20°C in parts of southern Alberta last week, freezing rain, slick road conditions and even record breaking cold weather made a comeback over the weekend.

"I'm ready to get on with spring and do my spring planting, so this colder weather is putting a hold on everything," said one Calgarian we caught up with Monday.

"Both camera operator Shawn Legg and I wore our long john's Monday morning after already putting them away a few weeks ago," laughed Calgary reporter Kelsey McEwen. "So that just shows the wild swings we've had."

On Monday, both Edmonton and Lloydminster dipped close to -20 degrees, breaking the previous daily record set back in 2002.


Temperatures plunge across the Prairies. © TheWeatherNetwork

Bitterly cold air over central Saskatchewan also resulted in several low temperature records by the early morning hours on Tuesday.

"Temperatures will gradually climb later this week, but in some places, daytime highs will remain far below seasonal," says Brian Dillon, a meteorologist at The Weather Network. - The Weather Network.

WATCH: Record cold grips the Prairies.




Sunday, March 24, 2013

FIRE IN THE SKY: Major Solar System Disturbance - Green Fireball Blazes Over Alberta, Canada; And Bright Green Fireball Trails Over Florida!

March 24, 2013 - NORTH AMERICA - Here are the latest reports from the Lunar Meteorite Hunters about sightings of green fireballs seen in two different locations on the North American continent this week.




Bright Green Fireball Trails Over Florida - March 21, 2013.
© LunarMeteoriteHunter / Google Earth.
21 March 2013 - Amanda, Miami, FL, USA 22:15 EST
About 2-3 seconds duration. Southeast direction. Blue/green color. Very bright like a firework. It was traveling southeast, continuing in that direction.
21 March 2013 - Kara Rhoden, Starke, FL USA 22:00
5 seconds duration. East to West direction, I was facing North. Bright green fireball with a trail. No sound, it was as bright as the moon. Fragments fell off the tail. Never seen anything like it...very fascinating.
21 March 2013 - Steve Holvik, Smyrna Beach, FL, USA 10pm EST
I saw an object like a shooting star but much closer and with a bright greenish tail that burned out as it came towards the ground...?
21 March 2013 - Nicki B., West Delray Beach FL, USA
It looked like a green flare falling from the sky but it didn't float like a flare. It came down on a solid diagonal line with a small tail. The color was not quite lime, not quite crayon-green. It was large in size like no shooting star I've ever seen. I feel like I'm crazy.

Green Fireball Blazes Over Alberta, Canada - 21 March 2013.
© LunarMeteoriteHunter / Google Earth.

21 March 2013 - Brittney Rattray, Calgary, Alberta @ 21:31 MST
3 seconds duration. I was Northwest facing. Green colour. Very bright falling star. Bigger than I've ever seen.
21 March 2013 - H.C., Calgary, Alberta 21:20
2 seconds duration. I was facing North. It travelled from top to bottom with a slight decline to the left. Bright whitish green colour, with a fairly bright tail. It was big and quick.
21 March 2013 - Stephany Cartwright, Drayton Valley, Alberta Canada 21:20
6 seconds duration. Northwest direction. Purple/blue/silver colour. As bright as the sun. There was a long tail.


Friday, March 22, 2013

EXTREME WEATHER: The QEII Highway Crash - Violent Snowstorm Causes 100-Car Pileup Near Leduc, Alberta; 25 Centimetres Of Snow; 2 Dead; 100 Injured!

March 22, 2013 - CANADA - The QEII Highway south of Edmonton has reopened after a series of crashes that injured 100 people during a storm that dumped as much as 25 centimetres of snow on Thursday.

The aftermath of the chain-reaction crashes closed the highway — the main route from Calgary to Edmonton — until late Thursday night. About 85 to 100 vehicles were involved in the crash near the town of Millet.

About 80 people were treated at the scene by EMS and another 22 were taken to area hospitals.


The crash on the QEII on Thursday injured 100 people. (Courtesy of Derek Fildebrandt)

RCMP said that the most seriously injured person was a man who was struck by a semi-truck while he was standing outside his vehicle after a collision.

About 45 heavily damaged vehicles had to be towed. The CBC’s Briar Stewart reported that most of the vehicles have been cleared away. She said the road is open but slippery.

RCMP investigators are trying to piece together what happened. Since the scope of the crash was so huge, RCMP Corp. Colette Zazulak said that collision reports were not filed at the scene the way they typically are.


Image: Steffie Williams ‏@Steffie_Lynnn via Twitter.


Image: @Dfildebrandt via Twitter.

Image: Drew Forward @Drewforward via Twitter.

Once people file reports with RCMP detachments, investigators hope to get a better picture.

"Which ones happened where, and what vehicles were involved," Zazulak said. "From there, they're going to determine whether it was just nature, in the sense of the conditions, or whether there are any charges to be laid or things like that."

Woman and children killed

Another crash north of Edmonton killed a 23-year-old woman, a four-year-old girl and a two-year-old boy.

They were in a car that crashed head-on with a truck about 85 kilometres north of Westlock on Highway 44.

Three others were seriously injured, including the driver of the truck, who is facing charges including dangerous driving causing death.


Image: Flowpoint ‏@flow_point via Twitter.

Image: ray b ‏@bigblu54 via Twitter.

Image: danielle lorenz ‏@daniellelorenz.

Image: Laura Gibbs ‏@LJ_Monster via Twitter.

The woman and children killed in the crash were from Slave Lake. Mayor Karina Pillay-Kinnee said they were well-known in the community.

"I think a lot of people will be familiar with them, either in the workplace, or know their families, or the schools, the children," she said.

Within Edmonton, city police dealt with 133 collisions on Thursday, nine involving injuries.

Edmonton cleanup crews worked overnight to clear streets in time for the Friday morning commute. - CBC.

Friday, December 21, 2012

FIRE IN THE SKY: The Latest Reports of Spectacular Multi-Colored Fireballs in the Skies Over the Earth!

December 21, 2012 - SKY - Here are several of the latest online reports of spectacular multi-colored fireballs from across the globe.


Fireball Streaks Across Warwick, Rhode Island - 13th of December, 2012.
There's a lively discussion on the Web about this video of a burning object streaking across the Warwick sky. A providencejournal.com reader says a co-worker shot the video just before 5 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 13.  One commenter on YouTube declared it a fake. Others had various explanations.  Ian Dell Antonio, a Brown physics professor contacted by providencejournal.com, had two theories:  " A plane. At 4:40, the sun would have set, but the plane would still be in sunlight -- as a result, the exhaust trail would be lit much brighter than the sky, and look like a fireball (the shape of the trail also would match -- you see two exhausts and that is typical of planes with wing engines, whereas a hunk of rock would not give you two trails).  "A much smaller object much closer ... that's on fire. I'm more skeptical of this, although it looks like the trail passes in front of the telephone wires, because the angular speed is too slow for something falling, so it would have to be floating or actively flying (model airplane?) as I said, I think it's not as likely as the plane explanation..." - Providence Journal.

WATCH: fiery object streaks across Warwick skies.


Shooting Star Over Local Farm in Philadelphia  - 15th of December, 2012.
What the heck landed in Christ Beiler's cornfield nearly two weeks ago? A number of people in East Lampeter and Upper Leacock townships reported hearing a loud explosion Sunday, Dec. 2, about 5 a.m.  That noise coincided with what Beiler reportedly saw while he was milking cows on his farm along Hobson Road near Smoketown.  According to a friend, Sam Stoltzfus, of Gordonville, Beiler saw a light streak into his field before he heard a "boom.''  "He did find the spot in his field and you can still see it,'' Stoltzfus reports. "There was also a strong acrid smell. That's why they called the fire company.''  Christian Kauffman, assistant fire chief of the Witmer Fire Co. and Stoltzfus' son-in-law, says a number of people dialed 911 and the county's 9-1-1 Center alerted the fire company. Among the concerned were East Lampeter Township Police officers. They heard the explosion inside their station along Route 340, Kauffman says.  The fire company investigated and found nothing, according to Kauffman. Heavy fog that morning hindered the investigation, he adds.  "We said, officially, that the report was unfounded,'' Kauffman notes. "But now I'm beginning to believe it probably was a shooting star.''  Stoltzfus says he and others have walked all over Beiler's field looking for possible fragments of a meteor, also known as a shooting star. They have not found anything. But Stoltzfus has no doubt a shooting star landed in that field.  "It wasn't the Star of Bethlehem,'' he concludes. "It was the Star of Bird-in-Hand.'' - Fire Engineering.

NASA Cameras Capture 2012 Geminid Meteor Shower - 16th of December, 2012.
Flaring brighter than the full moon, this spectacular Geminid meteor lit up the sky above Cartersville, Ga., at 2:29 a.m. EST on the morning of December 14, 2012. NASA says that this is one of the brightest fireballs observed by the NASA network of meteor cameras in over four years of operation. The 2012 Geminid Meteor Shower, which peaked on December 13th and 14th, is the most intense meteor shower of the year and can still be seen this week. It lasts for days and can be seen from almost any point on Earth.  The 2012 Geminid meteor shower can be seen around 8 p.m. every evening at the viewer's respective local time. The meteor shower will be the most intense and directly overhead during the hours of 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. The meteor shower sets in the western sky just before sunrise. A new moon coincides with the 2012 Geminid meteor shower peak. So the dark night sky will make the display even more spectacular.  Geminid meteors stream from a point called "the radiant" in the constellation Gemini. - Brevard Times.

WATCH: 2012 Geminid Meteor Showers.


Huge Fireballs Light Up Evening Sky Over Punjab, India - 17th of December, 2012.
Eyewitness - Kamalpreet Singh, Jalandhar, Punjab, India at  7.36pm.
5 seconds duration - Travelling from left to right. Bright yellow colour. Same brightness as the moon, like a huge ball from the sky.
Eyewitness - Rahul Sharma, Jalandhar, Punjab, India at 6.50pm.
5 seconds duration - N-E direction, heading east and downward diagonally. Firstly it was bright green / blueish, then it changed into orange around midway. No sound. It was as bright as the full moon, like a huge burning ball. I have seen many meteors in my life, but this one was huge. It lit up the sky like a firework. - Lunar Meteorite Hunters.
Calgarian Left Scratching Head Over Odd Light In The Night Sky - 18th of December, 2012.
She admits it sounds nutty.  But Janine Coburn swears she spotted a fiery green orb streaking across a clear night sky on the weekend. It was moving faster than an airplane, Coburn insists, and it was bigger than a falling star.  "It's as if it were flung by a giant," she said. "It was vivid."  The Somerset resident was out for some fresh air shortly before midnight on Sunday when she watched the mysterious object soaring north for at least five seconds before vanishing.  It's left Coburn scratching her head to explain the apparent cosmic show. Combing through online communities has been fruitless, so she's asking Calgarians for answers.  "I've done research since then and it hasn't made me feel any more comfortable with what I saw," she said Tuesday.  Phil Langill, director of the University of Calgary's observatory, is also unsure what Coburn witnessed. Photos pulled from a sky camera reveal Sunday was actually a cloudy evening, which leads Langill to believe it was a low-flying object - possibly fireworks.  "If it were below the clouds it would've been man-made," he said. "If it were above the clouds it could've been a meteor."  Experts predicted rural skywatchers could have seen as many as 100 shooting stars per hour during the Geminid meteor showers, which peaked last Friday.  Devon Hamilton, a PhD in astrophysics, suggested the local sighting was a highly visible meteor known as a fireball, based on Coburn's loose account.  A highly charged meteor often emits distinct colours as it passes through Earth's atmosphere, according to Hamilton, a vice-president with the Telus Spark science centre.  "In the case of green meteors, the composition can be connected to nickel," he said. "Although other factors can contribute to the coloration, including tricks our eyes and brains play on us." - Calgary Herald.