The Colorado River system is experiencing a catastrophic water crisis where both Lake Mead and Lake Powell are projected to reach critical shutdown levels simultaneously by December 2026, with Lake Mead dropping below 1035 feet and Lake Powell falling below 3490 feet, which would halt hydroelectric power generation for 5 million people and trigger widespread water shortages, power outages, and potential social unrest across the American Southwest.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
The Ancient Intelligence Files. Episode 22Added:
May the 29th, 2026. Guys, almost another month is over. And guess this Sunday night, Lake me is going to drop below the two-tier level of 1050. Monday morning when you wake up, it's predicted to be 10:49 with a little bit of change in there.
It's dropping quickly. The Lake Powell situation is not getting much better and they have just about used all of their upriver resources to keep them supplied and they're trying to limit and actually they're doing it the output levels to meet at about 7,000 cubic feet per second.
Now the demand on Lake me guys is much more is much stronger than we think if we look at the daily numbers on the output level or the intake level in cubic feet per second and the output level and try to balance how that works out. But if you look at it on an hourly schedule, you'll see that you're going to get about the same number. But the numbers really can surprise you as we come into the morning and the midday area and look at the outfit or excuse me out feet um and cubic feet per second in an hourly rate to where you're seeing say a 14,000 average day output. You may see peak hours at 30,000 25,000 cubic feet per second. Now, that does not mean that that's being replenished by Lake me because a few days ago, I think the 25th, the Fed started really a little early in on the tier 2 restrictions that are coming up starting Monday morning.
But, uh, they came in and said, "No, we're going to stop Lake Powell." That was not Lake Powell's decision. That was a federal decision. We're going to stop it and preserve it level because it's uh supplying power to about 5 million people. Probably a lot of money in that area. Either way, they that may change.
But right now, the feds have stepped in, stopped Powell's outflow. But when you look at the again, I mentioned 260 miles between Powell and me and going through the hottest valley in the nation just about the peak of summer. the evaporation amount is almost as much as the output level of power and that just increases coming out of meat all the way down into Southern California.
But the numbers are starting to become staggering in a way because again tier 2 starts in a couple of nights and guys I'm starting to uh see the change in mainstream media. the panic level is changing just a little bit and the fact that they are being forced to maybe broadcast more of this information out, especially like your local, you know, Vegas channels, Phoenix channels, uh, California channels. But anyway, I see that mainstream media narrative starting again, I think, being forced to pay attention to this and that will we talked about that happening and that will escalate several things. The one would be the time when the Fed does uh physically step in and control more than just the output of Lake Powell.
So here we go guys. As of today, Lake Me's water level is at 1050.61.
Now we've been told earlier that that would happen in early 2027.
It's going to happen in two nights. Even the new Bureau of Reclamation graph shows you exactly that same information.
This coming Sunday night, we're dropping into tier 2. Water levels have plummeted more than 6 ft since March, sitting about 7 ft lower than this time last year, driven by severe regional snow drought and dry conditions across the Colorado River Basin. Federal officials warned that the lake is on a trajectory to shatter its historic 2022 record low.
Guys, you remember that year we were watching and we started making YouTube friends with Joey from Vegas DTEK and all. Well, he came out with a new video this morning. I'm not sure if he recorded yesterday afternoon and produced it and came out, but anyway, it's the newest one that was on the channel a few hours ago. And he's getting way down to the bottom of some of the old boat ramps and looking at the sand bars rise up. Actually, it's not sand bars. It's heavily compacted silt up under the very top of some of the mountains there. some of the canyon ridge tops is what's starting to peep up. And it looks like on me, one of the very last marinas, guys, is about to be cut off by one of these rising silt bars. That's why they tell you don't walk on them. You're talking about decades of compressed silt that is not really sand and it can suck you up like quick sand in an instant. And they've got places that tell you that. people won't listen. Anyway, water levels have plummeted more than 6 ft since uh March, sitting about 7 ft lower than this time last year, driven by drought. Federal officials were warning the lake will shatter the records. Current level 1056 or 1050.61, which is nearly 170 ft below its maximum full capacity of 1229. Guys, the white bathroom rings on the canyons are like an 18story building.
And again, Joy from Vegas DTEK on the YouTube channel, he walked down there between I think it's called Saddle Hill or Saddle Mountain where two large pumps that were initially put in are hundreds of feet above the water level.
Anyway, federal forecasts are saying May 26, 2024 month study warns that water levels could plummet to a staggering 1,020 to 1,020 ft by summer 2027.
That again, they put out a 24-month forecast, but the actual numbers don't equate to that at all. By the way, they had that same long-term forecast on it hitting 1050. Remember 24-month forecast from the bureau and we would see this in early uh 2027.
Yeah. Right. Anyway, but they're look, they're saying by and just if their numbers were right coming into June, July, a year from now and you're at 1020, guys, it's over. The game starts being over at tier two, but maximizes at 1035. And then the straw that's intake three for Vegas, guys. It's 100 ft up off the bottom. And it's in a pretty good place, but you're still going to have some effects of the silt and things like that. And lake pile is in more trouble than me with that buildup of uh silt.
And so you got 100t of silt in this huge uh V-shaped lake. then that replaces volumes of water that can evaporate or be pumped out, right? So you're 100 foot less if you're measuring uh acre feet of water, but it and you subtract 100 ft of that even with a V bottom, you realize how much water is not really there.
Think about what I'm saying now. If a drop to 1020 ft happens guys, it would historically shatter the previous record low from July 2022 of 1040.
And that's when we started watching again the videos coming out of Hoover Dam and Lake me by an additional 20 ft.
Guys, it's over for the desert southwest. What I see surviving after all the chaos erupts and the conflicts is just what happened after young the younger dry in that period of time when nature rebalanced and after the great floods when nature rebalanced. You're going to see the survivors make it more than likely a lot to do with the southwestern tribes because they've been through it before.
But there's the problems will be with the silt layer. Let's go back to that for just a moment.
because it can stop up the output uh put of both dams even when they're below the capability of hydro power and they could technically erode the downstream outlets at low level to where they become blocked and then you would have to go into a um government situation of somehow I don't know if it' be dynamite or trying to drill another 5 m bore hole through the rock to get around that silk to release any water downstream.
What we're looking at is a complete mess and it's nature overriding the stupidity and greed of mankind.
Again, Newsweek, like I said, I'm starting to notice uh some of the mainstream media veer away from the other headlines we've been bored with.
Right. Anyway, um the turban threat at Hoover, federal government has deliberately reduced water releases from upstream Lake Power to protect its own power pool, directly accelerating Lake Me's decline. But guys, just a week ago, the mainstream media and many others were saying the Feds won't step in because they're tier 2 levels don't officially start until up until 2027.
Now, let me say this, be very clear, because the mainstream media does not report the data, it doesn't mean that the data is not real, and it doesn't mean that the feds don't have the exact data. Plus, right? They got the money to have it.
But what we're looking at now is a complete collapse happening very quickly. They will be forced to step in.
But they really already have. When they designated power could no longer let out more water than what it's doing now, that was a federal takeover, right? And guys, we talked about uh that Vegas has a company that is in between the middle of the pumping of the water and it getting into the Vegas water supply. And it's a big company. I don't know the name, but they filter water, right? But right now, what they're seeing is uh they're putting out a monitor for the visitors as severe drought conditions have sparked localized toxic algae blooms in portions of the reservoir. So that would affect fishing, your ability to eat the fish, swimming, things like that. But the access is getting critical. And as it drops, guys, and the heat increases, the oxygen level drops of that water. So I don't know how the filtration systems will handle anything other than silt, mud, sand if it will go into, you know, algae and things like that. But it what we're looking at is a multi- attack almost a 360 degree attack from nature shutting this system that cannot survive back down. Man thought they could train and claim and conquer the desert.
The desert has a different message.
And the problem with politicians, guys, is that they always throw money in a sinking hole.
throw money at the problem instead of solving it. We saw it with the 52 million to try to revamp some of the or one of the turbons there at me at Hoover Dam. And now they're talking about the national park is warning of longer wait times for boat recovery and partial land uh launch ramp closures. We're seeing that. And again, if you look at Joey at Vegas DTEK's video today, you'll see it. Active construction, listen to this, stupidity, is underway to extend some ramps down to 1,000 ft of elevation to ensure future access. Guys, you understand,000 ft elevation there.
There's no outflow at all of Hoover Dam, especially with 100 ft of silt and they're going to blow millions of dollars to get your boat down there when they should be trying to figure out ways to uh help people and not worry about them uh their fishing boat. It's called stupidity. The Old Testament told us in the end we would be ruled by babes.
Very true. And guys, what also just happened is that seven basin states missed a critical federal deadline to agree on a unified water savings plan.
And that's why the government says we will step in shifting the authority to the feds to uh dictate the next long-term allocation framework.
This is what we've been talking about, guys. They will be forced to come in to stop the at first water protest, then water riots, food protest, food riots, power out, no AC in the middle of the summer in the desert. Perfect planning. Anyway, they're going to have to step in to quail that guys. People don't go long without food and water or electricity without coming totally unglued. you or I or any one else that has not been watching this stuff go on for years and years and years and trying to make some type of plan.
They wondered aimlessly, blindly, thinking the government could step in and take over mother nature. They can make all the federal rules and regulations they want as that river dries up. And I can see a utopian type image, guys, of that 100 ft silt layer being up to the surface with just a gully of water washing through it as the data centers pump the last drops out because the Fed stepped in. And guys, today at Hoover, we there were wild swings in the outflow. you know, they give you an average the day after of 8,000 ft uh cub or cubic feet per second outflow. But looking at the hourly uh uh data that comes from a different site, guys, we today I was looking at peaks at 30,347 cub feet per second, dropping to as low as 1,512 cubic feet per second in the afternoon.
That's telling you there's a massive um pull from downstream probably because of everyone waking up and turning on ACs in Phoenix and downstream from there.
But at 30,000 33 47 guys, you're still averaging I think it was maybe 12 hours there of around 14,000 cubic feet per second because you had again some of these low ones trying to balance it not power just me and it's like a rush to get as much done as you can before the feds step in. Now they are under contract. I realize that to try to balance the downflow, not just the water, but again the grid power to the peak of the days and all, but with the data centers running 24/7, it's a downhill race because of the aging transformers and the up to two to threeyear weight to replace them. A lot's going to happen very quickly. And please pay attention to it. If you're in that area, guys, think about what we're saying. And if they're right about it early 2027, which I still have my doubts going into 1035 and tier 3, you're not going to have much choice. So plan now. But I think that July, excuse me, that 2027 deadline is off. And guys, we usually just use the daily average on the outputs. But let me show you this hourly uh Colorado River Reservoir log. And this is me.
This is Mojave. And this is Havsu. This is the lower sections. Okay. Anyway, uh this morning, this 01, this 011 is 1:00 in the morning. And this gives you hourly updates starting at midnight Mountain Standard Time. Elevation 105073.
If you look at it now, it's still hanging at 10:51 on the daily uh level information.
Now, look at the output. in at midnight 22,324 ft. When it's been average, we've seen it drop guys down into 4, 5, 6,000 and then average out the last few days at 16,000 to 14,000 cubic feet per second average. Just but think about what I'm telling you. Then by 1:00 to 2:00 in the morning, it had increased to 30,347.
Now this is kind of standard in a way on normal conditions they match that output to the peak of uh of the needs right with the peak timing of the needs but when power is stopped these numbers only point to one thing and that's greed and destruction and really the ab inability to stop this downhill slide. You come up to 2 or 3:00 this morning, 28,000 28 350. Just look at it by the hour. Now watch what happens this afternoon. Rapid drops to try to balance it out, guys.
Look at here. 13400 hours, right?
1 to 2:00 only 1,876.
And then by this afternoon, 1,512. You average it out again, you're around 14,000 something cubic feet per second.
But I wanted to drop you into this hourly thing to see you how quickly that this thing regulates and how long can they continue this 14. Even if you just average all of these hours together and get 14,000 something cubic feet per second, how can you match that to now less than 6,000 cubic feet of input uh from power with most of that evaporating in that 260 mi area. That tells you one thing, that tier 3 is coming much quicker than they expected. And let's take a look at Lake Powell. As of today, 3,527.9 ft of elevation. It's experiencing a parallel water crisis with water levels currently standing at that uh level.
Guys, the reservoir is operating at just 23.49% of its total capacity as intense upper Colorado River basin snow drought suffocates crucial inflows. Mother nature's taking it back. It's not drought. It's air ritification. Excuse me. Says because it sets upstream from me pow's crisis is driving the broader systems decline as federal managers again federal restrict its downstream releases to save its own power grid. And they're not waiting to 2027. They just did it. But it's about to move much further in this Colorado River chain.
Now looking to current levels and looking at again it's low pool. It's 172 feet below just like you were talking about 18story building at me. They're seeing the same thing upstream and that's the power has long been the battery for the main engine which is Lake me. It's that backup battery. No longer not since the feds stepped in.
They're so they're saying that uh it is again 172.1 ft below a full pool of 3,700 ft. The lake currently holds 5.7 million acre feet of water down 31 ft from the exact date last year.
That's a lot of water. The basin's unregulated water inflow is tracking at a meager 34% to 40% of the historical average.
They didn't get much snow. You're not going to get much this year. But the Listen, this number is important right here. We're talking about it being at 3527.
So, we're talking about 37 ft below this. At 3490, you have a a hydro power deadline, minimum power pool. If the lake drops 38 ft to 3490, water will fall below the intake pipes for the Glen Canyon Dam turbines. Are you listening? Falling below 34.90 ft stops all hydroele electric generation entirely. Cutting off cheap electricity to tribes, rural farmers, and cities across Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. This is coming out of the Arizona Daily Star.
Now, just as a few days ago in my last video, I showed you that the Bureau of Reclamations, the Fed guys, had came in and put a new graph up matching our numbers of this Sunday night reaching 1050 and dropping to 1049.
And the same thing is happening now with Powell. They're realizing their numbers are way off. their fallback projections.
It says the US Bureau of Reclamation's May 24th month study warns that under a pessimistic minimum probable weather scenario, the lake could plunge to 3464 by this December, well into the shutdown again. 3490 was the problem line, but just this December, guys. So, think about that.
We're not going to make it to December with power. You're not the P. The water's not. If the water drops below the power turbines, the bureau must rely entirely on four lower steel tubes called outlet works to send water downstream to Lake Me, Arizona, Nevada, and California. But what they're not mentioning here yet is they also have this huge silt problem raising the bottom of the reservoir, knocking out uh uh thousands of cubic acre feet of water that they're they're actually calculating in that seal to the bottom as volume of water from the base of the canyon.
I can't they know the truth, but I guess it's just part of their number game.
Now, putting in that data guys, as of late May 2026, Lake Powell is gaining roughly 0.04 to11 ft of elevation per day. And we've seen those those numbers and we've evaluated them and showing that they've released the water out of uh Flaming Gorge and several other upstream dams to maintain Powell's elevation, but that those backups are running out. says, "However, because this year's regional snow drought, severely limited winter snow pack, this vital spring runoff peak is tracking at an incredibly weak 33 to 40% of the historical average, meaning the lake will peak much earlier uh and lower than normal before entering a sharp summer and winter drop. The broader daily and seasonal rates reveal the following structural shifts. Pay attention to this. Now, looking at the daily net gain, again, they depend on the spring peak inflows, and you're not getting it. And that's when you see the rise every midsummer and early spring to where the uh snowfall is making it down the canyons and down the river basin and you start to see that rise. It was it happened last year, not as much as they hoped for, but we did see a rise in the levels, but now they're not seeing it.
The elevation shifted upward from 3527 to 3527 ft over recent consecutive days need netting a mill a minor daily rise of 0.007 ft. And guys, that's because again upstream inflow and they're cutting me down very low. This minor daily positive rate is expected to flatline by June as weak high elevation snow melt completely wraps up. It's almost gone and we got a high pressure dome setting over the southwest guys that is unrelenting.
But the estimated monthly drop once spring inflow cease in June which they already have. The US Bureau of Reclamation model projects late pile will plunge from its current elevation down to roughly 3510 by September 2026. Again, Bureau Reclamation Feds guys. So at 349 you're in trouble. This is what uh 20 ft. You see what I'm saying? So um both dams both me and power are coming into the same time period of collapse doubling not quite doubling but exasperating the water and power outputs of both systems.
The Southwest is about to go through a drastic change. The people that are smart, that have been paying attention, that probably have been putting up survival food and plans and other things.
You're ready.
But so many guys are and just let me say this. Somebody out there needs this right right now.
Pause Netflix just a moment and pay attention. You may need this. Anyway, so many people are unaware, don't want.
It's either they're unaware or they hear a little voice in the back of their head, but they would prefer to keep their head down in the sand other than look up and face reality. And when you um fail to plan, you plan to fail.
That's the old saying, right? And guys, it it will not hit home to where you're some people will not realize the impact of what I'm saying until they have no water and they have no electricity and no AC. And when you don't have any power, you don't have any way to pump gas or go to the grocery store. It's complete chaos headache in our way very quickly, guys. We've talked about it for years. How would this happen? Now you're seeing that nature which is controlled by our father the creator is taking back her desert. Now let's go a little deeper again 3510 by September this rep but the daily summer drop rate represents a loss of roughly 17 ft over 90 days or a steady decline of point uh 0.19 ft per day through the hot summer months.
And that's exactly what's going to happen with zero input from upstream power because the snow melt is over.
If dry conditions pi uh persist into the minimum probable winter framework, listen, the water level is modeled to plunge an additional 46 ft down to a staggering 3464. Now, where was the deadline? I mean the cut point 3490.
And that look 34 64 by this December you can forget 2027 because at this point me and Hoover I mean me and Powell are shut down.
This will accelerate the drop of uh to a staggering average of 50 feet per day or half a foot a day 15t a month into the late fall. And guys, this is coming from the Bureau of Reclamations.
It's not just me on YouTube.
And looking at the entire balance of the Colorado River system, guys. The shutdown of both Powell and me at the same time is it's wild, but it that's exactly what we're looking at. Possibly with just a few weeks of each other completely hitting the bottomed out levels again. How will the dams hold up?
Guys, think about this. You drain the water down low. You got a 100 foot of sediment, compressed sediment for over 100 years on the back side of the dam.
How will that structure hold up? How will they clear that once the intakes are stopped up with 100t of settlement?
How will they clear the any path for downstream?
Will it be a slow rebuild of Lake Me over two or three decades? Or has mother nature now finally resettled it back into the original flow? Again, when they planned all this, guys, it wasn't just a rainy season that they when they started allocating hundreds of years or 100 years ago these water rocks, it was in a record rainy season. not an average rain season but in a record rain season where they came up with all these numbers. So they planned it to fail without even realizing. And the bureau is saying guys below the intakes at 3490 again power the water level drops below the top of the concrete intake structures that feed the dam's eight hydroelect electric generators. If the Bureau of Reclamation tries to run the turbines below this point, it creates a powerful whirlpool effect. that sucks air into the system causing severe cavitation that can physically tear the giant metal turbine uh blades apart. That is why they've already stopped the output of power to prevent this. Now we're talking about going down 30 40 more feet.
It's over for the desert southwest.
Guys, you'll have to decide how you handle it. Think about this. It was um in Phoenix a few years back. We were watching in one of the towns there had Verie in the name. I can't remember but we've talked about it. They were having to truck water up to that section outside of Phoenix because they just didn't have any and it created quite a problem. Trucks back and forth all the time. Very expensive diesel water cost skyrocketing. Imagine doing that on a Phoenix level.
What? 5 million people or so down there.
You're not going to chuck that much water in the diesels alone or the 18s would uh completely block the interstates. There's not that much water left to get. The Heila River, Salt Lake, I mean Salt River are low. You It's not You can't put that small band-aid like you did on this first crisis on this major catastrophe. The numbers don't add up. Now again at power at the minimum power pool 34.90 hydro power is dead. 5 million people are automatically cut off from electricity in that area. At if you drop down 10 more feet 3370 at this level water is too low to even reach the lower backup release tubes. and you created a dam. It would take uh some very low-level demolition flyovers to take out to get any water downstream and the dam becomes a concrete wall and no water can flow downstream to Lake me, Arizona, Nevada or California.
Listen what I'm saying. This region will be reclaimed. It may take a few decades, but the immediate effect is not going to take over just a few more days as it begins to slide this Sunday night. And again, looking at this, uh, even the feds guys are having to change their mind. Listen, it says um, according to the US Bureau of Reclamation's probable minimum 24 month supply, Lake Powell is projected to drop 3464 by December 31st. Again, this means the reservoir will drop 26 ft below the total shutdown thresh threshold of 3490.
Guys, it again with that silt layer, the water level is it's not it will not take long before you start seeing that silt be the uh very surface of the bottom of Lake me or excuse me, Lake Powell. And now they're starting to understand the implications coming from the water education section of Colorado guys. says this means the reservoir would drop 26 ft below the total shutdown 3490.
Falling to 3464 would trigger a serious infrastructural and legal crisis. It would create water wars that would quickly uh turn into water protest, water riots again just like we said in the fed forcing the feds to step in. So it's not just a natural or mother nature war on the people there. It will become much deeper than that because of the Fed stepping in to try to maintain some peace. But when again when all of that authority your water rations, your gas rations, your food is handed to you by the government, they have you right where they want you.
And just looking back at today at the hourly water output from Lake me getting up at 30,000 cubic feet per second guys what kind of mentality is that downstream? I mean who's pushing the buttons? We know it's got it's by law it's legally tied in. You got to do certain things. But we saw with Lake Pow the Fed step in maybe was the 25th or something. I'm not sure. anyway right around it wasn't long ago and stop that output to protect power. Will they do the same thing now to protect me or will the greed and the money from downstream and the big data centers force that gate to stay open and and that will just increase or it will decrease the time it takes for complete devastation of the power and the water generated from the entire Colorado River system. And guys, if you look again the alignment of it, the two dams going down together, it says under the US Bureau of Reclamation's baseline track, POW hits its 3490 ft shutdown mark in December 2026.
At that exact same time, Lake me is projected to decline roughly to 1036, putting it just inches away from the 1030 foot uh 1035 ft threshold.
Simultaneous collapses Mother nature's coming full of force and she knows the art of war. And guys, again, like I said, mother nature knows the art of war. When it's getting unbalanced and tired and Atlas decides to shrug, then uh look at this satellite image from today. Look at the low, excuse me, high pressure setup over this entire region. The blue greens are moisture not happening, not in this area. And this goes even further north than what we're talking about Lake Powell and all pushing all the way up into Alaska. Look at that dry air. This is just the bottom of that funnel. But what it's doing again is putting a dome over the southwest, pushing air, all the moisture back on the other side of the Rockies, moving it up north from this point. It looks like it's going to hang in there. Why?
Because as I showed you in the last video, the steering currents disappear this year. We'll take a quick look. I'll show you. Now, let me say this. I've showed you this image a few times, but each day it changes. And I was asked in the comments, BP, can you show us multi days going back and forth? And so that's what we're doing. I've been showing this what, maybe four or five videos. So, we're going back a year to date now. And this is why we're seeing the collapse.
Jetream.
See that? That keeps the moisture pushing. Gets pushing out of the Atlantic through the Caribbean up through the Southwest. Now, let's go again.
You wanted to see multiple days. We're going to go from a year ago then to a year ago now, guys. And those steering currents have completely disappeared.
Very unusual. The main thing about it is it's not going to let let any moisture into this high-pressure area. It's like a stagnated high pressure zone sitting there and we don't know how long it will happen. We saw it in the southeast a few years ago, 2023, maybe 2024. Terrible.
But we weren't in the desert. It was still terrible. But now that current is gone. That upper level jetream no longer exists. Look at that.
Nothing's moving. It's called stagnant.
And it has set in to the desert southwest. And all arrows point to complete shutdown of the Colorado River water and power systems.
You just cannot make it. But like I said before, no judge, no federal authorities can make the river rise. They can adjust the dam levels for a small period of time with no upstream rain. So now it's up to you. If you're in this area, you're the start of the migration.
Anywhere in this complete Colorado River area, you'll become the start point of the migration. But we're seeing problems all over the nation.
Keep that in mind. You may um move to a wetter climate or wetter area, but we are all having problems. It's time to prepare.
Again, it makes me think of the ant people, the whole they survived and the same scenario going back to Darren Cuku. during Kuyu when Mazda told Yema how to create these underground cities to survive very similar we're talking about earth cycles and earth ages and what's so amazing even though it's going to be a lot of trouble is that this generation is going to see the end or part of the end of this earth cycle again not by flood but by fire. What are we dealing with? a very hot desert. Guys, we're watching it. Thank you for dropping by and taking a little bit of time to do this. If you got friends and family in that area, pass the word on. Now, of course, you're going to be immediately hit with, "Oh, that's crazy BP." That's why I was showing you the numbers from the Bureau of Reclamation to match what we've been looking at. So, all you can do is tell them, ask them to pay attention to it.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink, right? They'll drink when they get thirsty enough and they become call in mom and daddy say, "You got a place we can get out of this desert? Can we come see you for a minute?" You know what I mean? And that's exactly what we're going to see.
So prepare on both sides, parents, grandparents, and kids, cuz it's going to be coming home to mom and daddy and grandpa and mama and asking for a little bit of water and food if they live in this area. And I know quite a few that do. have grandkids and kids there in Phoenix.
I've tried to get them out of there for a long time, but you know how it is. But when it gets hot enough and thirsty enough, there'll be some calls. And just like the old song about Las Vegas, nobody calls from Vegas just to say hello. Same thing through the whole Colorado River Valley. It's going to be, "Have you got a place we can go?" That's how it's going to be, guys. Anyway, just trying to keep it light a little bit.
This thing is much more serious than what many people realize. We have watched for this period of time to come.
We didn't know exactly how it would occur or how it would happen, but now the data is showing exactly the center of the bullseye.
Again, God bless every one of you. Thank you for coming. It's a heads up and be safe.
Related Videos
Taking $10,000 Cash To Green the Driest Barrio in Bolivia
LeafofLifeEarth
528 views•2026-05-29
They Laughed When She Let the Weeds Grow Between the Fences — Then Her Cattle Outweighed Every Herd
BackroadHarvest
117 views•2026-05-28
Mozambique RELEASES AFRICA'S MOST DANGEROUS ANIMAL - After 2 Months, The Results Shock Scientists
SimpleDiscovery24
541 views•2026-05-29
The Bay Poisoned by Mercury #shorts
harmedino
289 views•2026-06-01
Calgary Flood Watch Day 4 🚨 Bow River Not Expected to Peak Until Tomorrow
RealtorDhirYYC
103 views•2026-06-01
Cute Seals Spotted On Remote UK Island | Our Tiny Islands
Channel4OnTour
141 views•2026-05-29
This Jamaican Pond Has A Deadly Reputation
MyEyesAreYours-i3s
656 views•2026-05-28
Glowing Blue Powder Turned Brazilian City Into Radioactive Wasteland
Adnan-Sandhu976
637 views•2026-05-31











