No one knows
Paul Homewood
Recently, you recently heard a horror ad from the Woodland Trust on the radio.
It is characterized by a woman wearing dirty voices that emanate from the “climate crisis.” She is promoting the event:

The climate crisis has had a profound impact on nature. There is an urgent need to understand how wildlife responds to changing seasons, rising temperatures and unpredictable weather patterns.
Compared to the early 1900s, climate change has accelerated the arrival of spring by an average of 8.4 days. Now, we need you to help us find out if the signs of spring are also changing.
Let us know if you have discovered three vital signs of spring – frogspawn, the song thrush or the flowering black dragon. Your records are crucial to help us understand current threats and how climate change affects natural health.
So don't wait – scroll down to submit your record March 31, 2025 And play your part in nature’s healing.
https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/visiting-woods/things-to-do/natures-calendar/springs-vital-signs
Is that the level of crisis? Is spring earlier than 8 days a century ago?
In other words, we usually get the temperature on March 1 on March 8 now!
Or in other words – Oxford is now the same temperature in spring as London was a century ago.
Does this have a “far-reaching impact” on nature? Seriously?
In any case, it is well known that nature will not have an average. The temperature in spring has risen by as many as three degrees year by year. Nature seems to have done well, however.
In fact, spring weather is much more predictable than it was earlier decades ago:

But the facts do not fit the forest land trust’s climate agenda.
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