A South Lake Tahoe author-intuitive, who for years has been sensing earthquakes and weather changes, says she knew Northern California would be hit by flooding this month. In fact, she spread the word on her Web site weeks beforehand.
Cal Orey will be a guest panelist discussing earth changes on tonight's Coast to Coast AM with George Noory, heard on more than 500 radio stations across the U.S. and worldwide on the Internet. Listeners in Tahoe can hear the broadcast on AM 1490 KOWL in South Lake Tahoe or 780 KOH in Reno. The segment begins after the 11 p.m. national news feed. The Web site is www.coasttocoastam.com.
Orey is an internationally known author of several books and hundreds of articles, learned how to fine tune her intuitive skills by Glen Ellen geologist Jim Berkland who predicted the World Series Quake in 1989, says her weather forecast hit on the nose and sees more flooding and flash floods in many Northern California regions.
While forecasters were gearing up for a Tahoe blizzard, I was telling locals and posting on websites that flooding was going to be the major problem, not whitebouts, blackouts, and blizzards at lake level. At the end of 2007, I sent our local weatherman an email which read: This season still seems warm to me as well as not much snow. Very slush/icy at lake level. I still am sensing those flash flood warnings and some flooding in Reno/Tahoe Basin come January.
"On December 28, I received a response from the weather man. He agreed with my premonition and said he saw a fairly wet pattern developing on Thursday Jan. 3rd that should persist for several days. If the snow levels stay high we should see some flooding from rain on snow, she said.
So how did the prediction of flooding come to Orey? In early December she posted on her Web site www.earthquakeepi-center.com on the Weather Watchers forum that she sensed Northern California flooding in December and January.
It was deja vu. It reminded me of the flooding we had back in January 2006. The Internet reports of flooding and flash floods around the Tahoe Basin and Reno frightened me. I saw footage of the 1997 Reno-Tahoe Flood. It was surreal. And I remember the deadly flooding in the early 1980s in Santa Cruz Mountains, said the native of San Franciso Bay Area who also lived in Boulder Creek in 1983. Also, in the past months, I continued to get frightening dreams of rising water, people running for higher ground, authorities, and chaos. But I always survived and was an onlooker.
The intuitive added, People and animals have an uncanny sixth sense. I have learned to listen to my gut instinct, pay attention to dreams and images that come in words and visions, tune into Mother Nature and then I make predictions or forecasts that often come true, again and again.
Orey added, Early on Jan. 5, I got a heads up from a friend on my Web site that a levee broke. I soon discovered on the National Weather Service site that flood water from a broken levee along the Truckee canal was affecting the town of Fernley about 30 miles from Reno. I wasnt surprised by the report, but I was emotional and on the verge of tears when I read the facts of how it affected people who were in three feet of cold water, being rescued, and displaced. It is so much like my dreams that its an eerie feeling.
Orey made the Northern California flooding forecast on December 8th on her Web site: www.earthquakeepi-center.com. She also noted that it wasnt just Fernley dealing with flooding, there were flooding reports for Sacramento, Eureka, San Francisco/Monterey areas, too.
If we continue to get heavy snowfall and it is followed by warmer temperatures and rainfall, I am strongly sensing that Northern California will be dealing with coastal flooding as well as urban and mountain flooding in the days and weeks ahead, she said.
For more information, visit Cal Oreys Web sites at www.calorey.com and www.earthquakeepi-center.com.
Cal Orey will be a guest panelist discussing earth changes on tonight's Coast to Coast AM with George Noory, heard on more than 500 radio stations across the U.S. and worldwide on the Internet. Listeners in Tahoe can hear the broadcast on AM 1490 KOWL in South Lake Tahoe or 780 KOH in Reno. The segment begins after the 11 p.m. national news feed. The Web site is www.coasttocoastam.com.
Orey is an internationally known author of several books and hundreds of articles, learned how to fine tune her intuitive skills by Glen Ellen geologist Jim Berkland who predicted the World Series Quake in 1989, says her weather forecast hit on the nose and sees more flooding and flash floods in many Northern California regions.
While forecasters were gearing up for a Tahoe blizzard, I was telling locals and posting on websites that flooding was going to be the major problem, not whitebouts, blackouts, and blizzards at lake level. At the end of 2007, I sent our local weatherman an email which read: This season still seems warm to me as well as not much snow. Very slush/icy at lake level. I still am sensing those flash flood warnings and some flooding in Reno/Tahoe Basin come January.
"On December 28, I received a response from the weather man. He agreed with my premonition and said he saw a fairly wet pattern developing on Thursday Jan. 3rd that should persist for several days. If the snow levels stay high we should see some flooding from rain on snow, she said.
So how did the prediction of flooding come to Orey? In early December she posted on her Web site www.earthquakeepi-center.com on the Weather Watchers forum that she sensed Northern California flooding in December and January.
It was deja vu. It reminded me of the flooding we had back in January 2006. The Internet reports of flooding and flash floods around the Tahoe Basin and Reno frightened me. I saw footage of the 1997 Reno-Tahoe Flood. It was surreal. And I remember the deadly flooding in the early 1980s in Santa Cruz Mountains, said the native of San Franciso Bay Area who also lived in Boulder Creek in 1983. Also, in the past months, I continued to get frightening dreams of rising water, people running for higher ground, authorities, and chaos. But I always survived and was an onlooker.
The intuitive added, People and animals have an uncanny sixth sense. I have learned to listen to my gut instinct, pay attention to dreams and images that come in words and visions, tune into Mother Nature and then I make predictions or forecasts that often come true, again and again.
Orey added, Early on Jan. 5, I got a heads up from a friend on my Web site that a levee broke. I soon discovered on the National Weather Service site that flood water from a broken levee along the Truckee canal was affecting the town of Fernley about 30 miles from Reno. I wasnt surprised by the report, but I was emotional and on the verge of tears when I read the facts of how it affected people who were in three feet of cold water, being rescued, and displaced. It is so much like my dreams that its an eerie feeling.
Orey made the Northern California flooding forecast on December 8th on her Web site: www.earthquakeepi-center.com. She also noted that it wasnt just Fernley dealing with flooding, there were flooding reports for Sacramento, Eureka, San Francisco/Monterey areas, too.
If we continue to get heavy snowfall and it is followed by warmer temperatures and rainfall, I am strongly sensing that Northern California will be dealing with coastal flooding as well as urban and mountain flooding in the days and weeks ahead, she said.
For more information, visit Cal Oreys Web sites at www.calorey.com and www.earthquakeepi-center.com.


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