Mysterious "dirty rain" falling in Eastern Washington, Oregon
While it's been a routine, rainy day in Seattle, those over in southeastern Washington and northeastern Oregon have had a strange phenomenon: A dirty, milky rain.
Several reports have come in from Spokane, Walla Walla, Pendleton -- and really across much of that region. The rain has left a dirty residue on cars and has flooded social media over there with people wondering what is causing the odd rain.
Several reports have come in from Spokane, Walla Walla, Pendleton -- and really across much of that region. The rain has left a dirty residue on cars and has flooded social media over there with people wondering what is causing the odd rain.
So far, the official cause remains a mystery, but officials with the National Weather Service offices in Spokane and Pendleton are looking into it.
The Walla Walla emergency management office posted photos of their area, which show much more of an ashen look to their rain. Their office suggests it all could be ash washing out from an eruption of Volcano Shiveluch in Kamchatka Krai, Russia. Their office says it spewed an ash plume to about the 22,000-foot level in late January and has deposited ash in a widespread area across parts of the Northwest.
The Spokane office of the National Weather Service posted a new photo Friday afternoon showing the cloudy rain that collected in their rain gauge.
The Walla Walla emergency management office posted photos of their area, which show much more of an ashen look to their rain. Their office suggests it all could be ash washing out from an eruption of Volcano Shiveluch in Kamchatka Krai, Russia. Their office says it spewed an ash plume to about the 22,000-foot level in late January and has deposited ash in a widespread area across parts of the Northwest.
The Spokane office of the National Weather Service posted a new photo Friday afternoon showing the cloudy rain that collected in their rain gauge.
"Definitely much cloudier than the typical rain water we see," they wrote on their Facebook page. "We have heard a few theories thus far including; volcanic ash from Mexico or Russia, dust picked up from last night's strong winds, or perhaps ash from last year's wildfires over SE Oregon/SW Idaho. We still don't have a definitive answer."
We'll let you know when we indeed do get more definitive answers.
5 comments:
First thing that comes to my mind is chem trails.
Looks like someone mixed the coal-ash a little on the heavy side in the chemplanes early this morning.
Correct, 11:45 PM. There is a video ( as of yesterday ) explaining that chemtrails contain coal ash, and independent tests confirm them as nearly identical. Just like Fluoride is a waste product sold by aluminum smelters and put in our water and toothpaste, this coal ash is hazardous waste being disposed of in our air for a lot less than hazardous waste disposal costs. TYJM frj.
Looks like that 'theory' about flyash from coal burning power plants being sprayed as chemtrails is gaining momentum. Power plants that burn coal have an expensive by-product to get rid of in the form of flyash. Costs them billions of dollars per year. Flyash is acidic, I suggest those cars be washed off as soon as possible to deter these effects. I worked around this ash for many,[32], years.
Mysterious Yea ? We can trace D N A and most everything else thru spectrum analysis, but they do not know what this is ?
you might think if it fell over major area might be worth investigating Eh??? yes just Chem trails cover up
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