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the sky is falling the sky is falling......
#1
part of the great out is some of the sites we are blessed with. I have seen many fanominon while fishing including these below,,, well maybe not a sun spot but I have often wondered on affects that sunspots have on fish. Reason is because I have gone out at the right moon phase time of day and weather conditions and yet not a fish to be found. there may be something to it, I dont realy know.


this pic is a site I saw the last time I was out fishing. my cousin and I pulled up to a spot to get out of the wind and found a nest of gills where we limited out in less than an hour.
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below is current conditions... wonder if they have any thing to do with the fish in the water.... VENUS RETURNS: After many months in hiding, Venus has returned to the evening sky. You can see it at sunset; it pops into view long before the sky grows completely dark. Wednesday evening, June 8th, is an especially good time to look, because then Venus will be pleasingly close to the slender crescent Moon.

DAYTIME METEORS: The annual Arietid meteor shower peaks on June 7th and 8th. You won't see many meteors, though, because the shower is most intense when the sun is high in the sky. The Arietids are a rare daytime meteor shower. Researchers aren't certain where the Arietids come from, but they might be debris from sungrazing asteroid Icarus. [left][font "Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"][#ff0000][size 3]SOLAR ACTIVITY: [/size][/#ff0000][/font][font "Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"][size 2]The sun is a busy place today. Our star is peppered with 'spots, criss-crossed by dark filaments, and the limb of the sun is alive with arcing prominences. All of these things appear in the June 6th photo, below, from [url "http://www.solarminimum.com/"]Gary Palmer[/url] of Los Angeles.[/size][/font] [center][url "http://spaceweather.com/swpod2005/06jun05/palmer1.jpg"][Image: palmer1_strip.jpg][/url] [left][font "Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"][size 2]Despite all this activity, the chance of a strong solar flare remains low. None of today's sunspots have the sort of tangled, unstable magnetic fields that tend to explode.[/size][/font] [left][font "Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"][size 2]more images: [url "http://spaceweather.com/swpod2005/05jun05/Murner.jpg"]from Andreas Murner[/url] of Lake Chiemsee, Bavaria, Germany; [url "http://spaceweather.com/swpod2005/05jun05/Rapavy.gif"]from Pavol Rapavy[/url] of Rimavska Sobota, Slovakia.[/size][/font] [/left]
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