@fr0zo664

that butterfly shouldn’t have flapped it’s damn wings

@geimfarinn

Living in north Iceland I can confidently predict winter will be long, dark and cold. Mostly with snow

@yoastertoaster8306

This balance patch is gonna be wild

@DeyvsonMoutinhoCaliman

El Niño is hell in South America, heavy droughts for a population used to live in a hot, but rainy place. But La Niña is usually good for agriculture here, it's already raining a lot.

@MayankSingh-ou5gv

I come from a farmers family in india, we are not very rich but la nina years usually brings more rain for rice while cooler winters for wheat. I hope la nina continues for long period and bless us farmers

@sesch629

This 19 minute video explained el niño and la niña better than my uni lecturer could in 3 hours.

@Cracker_Barrel_Kidd_55

Astrum could narrate an impending apocalypse and it would be the comfiest thing ever.

@ShepherdsCreek

I'm a sheep farmer in northeast bc, Canada. The drought here for the last year saw us evacuated due to wildfires and saw hay prices soar to unprecedented highs. Many farmers had to sell off massive portions of their herds, including breeding stock in order to keep going and that will take years to rebuild. Food prices have reflected this and will probably get worse before they get better. My hope is that la Nina will restore the water reservoirs and bring forage prices back to more affordable levels sooner than later so farmers can rebuild and feed the world again soon.

@masondixit2264

Stronger hurricane season is gonna be crazy we’re already getting record breaking storms

@rossr100

I'm sitting in New Zealand watching this. The fruit trees are covered in spring blossom and it's snowing....
Situation normal heh.

@JamieAlice92

At this point i honestly just don’t care any more. Bring it on i say.

@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145

That woul've been nice to show how these phenomenons impact more places in the world than the US and vaguely mentioning Asia.

@anthonypierson1593

There are garbage science creators that use a fancy narrator and fancy footage but lack any substance. I almost avoided watching this video because of that, but I’m pleasantly surprised. Will definitely make a mental note that Astrum is not like some other clickbaity, low quality science creators

@Phillip-dw7vr

I remember about 30 years ago reading an article in a newspaper talking about “rivers in the sky.” Glad it’s been figured out so well now.

@Tinil0

This makes me remember that I think I first became aware of El Nino back in the '97-'98 cycle.  I remember the news media spending a LOT of time talking about El Nino then.

@r.p.5863

This was so on point for Southern California, I cant remember a winter that has been so warm and dry, and it may explain why the high winds we have were so devasting and causing wildfires.

@ErikGarcia07

you could say the earth is a whole organism

@Arcturus.93

In South Africa it's currently spring and yet we had one of the strongest snow storm during the weekend which resulted in 1823 vehicles being stuck on the highway between cities and unfortunately due to the unexpected cold weather 2 people lost their lives. The days prior, it was on average 30°C (80°F). That's how crazy the weather changed!!

@erinmcdonald7781

Top tier content here! As a weather nerd, this is one of the best videos I’ve seen explaining these circulations and their impact worldwide. Often content gets biased to the western hemisphere, but these seriously impact SEA, Australia, and India, probably Europe, as well (research possibilities, there). 
Your cohesive overview and organization, combined with animated graphics, and Astrum quality make this an engaging video I want to share with my students. 
Thank you for sharing your amazing work! 💜🌎

@emerster656

0:15 I heard of La Niña while researching the Santa Ana winds but I have no idea what it is. Cant wait to find out