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Post by rainteacher on Dec 11, 2017 23:19:56 GMT
There's a bunch of ways.
I will give you one...fireworks shows work to make it rain under the right conditions.
That's rather expensive though for me.
I like the $1-$100 stuff.
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Post by rainteacher on Dec 18, 2017 15:28:15 GMT
Lightening Balls are used to create 2-4 times the lightening strikes during a thunderstorm.
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Post by rainteacher on Jan 5, 2018 23:01:34 GMT
Kitty litter to make it snow.
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Post by rainteacher on Jan 6, 2018 1:15:30 GMT
Any kind of kitty litter, even the cheapo kitty litter does the trick.
You just have to do this one thing to it to make it work.
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Post by rainteacher on Jan 11, 2018 19:35:44 GMT
And baking soda.
Throw kitty litter and baking soda (Arm and Hammer) on the roads.
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Post by rainteacher on Jan 11, 2018 19:37:00 GMT
It doesn't have to be arm and hammer, it can be the off brand of baking soda also.
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Post by rainteacher on Jan 12, 2018 1:33:19 GMT
Forget the kitty litter, just use 50-100 pounds of baking soda and viola, snow downwind.
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Post by rainteacher on Feb 24, 2018 20:45:04 GMT
I guess I should be more specific.
When a line of rain comes with a cold front, throw out the baking soda on wet pavement, and more particularly, pavement on the top of hills and going up hills.
If the temperature behind the cold front is going to be below 32 degrees, then it will snow if you have a strong stationary low pressure system North or Northwest of you spinning clouds.
It will snow for about 12 hours in a pattern like lake effect snow 50-200 miles downwind. I got 5-8 inches in Kentucky. I Seeded the roads that seeded the clouds in Kentucky in Carbondale, IL.
I have to admit, the scenario for this to work doesn't happen very often, maybe once per year or two, but when it does, it is effective way to make it snow.
I know it works because I watched it unfold on the weather channel.
I have to add, if the pavement is dry and you throw baking soda out, it will blow off the roads. THE PAVEMENT MUST BE WET WHEN YOU THROW THE BAKING SODA OUT! That way, when a car goes over where you threw out the baking soda, it splatters the baking soda/water mixture all over the road and when it dries, baking soda is splattered all over the roads and it wafts up in small amounts to your target areas to seed the clouds.
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Post by rainteacher on Feb 24, 2018 20:46:58 GMT
I used about 25 lbs of baking soda, but more is probably better.
I was on I-57
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