It's Climate Change I tell'ya!! IT'S CLIMATE CHANGE!!

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Panama community pushed from island by rising sea levels moves into new houses
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Juan Zamorano
Published Jun 06, 2024 • 3 minute read

ISBERYALA, Panama — Hammocks began appearing this week in the doorways of 300 new houses built in what was previously a yucca field along Panama’s Caribbean coast for families from the country’s first low-lying island evacuated due to rising sea levels.


Indigenous Guna families from the island of Gardi Sugdub ferried stoves, gas cylinders, mattresses and other belongings first in boats and then in trucks to the new community of Isberyala.

They quickly saw some differences.

“Here it’s cooler,” said 73-year-old Augusto Walter, hanging his hammock on Wednesday in the tidy two-bedroom house with a backyard. “There (on the island) at this time of day, it’s an oven.”

He was waiting for his wife who had stayed a bit longer on the island to prepare food. They will share the government-constructed house with three other family members.

Most of Gardi Sugdub’s families had moved or were in the process of moving, but Isberyala’s freshly paved and painted streets named after historic Guna leaders were still largely empty.


The Indigenous community surrounded by jungle is about a 30-minute walk from the port where a few more minutes aboard a boat brings them to their former homes. Government officials said they expected everyone to be moved in by Thursday.

However, that doesn’t mean everyone is leaving the island. Seven or eight families numbering about 200 people have chosen to stay for now. Workers were even building a two-story house on the island Wednesday.

Among those staying was Augencio Arango a 49-year-old boat motor mechanic.

“I prefer to be here (on the island), it’s more relaxing,” Arango said. His mother, brother and grandmother moved to Isberyala.

“Honestly, I don’t know why the people want to live there,” he said. “It’s like living in the city, locked up and you can’t leave and the houses are small.”


He didn’t think climate change was responsible for the move, but rather decisions made by people. “Man is who harms nature,” Arango said. “Now they want to cut down all the trees to build houses on solid ground.”

Tiny Gardi Sugdub is one of about 50 populated islands in the archipelago of the Guna Yala territory.

Every year, especially when the strong winds whip up the sea in November and December, water fills the streets and enters the homes. Climate change isn’t only leading to a rise in sea levels, but it’s also warming oceans and thereby powering stronger storms.

The Gunas of Gardi Sugdub are only the first of 63 communities along Panama’s Caribbean and Pacific coasts that government officials and scientists expect to be forced to relocate by rising sea levels in the coming decades.


Ernesto Lopez, 69, moved Tuesday with his wife Digna. Two more relatives were expected soon.

“We feel like we’re more comfortable here, there’s more space,” Lopez said, sitting on his own hammock Wednesday. “On Gardi Sugdub we were really squeezed in houses with a lot people. We didn’t fit anymore and the sea was coming in every year.”

Like most of the families who had moved in, Lopez, a Guna leader, and his wife still didn’t have electricity or water. The government said electricity was available in the community but families had to set up their own accounts. They made do their first night with a battery-powered lantern and the gas burners they brought from the island.

Mangos, unripened bananas and sugar cane that Lopez had brought that morning from his farm plot some two hours away lay in a pile on the house’s floor. Like most families, they didn’t plan to completely abandon the island where generations had spent their entire lives.


“Once in a while we are going to cross to the island,” Lopez said.

Late in the day, many of Isberyala’s new residents did just that because their new homes didn’t yet have electricity.

Betsaira Brenes, 19, moved with her mother, grandmother and an aunt Wednesday. Carrying two gallons of water into the house that they brought from the island, she said it would be enough space for their family after living on the crowded island.

They planned to continue straddling between mainland and island too, she said. “The good thing in all of this is that now we have a new house and the other one where the other aunts stayed.”
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Bob Weber
Published Jun 11, 2024 • 2 minute read

Environment Canada is predicting a warmer-than-usual summer across the entire country, with the greatest chance of high temperatures everywhere east of Manitoba.


“There is a high probability of above-normal temperatures for the summer season,” said meteorologist Jennifer Smith. “Above-normal temperatures are expected for the Prairies, but the probability isn’t as high as out East.”

The government agency released maps Tuesday suggesting the chance of a hot summer is virtually 100% almost everywhere east of the Ontario-Manitoba boundary. That probability falls to as low as 50 per cent in Alberta.

Coastal British Columbia and Yukon are the only parts of Canada for which normal temperatures are forecast.

Still, the usual weather of a Canadian summer is expected — that is, a little bit of everything.

“Daily weather will vary,” said Smith. “Expect heat waves, cool spells and all the fluctuations that summer brings.”


No such simple pattern presents itself for precipitation.

“The climate models are not able to make reliable predictions,” Smith said. “There is no clear signal.”

Predicting rainfall is much harder than precipitation, said Smith, who compared long-range rain forecasts to trying to predict where individual particles of milk go when you drop them in a cup of coffee.

“The science is there but the ability to measure what’s happening in the atmosphere everywhere at all times is not.”

Those higher temperatures will have an effect on wildfires. Heat will dry up soils, and mountain snowpacks are already melting earlier in the year than they used to.

“Our colleagues at (Natural Resources Canada) are predicting increased wildfire risk for Central Canada in the later part of the summer,” said Environment Canada climatologist Nathan Gillett.


The department plans to offer new products this summer.

A website called FireWork, expected to be running by the end of next month, would pinpoint sources of smoke and predict where it would drift over the next three days. It would be accompanied by an advisory scale describing the severity of the threat.

Users could set it to issue an advisory when smoke levels pass whatever threshold they consider safe or comfortable.

The agency is also developing a rapid response climate change attribution system, which would allow scientists to calculate the probable contribution of climate change to any extreme weather event.

For example, last spring’s heat wave in Alberta, which saw temperatures of over 30 C when the average is about 18 C, was made at least twice as likely by the influence of climate change.

Gillett said that information would allow officials to target their response to such events. If you’re rebuilding a bridge, he said, it’s useful to know if climate change played a role or if it’s natural variability.

Gillett said climate is already taking effect. Temperatures have risen since 1948, he said.

“Warming has been observed from coast to coast in summer,” he said. “The human-induced warming explains almost all the observed warming.

“The signal of climate change on warming in Canada is clear.”
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
110,387
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Low Earth Orbit
Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Bob Weber
Published Jun 11, 2024 • 2 minute read

Environment Canada is predicting a warmer-than-usual summer across the entire country, with the greatest chance of high temperatures everywhere east of Manitoba.

“There is a high probability of above-normal temperatures for the summer season,” said meteorologist Jennifer Smith. “Above-normal temperatures are expected for the Prairies, but the probability isn’t as high as out East.”


The government agency released maps Tuesday suggesting the chance of a hot summer is virtually 100% almost everywhere east of the Ontario-Manitoba boundary. That probability falls to as low as 50 per cent in Alberta.

Coastal British Columbia and Yukon are the only parts of Canada for which normal temperatures are forecast.

Still, the usual weather of a Canadian summer is expected — that is, a little bit of everything.

“Daily weather will vary,” said Smith. “Expect heat waves, cool spells and all the fluctuations that summer brings.”


No such simple pattern presents itself for precipitation.

“The climate models are not able to make reliable predictions,” Smith said. “There is no clear signal.”

Predicting rainfall is much harder than precipitation, said Smith, who compared long-range rain forecasts to trying to predict where individual particles of milk go when you drop them in a cup of coffee.

“The science is there but the ability to measure what’s happening in the atmosphere everywhere at all times is not.”

Those higher temperatures will have an effect on wildfires. Heat will dry up soils, and mountain snowpacks are already melting earlier in the year than they used to.

“Our colleagues at (Natural Resources Canada) are predicting increased wildfire risk for Central Canada in the later part of the summer,” said Environment Canada climatologist Nathan Gillett.


The department plans to offer new products this summer.

A website called FireWork, expected to be running by the end of next month, would pinpoint sources of smoke and predict where it would drift over the next three days. It would be accompanied by an advisory scale describing the severity of the threat.

Users could set it to issue an advisory when smoke levels pass whatever threshold they consider safe or comfortable.

The agency is also developing a rapid response climate change attribution system, which would allow scientists to calculate the probable contribution of climate change to any extreme weather event.

For example, last spring’s heat wave in Alberta, which saw temperatures of over 30 C when the average is about 18 C, was made at least twice as likely by the influence of climate change.

Gillett said that information would allow officials to target their response to such events. If you’re rebuilding a bridge, he said, it’s useful to know if climate change played a role or if it’s natural variability.

Gillett said climate is already taking effect. Temperatures have risen since 1948, he said.

“Warming has been observed from coast to coast in summer,” he said. “The human-induced warming explains almost all the observed warming.

“The signal of climate change on warming in Canada is clear.”
“There is a high probability of above-normal temperatures for the summer season,” said meteorologist Jennifer Smith. “Above-normal temperatures are expected for the Prairies, but the probability isn’t as high as out East.”
2° under average is "above normal".

Come to SK for the weekend its gonna be a cooker at 16° daytime and a scorching low of 5° at night.

A nice late October day!
 
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pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
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2° under average is "above normal".

Come to SK for the weekend its gonna be a cooker at 16° daytime and a scorching low of 5° at night.

A nice late October day!
How come so many fields are still brown , is that normal this late in the year ? Driving thru Saskabush I thought we would see green wheat growing tall already .
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
110,387
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Low Earth Orbit
How come so many fields are still brown , is that normal this late in the year ? Driving thru Saskabush I thought we would see green wheat growing tall already .
When were you in Saskatoon? Spring wheat was seeded 5-6 weeks ago. It takes 120 days to mature to harvest. Barley, oats, peas, lentils etc 65-75 days and canola around 90-100 days.

With that, some crops were seeded just in the past couple weeks even days.

Zero till makes the fields look brown. It's deceiving.

Hopefully you're back and miss the snow on Hwy 5.

1000015726.jpg
 
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pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
26,886
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B.C.
When were you in Saskatoon? Spring wheat was seeded 5-6 weeks ago. It takes 120 days to mature to harvest. Barley, oats, peas, lentils etc 65-75 days and canola around 90-100 days.

With that, some crops were seeded just in the past couple weeks even days.

Zero till makes the fields look brown. It's deceiving.

Hopefully you're back and miss the snow on Hwy 5.

View attachment 22563
Just got back , this minute , hwy 3 from the Kootenays , it had snowed on Paulson summit . No trace at Sunday or Allison summits .
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
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Was in Saskatchewan Monday ,Tuesday , it rained so we camped in a hotel in Swift Current .
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,364
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How much rain fell in Florida? Is there more coming?
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Matthew Cappucci, The Washington Post
Published Jun 13, 2024 • 3 minute read

Disastrous flooding plagued areas between Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Miami on Wednesday after nearly a foot of rain fell, transforming roadways into rivers and leaving homes and businesses treading water. It was the wettest summer day on record in Fort Lauderdale, where bookkeeping dates back to 1912.


The National Weather Service issued a dire flash flood emergency for “catastrophic” flood impacts between Miami Dade and Fort Lauderdale.

The episode comes 14 months to the day since an incredible 22.5 inches fell on Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport in a single day, leading to unprecedented flood impacts. Both episodes bear the fingerprint of human-caused climate change, which is increasing the intensity and severity of top-tier rain events.

To make matters worse, the ongoing rain event is far from over, and another half-foot or more of rain could fall in some spots before downpours finally wind down into Friday. In some areas, roadways are still impassable due to high water.

How much rain has fallen?

Here’s how much rain fell just on Wednesday:

12.71 inches in Hollywood

12.6 inches along Interstate 75 (Alligator Alley) in rural north Collier County

12.1 inches at the Miami Date College North Campus

10.63 inches in North Miami

10.85 inches at Dania Beach

10.63 inches in North Miami

10.4 inches at Miami Shores

9.58 inches at the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport

8.49 inches at the City of Sunrise Fire Station

6.76 inches at Everglades City

5.89 inches on Marco Island

If we look at what has fallen since Monday morning, there are a few totals closing in on 18 inches:

16.04 inches at Kirby Storter Park on the Big Cypress National Preserve

15.71 inches in North Miami

15.47 inches along Alligator Alley in rural Collier County


15.37 inches in Miami Shores

15.08 inches at Dania Beach

14.54 inches in Everglades City

14.41 inches in Coconut Creek

13.01 inches at the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport

12.59 inches in Coral Springs

11.56 inches in Fort Lauderdale

10.76 inches in Weston

Did the rain break records?
A number of records were set across the area. Wednesday’s 9.54 inches nabs the top spot for the wettest summer day on record, surpassing the 8.6 inches that fell on June 2, 1930. It’s the eighth wettest day at the airport of all time.

A typical June averages 9.55 inches of rain, meaning an entire month’s worth of rain came down in one day.

Between 1 and 2 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, 2.41 inches of rain fell. That’s the seventh wettest hour on record at Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport. Hourly weather observations date back to 1973, but seven of the wettest hours on record have occurred in the past 10 years, and all have occurred since 2003.


One station in Hollywood, Fla., logged 10.22 inches of rain in six hours, which statistically falls just shy of a 100-year rain event, or an event that has a 1 percent chance of happening in a given location any given year. Sunny Isles Beach got 6.47 inches in 3 hours, which occurs on average once every 25 years.

The climate connection
It’s well established that the frequency, and intensity, of rainfall events is increasing in tandem with our warming atmosphere. A warmer world is a wetter world, since warmer air has a greater propensity to hold water. For every degree of increase in heat in the atmosphere, it can hold 4 percent more moisture.

That’s why extremes like this are becoming more common, and rainfall rates are getting heavier too. Moreover, a more saturated atmosphere during high-end events increases precipitation efficiency; in other words, more of the raindrops survive to the ground without evaporating, leading to more rapid accumulations.


What’s next?
Weather models depict continued shower and thunderstorm activity across South Florida on Thursday afternoon and evening, with the chance that another 3 to 6 inches falls. Localized greater totals can’t be ruled out.

The rainfall won’t extend much north of a line from Punta Gorda, Fla., to the Space Coast, though a renegade afternoon shower or thunderstorm is possible.

By Friday afternoon, only typical late-day summertime storms are expected. The parent low-pressure system will be pulling into the northwest Atlantic, where it has a low-end chance of acquiring subtropical characteristics as it passes over the warm waters or the Gulf Stream. According to the National Hurricane Center, the system has a 20 percent chance of development.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
110,387
11,834
113
Low Earth Orbit
How much rain fell in Florida? Is there more coming?
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Matthew Cappucci, The Washington Post
Published Jun 13, 2024 • 3 minute read

Disastrous flooding plagued areas between Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Miami on Wednesday after nearly a foot of rain fell, transforming roadways into rivers and leaving homes and businesses treading water. It was the wettest summer day on record in Fort Lauderdale, where bookkeeping dates back to 1912.


The National Weather Service issued a dire flash flood emergency for “catastrophic” flood impacts between Miami Dade and Fort Lauderdale.

The episode comes 14 months to the day since an incredible 22.5 inches fell on Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport in a single day, leading to unprecedented flood impacts. Both episodes bear the fingerprint of human-caused climate change, which is increasing the intensity and severity of top-tier rain events.

To make matters worse, the ongoing rain event is far from over, and another half-foot or more of rain could fall in some spots before downpours finally wind down into Friday. In some areas, roadways are still impassable due to high water.

How much rain has fallen?

Here’s how much rain fell just on Wednesday:

12.71 inches in Hollywood

12.6 inches along Interstate 75 (Alligator Alley) in rural north Collier County

12.1 inches at the Miami Date College North Campus

10.63 inches in North Miami

10.85 inches at Dania Beach

10.63 inches in North Miami

10.4 inches at Miami Shores

9.58 inches at the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport

8.49 inches at the City of Sunrise Fire Station

6.76 inches at Everglades City

5.89 inches on Marco Island

If we look at what has fallen since Monday morning, there are a few totals closing in on 18 inches:

16.04 inches at Kirby Storter Park on the Big Cypress National Preserve

15.71 inches in North Miami

15.47 inches along Alligator Alley in rural Collier County


15.37 inches in Miami Shores

15.08 inches at Dania Beach

14.54 inches in Everglades City

14.41 inches in Coconut Creek

13.01 inches at the Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport

12.59 inches in Coral Springs

11.56 inches in Fort Lauderdale

10.76 inches in Weston

Did the rain break records?
A number of records were set across the area. Wednesday’s 9.54 inches nabs the top spot for the wettest summer day on record, surpassing the 8.6 inches that fell on June 2, 1930. It’s the eighth wettest day at the airport of all time.

A typical June averages 9.55 inches of rain, meaning an entire month’s worth of rain came down in one day.

Between 1 and 2 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday, 2.41 inches of rain fell. That’s the seventh wettest hour on record at Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport. Hourly weather observations date back to 1973, but seven of the wettest hours on record have occurred in the past 10 years, and all have occurred since 2003.


One station in Hollywood, Fla., logged 10.22 inches of rain in six hours, which statistically falls just shy of a 100-year rain event, or an event that has a 1 percent chance of happening in a given location any given year. Sunny Isles Beach got 6.47 inches in 3 hours, which occurs on average once every 25 years.

The climate connection
It’s well established that the frequency, and intensity, of rainfall events is increasing in tandem with our warming atmosphere. A warmer world is a wetter world, since warmer air has a greater propensity to hold water. For every degree of increase in heat in the atmosphere, it can hold 4 percent more moisture.

That’s why extremes like this are becoming more common, and rainfall rates are getting heavier too. Moreover, a more saturated atmosphere during high-end events increases precipitation efficiency; in other words, more of the raindrops survive to the ground without evaporating, leading to more rapid accumulations.


What’s next?
Weather models depict continued shower and thunderstorm activity across South Florida on Thursday afternoon and evening, with the chance that another 3 to 6 inches falls. Localized greater totals can’t be ruled out.

The rainfall won’t extend much north of a line from Punta Gorda, Fla., to the Space Coast, though a renegade afternoon shower or thunderstorm is possible.

By Friday afternoon, only typical late-day summertime storms are expected. The parent low-pressure system will be pulling into the northwest Atlantic, where it has a low-end chance of acquiring subtropical characteristics as it passes over the warm waters or the Gulf Stream. According to the National Hurricane Center, the system has a 20 percent chance of development.
Sweet. Cosmic rays must be high.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
110,387
11,834
113
Low Earth Orbit
Does it thunderstorm every day in Florida?

In the western half of the peninsula in a typical year, there are over 80 days with thunder and lightning. Central Florida's frequency of summer thunderstorms equals that of the world's maximum thunderstorm areas: Lake Victoria region of equatorial Africa and the middle of the Amazon basin.

https://climatecenter.fsu.edu › topics
Thunderstorms - Florida Climate Center
 

Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
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Environment Canada predicts warm summer across country, especially in East
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Bob Weber
Published Jun 11, 2024 • 2 minute read

Environment Canada is predicting a warmer-than-usual summer across the entire country, with the greatest chance of high temperatures everywhere east of Manitoba.


“There is a high probability of above-normal temperatures for the summer season,” said meteorologist Jennifer Smith. “Above-normal temperatures are expected for the Prairies, but the probability isn’t as high as out East.”

The government agency released maps Tuesday suggesting the chance of a hot summer is virtually 100% almost everywhere east of the Ontario-Manitoba boundary. That probability falls to as low as 50 per cent in Alberta.

Coastal British Columbia and Yukon are the only parts of Canada for which normal temperatures are forecast.

Still, the usual weather of a Canadian summer is expected — that is, a little bit of everything.

“Daily weather will vary,” said Smith. “Expect heat waves, cool spells and all the fluctuations that summer brings.”


No such simple pattern presents itself for precipitation.

“The climate models are not able to make reliable predictions,” Smith said. “There is no clear signal.”

Predicting rainfall is much harder than precipitation, said Smith, who compared long-range rain forecasts to trying to predict where individual particles of milk go when you drop them in a cup of coffee.

“The science is there but the ability to measure what’s happening in the atmosphere everywhere at all times is not.”

Those higher temperatures will have an effect on wildfires. Heat will dry up soils, and mountain snowpacks are already melting earlier in the year than they used to.

“Our colleagues at (Natural Resources Canada) are predicting increased wildfire risk for Central Canada in the later part of the summer,” said Environment Canada climatologist Nathan Gillett.


The department plans to offer new products this summer.

A website called FireWork, expected to be running by the end of next month, would pinpoint sources of smoke and predict where it would drift over the next three days. It would be accompanied by an advisory scale describing the severity of the threat.

Users could set it to issue an advisory when smoke levels pass whatever threshold they consider safe or comfortable.

The agency is also developing a rapid response climate change attribution system, which would allow scientists to calculate the probable contribution of climate change to any extreme weather event.

For example, last spring’s heat wave in Alberta, which saw temperatures of over 30 C when the average is about 18 C, was made at least twice as likely by the influence of climate change.

Gillett said that information would allow officials to target their response to such events. If you’re rebuilding a bridge, he said, it’s useful to know if climate change played a role or if it’s natural variability.

Gillett said climate is already taking effect. Temperatures have risen since 1948, he said.

“Warming has been observed from coast to coast in summer,” he said. “The human-induced warming explains almost all the observed warming.

“The signal of climate change on warming in Canada is clear.”
They have been predicting that since last summer. Meanwhile we are getting somewhat more than average rain and it is cold. But hey, the dogma is always right.
 
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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Edmonton
Panama community pushed from island by rising sea levels moves into new houses
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Juan Zamorano
Published Jun 06, 2024 • 3 minute read

ISBERYALA, Panama — Hammocks began appearing this week in the doorways of 300 new houses built in what was previously a yucca field along Panama’s Caribbean coast for families from the country’s first low-lying island evacuated due to rising sea levels.


Indigenous Guna families from the island of Gardi Sugdub ferried stoves, gas cylinders, mattresses and other belongings first in boats and then in trucks to the new community of Isberyala.

They quickly saw some differences.

“Here it’s cooler,” said 73-year-old Augusto Walter, hanging his hammock on Wednesday in the tidy two-bedroom house with a backyard. “There (on the island) at this time of day, it’s an oven.”

He was waiting for his wife who had stayed a bit longer on the island to prepare food. They will share the government-constructed house with three other family members.

Most of Gardi Sugdub’s families had moved or were in the process of moving, but Isberyala’s freshly paved and painted streets named after historic Guna leaders were still largely empty.


The Indigenous community surrounded by jungle is about a 30-minute walk from the port where a few more minutes aboard a boat brings them to their former homes. Government officials said they expected everyone to be moved in by Thursday.

However, that doesn’t mean everyone is leaving the island. Seven or eight families numbering about 200 people have chosen to stay for now. Workers were even building a two-story house on the island Wednesday.

Among those staying was Augencio Arango a 49-year-old boat motor mechanic.

“I prefer to be here (on the island), it’s more relaxing,” Arango said. His mother, brother and grandmother moved to Isberyala.

“Honestly, I don’t know why the people want to live there,” he said. “It’s like living in the city, locked up and you can’t leave and the houses are small.”


He didn’t think climate change was responsible for the move, but rather decisions made by people. “Man is who harms nature,” Arango said. “Now they want to cut down all the trees to build houses on solid ground.”

Tiny Gardi Sugdub is one of about 50 populated islands in the archipelago of the Guna Yala territory.

Every year, especially when the strong winds whip up the sea in November and December, water fills the streets and enters the homes. Climate change isn’t only leading to a rise in sea levels, but it’s also warming oceans and thereby powering stronger storms.

The Gunas of Gardi Sugdub are only the first of 63 communities along Panama’s Caribbean and Pacific coasts that government officials and scientists expect to be forced to relocate by rising sea levels in the coming decades.


Ernesto Lopez, 69, moved Tuesday with his wife Digna. Two more relatives were expected soon.

“We feel like we’re more comfortable here, there’s more space,” Lopez said, sitting on his own hammock Wednesday. “On Gardi Sugdub we were really squeezed in houses with a lot people. We didn’t fit anymore and the sea was coming in every year.”

Like most of the families who had moved in, Lopez, a Guna leader, and his wife still didn’t have electricity or water. The government said electricity was available in the community but families had to set up their own accounts. They made do their first night with a battery-powered lantern and the gas burners they brought from the island.

Mangos, unripened bananas and sugar cane that Lopez had brought that morning from his farm plot some two hours away lay in a pile on the house’s floor. Like most families, they didn’t plan to completely abandon the island where generations had spent their entire lives.


“Once in a while we are going to cross to the island,” Lopez said.

Late in the day, many of Isberyala’s new residents did just that because their new homes didn’t yet have electricity.

Betsaira Brenes, 19, moved with her mother, grandmother and an aunt Wednesday. Carrying two gallons of water into the house that they brought from the island, she said it would be enough space for their family after living on the crowded island.

They planned to continue straddling between mainland and island too, she said. “The good thing in all of this is that now we have a new house and the other one where the other aunts stayed.”
Don't they mean due to erosion? The sea levels aren't rising, erosion is taking place.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
14,711
2,443
113
Toronto, ON
I like them. They are pretty much the most consistently reliable but not the best. Western used to be good but not so much any longer.
I liked Western in my University days (back when dinosaurs roamed the earth) because they had good pizza and were open at 3AM for that mid-night snack during an all-nighter.