Solar The Grand Solar Minimum (ORIGINAL)

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TxGal

Day by day
The Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXqIRv7OQIg


Heavy Rain and Mountain Snow to Slide Across West Coast - Winter Solstice 2019

Run time is 10:48

Winter solstice: 5 things to know about the first day of winter 2019 http://bit.ly/2EI5vya
Really wet, then really dry, then really hot, then really cold: 2019 had weather extremes http://bit.ly/35H7cYx
‘Pineapple Express’ streams into Pacific Northwest with flooding rain, heavy snow http://bit.ly/2SbRW21
Heavy rain and mountain snow to slide across West Coast, rain to hit Southeast https://abcn.ws/34MuVFw
Sierra sees best start to the snow pack since 2010 http://bit.ly/2ZkF7E8
CMIP 6 Solar Data http://bit.ly/2PIza0p
Colorado’s Wild Weather Year Leaves Cities And Counties At Their Snow Budget Limits http://bit.ly/390PGQV
SNOWFALL ANALYSIS http://bit.ly/37ZQHZh
Continued Unsettled for Much of the West Coast; Heavy Rainfall Developing Over the Southeast U.S. http://bit.ly/2p2GER3 GFS Model Total Snowfall http://bit.ly/2Q7tD2C
Snow Is so Deep in Iceland Right Now That Farmers Have to Dig Out Horses http://bit.ly/34LupHV
Afghanistan jolted by strong earthquake also felt in Pakistan http://bit.ly/392dpQU
Worldwide Volcano News and Updates http://bit.ly/2v9JJhO
DOJ Starts ‘Operation Relentless Pursuit’ in Seven Cities http://bit.ly/34Ku3RB
Virginia forms active militia to protect sheriffs, citizens from unconstitutional laws http://bit.ly/394QNz5
Amazon Echo speaker goes 'rogue,' tells scared mom to 'stab yourself' https://aol.it/2Smtb2W
POLE SHIFT (AKA CRUSTAL DISPLACEMENT) AND THE MAPS THAT SHOULDN’T EXIST http://bit.ly/2PLUtOQ
Winter Solstice: The Astronomy of Christmas http://bit.ly/35LFpX5
Scientists find iron 'snow' in Earth's core http://bit.ly/2sc8gFb
Massive 2,034-foot asteroid will zoom past Earth just after Christmas https://fxn.ws/2SmtAT0
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks for the links. I try to find these on my own, but I usually get busy and miss them.

Today I emptied some VERY old quarts of dill pickles. I had to toss every single one of the canning jar bands. Luckily, I have a nice big supply of new ones stored away. I'm making room for the more recent things I've stocked up on...I'm getting tired of tripping over them, I'm tired of my kitchen being a little warehouse with only narrow aisles to move through!

Did not even get to 50 here today, lots chillier than I was expecting. Helper guy still a no-show so tomorrow my sister is going to help me empty the last bags of leaves into the chicken pen/house. 15 full leaf bags in my yard and 11 more still up at her place. I may see if she'll have time to help me get the cord strung out there for the light I want to set up.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poWfciXXSlk


What’s Happening in 2023 that Governments Are Preparing For ? (Celeste Solum 4/5)

Run time is 23:49

Celeste Solum author of Electromagnetic Radiation Protection Solutions and David DuByne from ADAPT 2030 discuss how society may shift as signs around indicate governments are stockpiling and preparing for something massive around 2023.
As we descend deeper into the Grand Solar Minimum this information will help protect your families during these changing times.

•Finding pure seed and pure stock for animals
•20% of next years seed potato and bean seed stocks wiped out globally
•Harvest 2021 becomes the Grand Solar Minimum awareness roll over year
•Emphasis on almost starvation diets around 1500 calories per day
•Cellulose in our food supply
•Society will appear as normal until the last second before the unwind
•Pioneer cookbooks to make basic staples into daily meals
•Learning how to can fruits and vegetables for long term food storage
•Reduce food wastage to increase available supply
•Findhorn experiments to get larger yields from plants
•Changing energy field to boost yields in plants
•USA moves to grow more Sorghum than Hard Red Winter Wheat
 

TxGal

Day by day
The Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out. At first glance it may not appear to be GSM related, but the Native elders in many cultures have knowledge passed down of previous events that may well be relevant:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-qRKLAbqcg


The Chief Joseph Tablet - A Common History of Assyrian and Native American Cultures Never Revealed

Run time is 10:40

A COMMON HISTORY OF ASSYRIANS AND NATIVE AMERICANS http://bit.ly/35QH11C
The Chief Joseph Tablet http://bit.ly/2SgfKSh
Exposed, Uncovered, & Declassified: Lost Civilizations & Secrets of the Past http://bit.ly/2tA7br4
Who Are the Assyrians? http://bit.ly/2PMvSJO
Anunnaki http://bit.ly/2Zfucvk
Nephilim http://bit.ly/2SbXtWi
Cuneiform in America 4000 years ago http://bit.ly/2QdfIbn
Ship Building In Ancient Egypt http://bit.ly/38VPCC2
 

TxGal

Day by day

flood-and-drought.jpg
Extreme Weather GSM

Wettest Seattle since 1900, Driest Australia since 1903 — Repeating Cycles to blame, not CO2
December 22, 2019 Cap Allon


Us humans need to play the blame game, we love a scapegoat — there are few things more satisfying than hanging a complex worldly issue on a singular, easy-to-understand hook.

The term ‘Climate Change’ has been hijacked by the activist, that’s clear now.

These ill-informed marionettes are being controlled by the UN & IPCC via the MSM; manipulated into hanging ALL extreme weather events on the man-made carbon dioxide emission ‘hook’.

This CO2 explanation, however, is an affront to science and logic, as ALL historical and proxy data points to the fact that this trace gas (0.04%) has only-ever been beneficial to our planet, increasing the quality of life and biodiversity.

Levels of the stuff were once 6,000+ ppm, and, as a result, life exploded! While contrastingly, atmospheric concentrations were very recently as low as 180 ppm, and life began to struggle. Levels below 150 ppm, and plants and creatures would cease to exist as we know them.

There is no ‘controllable’ bogeyman out there, no matter how much tax you pay — this is a myth.

Humans are powerless against the cycles of the cosmos — in particular, those of the sun.

The best we can do is prepare accordingly, and ride them out.

Wettest Seattle since 1900

Seattle residents woke up to their wettest December 20 in 119 years on Friday, as an atmospheric river soaked the city with heavy rain, leading to floods, landslides, and traffic disruptions.

More than 3 inches (78 mm) wound-up falling, busting the previous record of 2 inches (51 mm) set back in 1900, according to the NSW Seattle: (twitter post I cannot bring over)


This, like all events in nature, is a repeating cycle.

You need look no further than the sun for a clear and obvious correlation:

1577024997091.png

The year 1900 falls within the solar minimum between low solar cycles 13 and 14, cycles very similar to 24 — the one we currently find ourselves in the minimum of.

Driest Australia since the 1891-1903 ‘Megadrought’

A hotter climate means an increase in water evaporation. This results in drier soils and thirstier livestock.

Australia’s dirt has been baked-red by the sun’s routine scorching, and the intensity of these ‘bakes’ is –surprise-surprise– also cyclic, again matching up perfectly with solar output.

The ‘once in a century drought’, which went from 1891 to 1903, caused an ecosystem collapse affecting more than a third of the country.

The drought was one of the world’s worst recorded ‘megadroughts’, which at its peak saw much of the country receive less than 40 percent of its annual rainfall, with 1902 remaining the driest year on record.

CSIRO researcher Dr. Robert Godfree said: “In New South Wales, most rivers stopped flowing and dust storms filled dams, buried homesteads and created ghost towns as people fled.”

“Wildlife and stock starved or died of thirst. Native birds and mammals died under trees, in creeks, and on the plains.

“Tens of millions of sheep and cattle were killed, and hundreds of millions of rabbits died of starvation after stripping the landscape of its plant life,” Godfree said.


History is repeating:

The ‘megadrought’ of 1891-1903 falls within weak solar cycles 12 and 14, cycles very similar to the one we’re currently in the record-deep solar minimum of now — 24:


1577025043175.png
This may seem counter intuitive — low solar activity = a drier/hotter Australia?

But the factors at play aren’t merely the heat coming off the sun.

When solar wind is reduced, earth’s defenses against incoming radiation (our magnetosphere) is also weakened. Galactic Cosmic Rays from the cosmos continue to bombard and penetrate our atmosphere while our defenses are lowered, and the impact these particles have on our climate is huge.

And there are many cascading factors at play — for more on a few of them, including cloud seeding, see the articles below, or for more on the changing jet stream, keep scrolling: Cosmic Rays reach Record High as Solar Activity nears Space Age Low - Implications Explained - Electroverse
Renaissance in Climate Physics Plus Political Reform - Electroverse


2019’s extreme weather events have ALL happened before — a serious spanner in the AGW works.

If today’s climate scientists were permitted to conduct unbiased studies looking back further than 1979, an unalarming picture would emerge, with the sun holding the key.


If you still believe in the catastrophic man-made CO2 theory, there are only three possibilities in my mind: 1) you haven’t done your research, 2) you have no integrity, or 3) you’re an idiot.

Changing Jet Stream

Intensifying swings-in-extremes are in the weather forecast globally, for all of us, as historically low solar activity continues to weaken the jet stream, reverting its usual tight zonal flow to more of a wavy meridional one:

1577025118604.png

And depending on what side of the jet stream you’re on, you’re either in for debilitating polar cold or anomalous tropical heat.

This week in the NH, for example,the majority of North America is suffering well-below average temperatures, while much of Europe is experiencing unusually mild conditions. And in the SH, South America is suffering anomalous cold, while Australia currently bakes.

The full picture is never revealed by the MSM, their agenda-driven reporting allows only for one side of the story — heat and drought.

But the truth, regardless of what side of the jet stream you’re on, is that both of these setups can negatively impact crop production. And we’re already witnessing dramatic falls in yield and quality across the breadbaskets of the world — the price of wheat, for example, is now at a four-and-a-half year high, and rising fast.

An intensification of this meridional jet stream flow is in all of our futures, and the phenomenon isn’t caused by increasing –and wholly beneficial– atmospheric CO2 levels.

No, it isn’t you or me that’s causing this climate shift, it’s the sun — as it always has been:

Overall, global average temperatures are falling in line with this historically low solar activity, and glacial advance has once again kicked-in.

Heatwaves will always still occur –the evidence suggests they could even become more extreme– although the waves will be short lived and/or localized to regions residing ‘under’ the JS.

Don’t fall for NOAA’s or the BOM’s politicized, warm-mongering, UHI-ignoring temperature datasets — our future is one of ever-descending cold, crop loss and struggle.

Prepare accordingly
— grow your own.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
The recent DuByne podcasts with Celeste Solum are difficult to listen to because her she has audio problems on her end, but today's piece, Part 4 of 5, had some interesting things in it. Worth the time to listen to it.

One of the things he mentions is how Hard Red Winter Wheat isn't growing well any more, which is causing some switch to growing sorghum. I've had sorghum from Wild Bird Seed mixture grow the following year and it had huge seed tops. It would be worth growing for me if only my chickens liked it, but unfortunately, it seems to be the thing they leave for last in the scratch I feed them and then only if I'm late giving them their "next meal".
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks, Martinhouse.

I noticed that about the sorghum, and I have also never seen any of our animals eat it. Not chickens, domestic or wild ducks, wild birds that fly in, or rabbits, mice, or voles. They don't even eat it when it sprouts and grows where it sits.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks for all the links. I especially appreciate the Electroverse articles because I can't go to that site any more. Each time I try, my computer locks right up and I have to shut down to clear and start up again.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, my chickens eat the sorghum when there's nothing else. But I won't be buying scratch any more, unless I find out the nutrient content makes it worth growing.

That reminds me, I want to mention again something I posted a while back, maybe last summer. The woman I bought my chickens from told me that animal fats are no longer being added to the processed poultry feeds, so we need to add some ourselves to what we feed our birds.
 

theoriginaldeb

Still A Geology Fanatic
It probably stems from this vegetarian nonsense--feeding hens only vegetarian based feeds. Hens naturally need the vitamins and enzymes that come from insect life --their main 'meat' source. It's possible that sorghum is deficient in B 12 or the amino acid methionine, something else that is only available from high fat high protein sources.
The vegetarian egg growers know this and supplement their hens to compensate for this deficiency.
Growing our own meal worms or earth worms may be the best solution or crickets.
Those all have commercial sources and methods that can be easily copied. I'm not sold on the freeze dried worms--yet.
Food for thought. I've also noticed a crash in insect life in the last year--no clue why. Working on a theory.
Also vitamin D production --something we get naturally from the sun may need to be enhanced as solar radiation decreases.
And finally the change in the jet stream is very pronounced here in southern Oregon--we are currently in the s bend and our weather is somewhat like the early 1960's but different--very unsettling. I'm adding cold frames and a greenhouse.
Pretty sure the many vineyards that have migrated to the area are going to be hating life after awhile.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
I'm not really worried about sorghum not being right for hens. I was just wondering if it would be a good substitute if corn is no longer available and if the weather doesn't permit me to grow my own corn. Since what I read indicated that the sorghum was to replace wheat, I don't think it really matters. I don't worry about not being able to buy wheat for my chickens!!! I just thought it might be good to plant if it grows where corn no longer will.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
It's funny, but I haven't heard a single thing about if the different type of UV we are getting from the sun now will still stimulate our own bodies' production of Vitamin D.

I wonder if I could email someone like Ice Age Farmer? He'd be the best one to look into it.
 

mudlogger

Veteran Member
Sorghum used to be packaged as "Mega Millet" to parrot owners. I don't know if the birds ate it or not.

I'm wondering if it were sprouted if the chickens would eat it.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Mudlogger, that is a really good idea about sprouting the sorghum. Even if it's not as good as other types of sprouts, it's better than something they won't eat! And they'd at least be getting some sort of fresh greens.
 

TxGal

Day by day

The Little Ice Age altered the course of history

December 22, 2019 by Robert

Six Ways the Little Ice Age Made History-FromtheNewEngandHistoricalSociety.

The Little Ice Age changed New England history in ways that historians are only beginning to understand.
Though scientists don’t agree on what caused the Little Ice Age, most agree the climate cooled from the 15th century to the middle of the 19th century, with the greatest intensity between 1550 and 1700. Some scientists peg the coldest period even more narrowly, between 1645 and 1715. During that period the average winter temperatures in North America fell two degrees Celsius.

The NASA Earth Observatory blames diminished solar activity for the Little Ice Age, though scientists offer competing theories.

Historians, on the other hand, agree that the Little Ice Age altered the course of history. It froze rivers and canals in Northern Europe, wiped out cereal production in Iceland and caused famine in France, Norway and Sweden. Colder winters meant denser wood, which contributed to the superior tone of the Stradivarius violin.

See entire comprehensive article:
Six Ways the Little Ice Age Made History - New England Historical Society
Thanks to Jimmy Walter for this link
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Gee, Mudlogger, the sprouted grain with the fat from pan drippings is a super great idea!

TxGal, I'm glad you posted that article from Felix. Interesting historical stuff and we need to know as much of that sort of thing as we can, as we don't know what knowledge could be helpful in coming days, even if it's just to avoid problems, not solve them.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=APIjwZAvHfg


Are Megalithic Solstice Sites Older than We Think ? (927)

Run time is 14:19

As the seasons come and go, ancient cultures across the planet marked solstices with megalithic blocks. Adams calendar in South Africa is among the oldest on the planet, but what if sites like Stonehenge are far older that we are told and through the last century reworking of stone faces on the blocks make it appear much more recent. Did you know Stonehenge has been restored / reconstructed twice in the last 100 years. You will be fascinated by the black and white images.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htg9nMShDIg


Tree Diseases and Short Summers with the 5G Effect

Run time is 24:49

John Hickman from Primitive Ways Channel on YouTube with John Kitson from 5G Awareness.com and David DuByne from ADAPT 2030 discuss increasing space radiation from the Grand Solar Minimum combining with 5G and the effects on plants, animals and humans and how you can grow your own food to protect yourself during these changing times.

John Hickman Primitive Ways https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMe-...
John Hickson https://www.5gawareness.com
•Expecting disturbances in cities during the Grand Soar Minimum
•5g for crowd control in cities
•Colorado summer less than five month’s long
•Southern and Northern hemisphere countries coldest in over 100 year’s monthly averages
•Lack of sunspots brings us back to 1913 levels in solar activity
•UK experiencing shorter summers and much wetter conditions
•Bushcrafting and wildcrafting
•Fungal disease sweeping through UK tree population
•Greenery in plants turns brown as 5G is turned on around residential UK areas
•Most 5G networks are launching 868MH frequency, sub Giga-Hertz used for mapping IOT
 

TxGal

Day by day
The Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yRrXBoUWJk


NASA Contractor Comes Clean About The Magnetic Reversal, Prepping & How You Can Survive & Thrive

Run time is 39:33

Mr. Greg Allison is currently the Program Manager for the Huntsville Alabama L5 Society (HAL5) High Altitude Lift-Off (HALO) Program, and as President of the High Altitude Research Corporation (HARC). In these capacities Mr. Allison is actively developing cheap access to space technologies. Mr. Allison has worked on the International Space Station Program for Grumman as a systems engineer specializing in robotics, for the Mevatec Corporation as an electrical power systems integration engineer, and for Teledyne Brown Engineering as a payload integration engineer for external space station experiments. Mr. Allison is currently working for Hernandez Engineering as a safety and product assurance engineer on such projects as Orbital Space Plane, X-37 and HyTEx. Mr. Allison also studies means to defend Earth from asteroids, and the construction of large-scale space stations. http://bit.ly/2QdIhW7
 

TxGal

Day by day
Merry Christmas to all!

Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T--XYqkY58Q


Eclipses, Mud Men and Drought Cycles (928)

Runtime is 5:55

French women's downhill races cancelled too much snow while wildfires rage in Australia. Drought Atlas indicates its a drought cycle. Dec 26th eclipse, and cabbage snowman, mud snowman or water snowman, take your pick.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
There's a new Oppenheimer Ranch Project podcast out this morning and the last part of it is scarier than I can explain.

Runs 13:26

I recommend listening to it, even if you have to struggle through the science. He does try to keep it simple.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
I bookmarked a website a while back...don't know the actual name, but it is Fred and Fern something or other. If anyone knows how to get to it, they have pictures of a really cool greenhouse that appears to be attached to their house.

Also, from their site I tried to get to the Woodpile Report and the link would not work. Can anyone give me a proper link to Ol' Remus?

If so, thanks
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks!

Have you listened to that Oppenheimer Ranch Project podcast yet?

No, but I'm going to try now!

The Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ShY-QAuuuC8


Micro Nova Timing - Galactic Origin For Mass Extinction Cycle - Heliospheric Current Sheet Analog

Run time is 13:26

Heliospheric current sheet http://bit.ly/2PU51v8
Galactic cosmic ray modulation and the passage of the heliospheric current sheet at Earth http://bit.ly/39c2m7D
Plasma scaling http://bit.ly/2sbSevh
All The Proxy Data http://bit.ly/2PgQkkh
THE COSMIC CLOCK, THE CYCLE OF TERRESTRIAL MASS EXTINCTIONS. http://bit.ly/3612K6Y
Galactic Origin For 62M-Year Extinction Cycle? http://bit.ly/2tSQPtV
Mass Extinction And The Structure Of The Milky Way http://bit.ly/2ZmT5VQ
Known Magnetic Excursions http://bit.ly/34T3Pwl
The Nearest Stars, as Seen from the Earth http://bit.ly/3684FXL
The Nearest Stars to Earth (Infographic) http://bit.ly/2Sqq6z2
List of nearest stars and brown dwarfs http://bit.ly/2MuFF51
Barnard's Star http://bit.ly/2EUYc6e
Proxima Centauri http://bit.ly/35TsPoy
Proxima Centauri just released a flare so powerful it was visible to the unaided eye http://bit.ly/39dn2MD
Micro-Nova Arrival Graphic http://bit.ly/35XooZZ
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks!

Have you listened to that Oppenheimer Ranch Project podcast yet?
I'm still listening, but this really popped into my head - many years ago I read all the Zachariah Sitchin books...the ones about the 12th planet. Interestingly, the cycle was about 12,000 years as I recall. Kinda makes me think maybe this by Oppenheimer has something to do with all the changes Sitchin wrote about.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
I have all of Sitchin's books in paperback but I've never read them because the print was so small I could only handle a few pages at a time. Now that I have a little magnifying glass to read with when I need it, maybe I should try again. Hmmm.

Wonder where in this mess of a house could I have put them? I honestly have no clue where they might be!

I'll be interested to know what you think of that podcast. It sounded rather more scientific than tin-foil hat theory to me.
 

TxGal

Day by day
It does sound more scientific, and he seems most solidly assured it is correct. I'm still not sure quite what to think of it. He doesn't usually get this serious.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has a new short podcast just out

8:02
As Martinhouse said, Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oyvjxcXAXwQ


Southern Hemisphere Drought Connection Southern Africa / Australia (929)

Run time is 8:01

With all the talk of droughts and fires sweeping the Southern Hemisphere I found a connection to solar activity and drought cycles, which are with wildfire cycles. The connections between Southern Africa and Australia look as if its solar driven the changes. I will let you decide. Do you think this information is on the right track?
 

TxGal

Day by day
I just got back from grocery shopping, wow, traffic was terrible in the bigger suburbs. I did Costco and Kroger this trip, a few shockers for me I thought I'd pass along:

Costco always carries their own brand of green beans, very good quality, comes in an 8-pack I think, of 14.5 oz cans. For the first time since we've been shopping at Costco, and it's been decades, they had NONE. They had about 2 dozen #10 cans of green beans, might have been Del Monte. That was it. Usually their own brand is stacked pallets deep. There wasn't even a place for them. They did have two pallets of their corn (also very good) side by side. The missing green beans were a shocker. If anyone goes to Costco near them, please post if you see green beans.

Next up was Kroger. I picked up four cans of Del Monte French Style green beans on sale 4/$5.00. I'm not sure what the regular price was. And Oh My Gosh, Campbells Chunky soups! Last time I bought them we'd get them on sale for 86 cents. I think the regular price was $1.25. Today they were on sale for $1.25, regular price $1.99. Just wow. On the flip side, Kraft BBQ sauce was on sale for 49 cents each if you buy 5, normal price is $1.49 so you save a buck a bottle. Needless to say, I bought 5 to get the sale price.

I don't recall seeing prices jump so quickly in a long time....
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, if you have a Dollar General near you, check their store brand green beans. Clover Valley brand. They are 65 cents a can and for quite a while now they have been 2/$1. My sister said they are very good green beans.

I just can't see paying a dollar or more for a can of peas or beans, and certainly not $1.99!

I even recommend bringing along a can opener and container for what's in the opened can, and then buy a couple cans of the beans open one in your car and try them to see how you like them. If you do, go back into the store and clean off that shelf!

I've been buying most of their canned peas for a while now. Not for myself, but so I can have something cheap to use as greens for the chickens. They love them! I give them a can or two a week along with a lot of older things I'm cleaning out of my pantry. By the time the peas are all used up, it will be spring and the yard weeds will be growing again.

Have you gotten any more seed catalogs? I still haven't gotten any at all. Very strange! It's nearly time for me to start pestering the feed store about when they are getting in their seed potatoes and onion slips and sets. I'm going to suggest they check ahead of time on availability and also that they order right away to make sure they are high on the list.
 
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