Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting

Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting

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Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting
Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting
The Summer Pattern Has Arrived – It’s The Same, But Different

The Summer Pattern Has Arrived – It’s The Same, But Different

The thunderstorms are not going to shut off in this first month of summer

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Gary Lezak
Jul 01, 2025
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Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting
Weather 20/20 Ultra Long Range Forecasting
The Summer Pattern Has Arrived – It’s The Same, But Different
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Weather 20/20 Intelligence Report

To all of our new Weather 20/20 customers — welcome. We’re excited to have you with us.

You’ve joined me on a journey of eye-opening scientific discovery. For decades, I’ve been working to uncover how the atmosphere truly works — not as random chaos, but as a structured, cycling pattern we now call the LRC. And today, that pattern is helping farmers, businesses, and everyday users of our Global Predictor Pro app make smarter, more informed decisions. Some of you are adjusting your planting schedules, others are planning events or managing supply chains — all based on real, actionable information that is working with precision.

As the summer version of this year’s LRC pattern emerges, the flow is weakening and yet the pattern is still the same one that set up last fall. The summer version will be different. For example, the KC blizzard segment of the LRC will cycle through two more times this season, but the summer version is not going to produce snow in KC.

This week, we’re highlighting one of those moments that makes us stop and say: "You can’t make this up." A severe weather segment — Segment C — has repeated multiple times across the central U.S., including a set of high wind events that hit Waldo, a Kansas City neighborhood, in Cycle 6 and Cycle 7. The result? The same tree damaged twice, 41 days apart, in the same way — and yes, we have the video, actually both videos.

In Cycle 1, back on October 24, 2024, the LRC produced a burst of wind damage across eastern Kansas and western Missouri. You can see it clearly in the blue dots on the slide above—centered right over Kansas City.

Now fast forward:

  • May 19, 2025 — in Cycle 6

  • June 26, 2025 — in Cycle 7

Two more nearly identical severe weather events struck the Kansas City metro area, echoing the October 24 setup. The pattern didn’t just repeat — it returned with precision.

But this time, it wasn’t just dots on a map — it was real, personal, and powerful. Here is a video from Overland Park, KS on May 19, 2025:

Just a few minutes after the wind hit Overland Park, it hit Waldo. Look closely, as the tree across south of the house is the one that barely made it through this big wind event:

A big branch broke off that big tree in Waldo and flew through the living room window on May 19, during the Cycle 6 severe wind event. It was intense, sudden, and part of a broader system we had already forecasted — 125 days in advance.

Now, let’s fast forward to June 26 — Cycle 7.

This time, the tree didn’t make it.

Perhaps weakened by what happened in the previous cycles...
Perhaps the roots were just waiting for the next surge of wind...

Whatever the final trigger — the same segment returned, and this time it took the whole tree down.

We have the video. You can hear the wind, the crack, and the collapse.
And it happened right on cycle and we had it in our forecast since February. Watch and listen to this tree and fortunately it didn’t fall on those cars or the house:

This Waldo wind event may seem like a small, localized incident — but it’s part of a much larger pattern. This is how the LRC works.

We’ve showcased how tornadoes, not just wind gusts, have followed the same track, hitting the same towns in different LRC cycles.

Real-World Recurrence Examples:

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