“Once, there was so much water that a steamship could carry agricultural supplies from the Bakersfield area up to Fresno and then up to San Francisco,” Underhill told the outlet.
A California “ghost lake” that disappeared in the 19th century is making its grand return after 130 years, swallowing up 94,000 acres and counting of private farmland.
The Tulare Lake in California’s San Joaquin Valley began to dry up in the late 1850s — not through some fluke, but through deliberate action taken to reshape the land at the expense of the existing ecosystem and nearby indigenous communities.
It vanished altogether around 1890 and reappeared with a vengeance in 2023, thanks to the massive winter storms across the Golden State and snowmelt from Sierra Nevada.
Well not the next minute. It was reappearing over a year ago.
Ha ha yeah, did not read the full article until after I posted. Doh.
Back in the early days of Q someone assumed to be LDR said someone along the lines of "have fun watching your children die of thirst."
Then we have all the underground tunnels/construction/DUMBS. The famous "Water the water" drop.
Maybe something was going on with the aquifers that has been corrected? I know China has been shipping our water over there in SPRAG bags.
Spitballin'
OMFG, the famous Q statement, ';watch the water'.
u/Hildberht2 I was thinking more along the lines of Q's post "Watch California"
(Watch CA)
It was the LDR comment that always creeped me out, what does she know.
She knows their plan.
Pretty sure that was a 4chan thread with Lady Roths, before the Q team postings.
Nope that was through the Q postings between the anons baking the bread.
Gotcha.
Maybe, either way.
“Once, there was so much water that a steamship could carry agricultural supplies from the Bakersfield area up to Fresno and then up to San Francisco,” Underhill told the outlet.
A California “ghost lake” that disappeared in the 19th century is making its grand return after 130 years, swallowing up 94,000 acres and counting of private farmland.
The Tulare Lake in California’s San Joaquin Valley began to dry up in the late 1850s — not through some fluke, but through deliberate action taken to reshape the land at the expense of the existing ecosystem and nearby indigenous communities.
It vanished altogether around 1890 and reappeared with a vengeance in 2023, thanks to the massive winter storms across the Golden State and snowmelt from Sierra Nevada.
Yeah I read about this lake reappearing a couple of months ago. I thought it was a good thing but maybe not.
Explanation of the Lake's disappearance.
https://x.com/i/status/1863478778045124807
Watch the water
u/#catdance
Cat is watching it and not going near it
u/#catpopcorn
It's under the popcorn!
This has been re-appearing for several years, possibly three. There are some good documentaries about the historical perspective of it on YouTube.
Aquaculture is a thing. If life gives you lemons....
Watch the water? 😜