https://youtu.be/Iq0_7bDHJCQ a new presentation from space weather man and i kept watching the part where he shows africa in the centre of frame and i was like ooh east coast of africa the water runs over us to the north, north east, more or less, but that then blasts over spain and into the mediterranean and across slovenia and switzerland and southern germany, to then come back oohhhh so actually, while it's probably bad to be too far near the sea level on this island when this happens almost anywhere over 1km altitude (ie, camacha) and probably most of the north-east of the island is relatively less likely to have bad slosh back because there's so much land in that direction i may have to revise my plans, and actually try to get myself a patch on the north east of #madeira because i think this is probably the best place to be within 100km of where i am right now... the centre of the island is 1.8km tall and if the waves are ~1km tall then ... probably just need to have a cave dug into the mountainside continuing to add inputs here, but if you watch the part where he shows the tilt with the arrows and africa, you can clearly see that we don't have a lot of water northeast of us, not very much at all, so once the first round is over the reprise is pretty mild i've been observing very close the stone bones of this island, and they are extensive, because this is a relatively new landform, maybe under 50k years, idk exactly, you can see it when there is a lot of rain, what gets washed down, and what stays behind, and people have lived here for at least over 600 years and obviously in that period all the extreme weather has kinda skipped this place, mostly south side had a bad heavy rain in 2010 that led to a lot of loss of property and some loss of life, but i really think that ... hmm yeah, north east of madeira might be a really good place, if you can get a patch over 1km above sea level

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not sure if it was clear but something important to note about the movement of the water during a pole shift - first of all, due to the disruption of the magnetosphere, there will be hella storms, earthquakes and volcanoes, very likely almost total cloud cover, and rain everywhere - second, it won't be a normal tsunami, where you suddenly see all the water rush outwards at first and then minutes later giant tall cresting waves, it will be like a giga-chad-king-tide, that just keeps on going up and up and everything that can float, will float and start to be pushed in the direction away from the coast and the rotation direction - as in the story of Noah, it will then be the case that due to seismic, volcanic and windy stormy activity, and total lack of any ability to navigate even by sight (due to the fogs and rains) you will be adrift, and likely at risk of capsizing due to bursts of heavy wind and waves and tsunamis that may happen nearby... the craft you build for this MUST be self-righting it is possible that a deeply tethered anchor and a long enough chain could enable you to stay in one place but if that place goes downwards due to seismic activity, that would be worse than being stuck in heavy storms for days eventually, with the crust in new position, aligned with the external fields correctly again (this is why it happens btw, due to the 90 degree phase shift the fields are neutralised) the magnetosphere will resume to protect from solar and stellar energies, the weather will die down, and within a process of weeks, and likely somewhere along the way, unless you are as unlucky as Noah, stuck in the open ocean for 40 days, you will run aground on some land somewhere, and after the sun is shining on all the mud and rubble, seeds will start sprouting and you will be able to start a new life haha... that's why you gotta bring your flock almost all terrestrial animals will be wiped out unless they were on high enough ground or inside caves

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