Protesters Storm, Set Fire To Saudi Embassy In Iran
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2016 – 17:03

Adios petrodollar, I give it 1 year.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2016 – 14:00

Worth 10 minutes of your time!!
or , as my father used to call them ; ‘ Dogsicles ‘ in the snowbanks . LOL
symptoms in young trees versus mature trees in the Sackville, Nova Scotia, images since I am not familiar with conditions on the ground there.
My only comment is that I do not get up tight about aluminum in the forest environment. After oxygen and silicon, aluminum is the third most abundant element in the earth’s crust, and aluminum is the most abundant metallic element (see Abstract and first couple of paragraphs in link below). Aluminum becomes available to plants only when soil pH drops below 5.5 (that is, only when soils are acidic, as they tend to be under most forest vegetation). Plants have had geologically long periods of time to adapt to various levels of available aluminum in the forest soil environment. I remain to be convinced that the alleged aluminum coating on the bark of trees shown in the Sackville videos has anything to do with the present condition of the forests shown in the videos.
As an old timer of the North, the best advice I can think of for goldbugs, or anyone else for that matter, is……………………………………… DON’T EAT YELLOW SNOW!!
All the best to everyone in 2016……………………………Silverngold
I do not buy my fish from supermarkets as you do not know what you are getting, as fish caught in china and canned in nova scotia is labelled as Canadian fish. A hi percentage of fish genetically tested in supermarkets are mis-labeled. I buy from a fish market and buy local fish or fish caught in the atlantic. When I ask the clerks if there are any concerns about fish caught in the pacific, I get that deer in the headlights look! However if kardashian gets a pimple on her butt, they know all about it; Cheers.
inside information from that perspective. Nor am I into marine fishing or harvesting of other edible marine biomass, so I have no dockside gossip to pass on from commercial or recreational fishers. Mrs. Equiz, who does most of our food shopping has noticed, as I have, that there are no advertised warnings about consuming marine food from the portion of the Pacific Ocean bordering the coast of British Columbia. That is, there seem to be no advertised warnings about safety of Pacific marine food from scientists in Fisheries and Oceans, from regulatory officials in food safety agencies, nor from retail vendors of Pacific marine foods at our local fisherman’s wharf or in retail food outlets. So the only warnings we have seen are probably the same ones that you have seen about Fukushima conmtamination on numerous postings that appear on websites such as SGT Reports.
So what have we done about our consumption of seafood from the eastern pacific? Probably about the same as you. We are highly skeptical of its safety and have stopped buying any marine seafood that we know is ocean-run from the eastern Pacific region. I have rationalized, perhaps naively so, that perhaps commercially available farm salmon may be less likely to be contaminated from Fukushima radioactive outfall than would be ocean-run wild salmon that have been out in the Gulf of Alaska or elsewhere in the eastern Pacific for part of their life cycle. These farm salmon are typically reared in protected near-shore areas in the somewhat “inland” areas surrounding the Strait of Georgia, and that is why I imagine (but do not know) that they may be less susceptible to marine radioactive contamination than ocean-run salmon would be.
Check me out with your Geiger counter if we ever meet. Cheers. Equiz
i usually buy silver bars from APMEX since they are local. If you go to their website, their premiums are posted.
the gold/silver ratio will some day return to the historical 1/16. The freight and storage of gold seem to have vastly distorted the current ratio. When the currency collapse comes, I don’t believe the current premiums will seem significant.
if I was guessing, I believe a huge amount of gold is being transferred to new locations and covered by the paper smokescreen.
i just don’t trust the bankers and politicians. I don’t want my resources anywhere some sleazeball can punch a few Keyes and take everything. When they do, the legal system will be so jammed that it will take decades to get anything back if at all. One thing all sleaze balls have in common is that they don’t want to “kiss the dog” (face to face confrontation) when they want your resources.
The paper resources will be the first to go. Millions will go to bed financially comfortable and wake up broke with no recourse.
rno
I was checking metals prices the other day. What I found locally was that gold coins were about 5% over spot. Silver was 12% over for rounds, to as much as 33% over for silver Eagles. Junk silver was about 25% over spot. I imagine those are not uncommon ratios. Are you buying irrespective of those premiums because you feel silver is so undervalued that it is still a good buy even with the premiums?
Thank you. I immediately recognized that I had previously watched it, but I enjoyed watching it again. Here is an honest man trying to make a difference in our world. This is such a huge subject that I would recommend everyone watch it to gain more understanding of both mistakes of the past as well as what needs to be done to correct those mistakes. For my own small acreage I use cross fencing and rotational grazing to accomplish the goal of sustained yield in this semi-desert of the Okanagan.
All the Best and Happy New Year.
I keep hearing about the devastation of the pacific ocean due to fukishima. I hear reports of hi radiation and lots of dead ocean life washing ashore. I know I am afraid of eating any fish from the pacific now. Interesting to hear your take on this!
Hi Equise,
Thank you for your input. That’s very interesting info concerning the tree dieoff on the east coast of Canada and the US back into the 1940’s. What I was questioning as I watched the video of the more mature dead and dieing trees was that it appeared that the new young growth of the same species looked healthy….so I was questioning that if Aluminum was killing the older growth, why was it not also killing the new growth which looked so healthy?? I’m not a Forester but what came to mind was perhaps it was not caused from aluminum falling from the sky but was caused from the root systems of the older growth being deep enough to pick up something in the subsoil that caused the more mature trees to die off, but the new growth did not have root systems deep enough yet to pick up whatever was killing off the old growth. I certainly do not believe that all dieing trees in the world are from chemtrail fallout although I think much of them are. I know that there are many species of beetles and weevils and fungus that kill off both healthy and unhealthy trees alike. I have a small stand of black birch here that is dieing a few at a time but I believe it is due to ants that are harvesting something from them until the trees weaken and die.
I have not yet watched the TED presentation but will do so shortly. Again, thank you for your input.
to take one’s mind off of geopolitiacal subjects and money (gold and silver) matters, you might appreciate listening to some TED Talk ideas from Allan Savory. If you hear him out it takes about 22 minutes. We first heard of his controversial approach in the early 1980’s when we were working on a grazing management plan and forest regeneration plan for Cypress Hills Provincial park in southeastern Alberta. No need for you to respond to this presentation by Allan Savory; it is posted just for listening pleasure and its suggestion of possible different ways of thinking about vegetation/land relationships. Cheers.
forests around Sackville Lake in Nova Scotia. In 1962 to 1964 I worked in the “barrens” of Yarmouth and Shelburne Counties of Nova Scotia trying to come up with new ideas on how to regenerate new forest in areas that had previously supported forest stands. Those forest regeneration challenges were beyond my ability to suggest anything very helpful. In the 1960’s foresters were still scratching their heads about the very widespread forest dieback of yellow birch and beech that had occurred in Nova Scotia and neighboring northeastern states of the U.S. in the late 1940’s (see abstract of one reference below). That widespread dieback was long before Fukushima or HAARP. Forest tree vitality is influenced by a very wide range of potentially harmful agents or factors.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233518466_Aspects_of_Yellow_Birch_Dieback_in_Nova_Scotia
As copper continues to slide downhill, production in unprofitable mines is declining rapidly. The vast majority of silver production is as a by product of copper and zinc mining. Coupled with the gold/silver ratio being distorted to historic levels , the argument for silver is becoming convincing.
Im still dollar cost averaging phiz silver. Also finding a few small farm implements. The recent ice storms have produced lots of free firewood.
The crashing prices of wheat, cattle, oil and natural gas and subsequent layoffs will send the local economy here reeling when the foreclosures and re possessions hit. Those were not minimum wage jobs the oilies lost. Many were well into six figures and went to zero in one day. Oilies always bought lots of toys on credit. Anybody need a boat or pwc? The foreclosures and eviction notices will be hitting n March.
The last vestiges of the middle class are being strangled and looking for relief. Donald Trump, good or bad , will probably be the conservatives choice. If Hillary can avoid indictment, she will be the morons choice. The Muslim in chief is getting everything in place to throw the infidels under the bus.
rno