🔥 It’s Burning in Manitoba – While Others Try to Make It Rain
By Tina Winterlik aka Zipolita
May 29, 2025
It’s burning in Manitoba again. People are being evacuated. Families are fleeing their homes. The forests are engulfed in flames, and the skies are thick with smoke. It’s painful to watch. It’s heartbreaking.
And it’s not just a fire. It’s a symptom. A sign. A warning.
We’ve been told the jet stream is shifting, moving slower, creating lopsided weather. Up north, like in Manitoba, it’s hot, dry, and burning. Down south, it’s raining—sometimes too much. These extremes aren’t random. This is what climate change looks like: heat domes, stalled weather patterns, and increasingly violent cycles of fire and flood.
But while Manitoba burns, some people are asking a strange question:
Why don’t we just make it rain?
☁️ Making Rain: The Science and the Risks
Cloud seeding is real. It’s a process where chemicals like silver iodide are released into clouds to help raindrops form. It’s been used for decades in places like the U.S., China, and especially the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The idea is to increase rainfall—by about 5–15%—in dry regions.
But there’s a catch:
💧 It only works if there are already clouds.
💰 It’s expensive, localized, and not a guarantee.
⚠️ It comes with ethical and environmental concerns we still don’t fully understand.
And then there’s the example of Dubai…
🌧️ Dubai Flooded: When Rain Becomes a Disaster
Earlier this year, Dubai faced historic flooding, drowning highways and paralyzing the city. Many pointed fingers at their aggressive rainmaking program. Officials denied it was to blame, saying the storm was natural. But the truth? We just don’t know for sure.
Dubai, a place where rain is rare and precious, spent millions to make it fall—only to be overwhelmed when it arrived all at once.
I once took a plane ride beside a man from Dubai. He told me that everyone, even children, are expected to pray for rain every day. That really struck me—this idea of combining spiritual tradition with modern desperation. And now? They’ve gone from praying for rain to making it… and still, they’re not safe.
🔥 A World on Fire, A World in Flood
So here we are.
- One part of the world burns.
- Another part floods.
- Some pray for rain.
- Others manufacture it.
All the while, communities like those in Manitoba, who had little part in causing the climate crisis, are living the consequences.
It raises questions we can’t ignore:
- Should we keep tinkering with nature using tech “solutions” to fix problems we created?
- What are the risks of interfering with weather systems we barely understand?
- Where’s the line between innovation and arrogance?
And most of all:
- What happens to the people left behind?
💔 Fire Is a Warning — But So Is Rain
Maybe the fire in Manitoba and the floods in Dubai are both part of the same message. A message from the planet that says: slow down. Reconnect. Rethink how we live.
We can’t keep patching the climate with tech alone. We need deeper change—cultural, political, spiritual. Indigenous knowledge, community resilience, respect for nature. We need to listen. Because the Earth is speaking louder and louder every year.
🙏🏽 Final Thought
To the people in Manitoba and all those on the front lines—my heart is with you. May your skies clear, may the rains fall gently when needed, and may we all have the courage to act before more is lost.
—
Zipolita / Tina Winterlik
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