Posted by
K on
URL: https://www.es-forum.com/RADAR-tp1552691p1552776.html
Yes, I did feel pretty jittery during some of our bad thunderstorms last summer too. I can understand.
It will be interesting this summer to see how I react. Last summer was my first summer with EHS, so now knowing way more about it all, I'll have to see how things go, what I react to, how I react....
I'm such a newbie....
Kris
________________________________
From: "
[hidden email]" <
[hidden email]>
To:
[hidden email]
Sent: Mon, March 22, 2010 4:15:45 AM
Subject: Re: [eSens] Re: RADAR
PUK replies - When I say clouds I do not mean soft white fluffy ones, a
typical example was when I was looking skyward in the distance was a mass of
black/grey clouds heading my way, my head started to tingle almost going
numb, 30 seconds later the clouds burst with the most violent hailstones I had
ever seen, those clouds were angry to say the least !
In a message dated 21/03/2010 17:58:29 GMT Standard Time,
[hidden email] writes:
Hi Paul,
I wonder, if what you are feeling from the clouds, is actually dependent
on the type of chemical that has been sprayed in the atmosphere to affect
them? Making a plasma, an ionized vapor, which would have a stronger
electrical field, than say your average water vapor cloud, which just don't seem to
be so common anymore.
Take barium or aluminum oxide for instance, or the silica/quartz
particulate they spray up there. The stuff does drift down too.
~Snoshoe
--- In _eSens@yahoogroups.eSe_ (mailto:
[hidden email]) ,
paulpjc@... wrote:
>
> PUK replies - Hi when I was working full time in an office environmentt
I
> was extra sensitive and could definitely sense comercial aircraft at
times,
> I put this down to intelligent landing system control and air to ground
> radar, I can even sense electrical energy in clouds on bad days.
>
>
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