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Thursday, June 28, 2007 02:08:22 -0400
As of Thursday, June 28, 2007 02:08:22 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction. If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email. You will receive full credit for your find, to include reward monies. Please include the exact date of the dream and the DD number. And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.
Posted on 4/3/205

This says "1,000 people will die, New Orleans underwater, Katrina, hole in roof, lake floods this year, get out" (click here for 100% proof!) (talk about it)
Posted on 7/15/2005

Over 100 people will be killed in a major hurricane, the sad part is that they all died because they did not want to leave their homes. Over 300 cats and dogs will also die New Orleans, August 29th, 2005 click here for more information on this dream (click here for more proof) (talk about it)
POSTED IN NEWS SECTION on 8/27/2005
AUGUST 27th, 2005: Approaching hurricane Katrina was predicted in my dream drawing of 7/15/2005, it will hit close to New Orleans on Monday. If you are advised to evacuate, PLEASE DO SO, as my dream states that over 1000 people will die that decided to stay home.
UPDATE: I predicted Hurricane Katrina on July 15th, 2005 as well as the death toll, I WARNED everyone to get out for almost a month, yet no one seemed to take me seriously.... Please read today's (Aug 31st) prediction, as a similar event is about to happed again
Posted on 8/27/2005

A large dome breaks apart and many people are killed.
(CLICK HERE FOR PROOF)
(click here for even more proof!) (talk about it)
Posted on 8/28/2005

Gas prices in The United States will reach $4.00 a gallon very soon. (click here for proof, and by the way, no one saw this coming except me!) (talk about it)
AUGUST 27th, 2005: Approaching hurricane Katrina was predicted in my dream drawing of 7/15/2005, it will hit close to New Orleans on Monday. If you are advised to evacuate, PLEASE DO SO, as my dream states that over 1000 people will die that decided to stay home.
UPDATE: I predicted Hurricane Katrina on July 15th, 2005 as well as the death toll, I WARNED everyone to get out for almost a month, yet no one seemed to take me seriously.... Please read today's (Aug 31st) prediction, as a similar event is about to happed again.
Hurricane Katrina formed as Tropical Depression Twelve over the southeastern Bahamas on August 23, 2005, as the result of an interaction of a tropical wave and the remains of Tropical Depression Ten. The system was upgraded to Tropical Storm Katrina on the morning of August 24, and became a hurricane only two hours before it made landfall on the morning of August 25 between Hallandale Beach and Aventura, Florida. The storm weakened over land, but it regained hurricane status about one hour after entering the Gulf of Mexico.[1]
The storm rapidly intensified after entering the Gulf, due in part to the storm's movement over the warm sea surface temperatures of the Loop Current.[2] On August 27, the storm reached Category 3 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, becoming the third major hurricane of the season. An eyewall replacement cycle disrupted the intensification, but nearly doubled the size of the storm. Katrina again rapidly intensified, attaining Category 5 status by August 28 and reached its peak at 1:00 p.m. CDT that day with maximum sustained winds of 175 mph (280 km/h) and a minimum central pressure of 902 mbar. The pressure made Katrina the fourth most intense Atlantic hurricane on record, though it would be surpassed by Hurricanes Rita and Wilma later in the season; it was also the strongest hurricane ever recorded in the Gulf of Mexico (later also broken by Rita).[1]
Katrina made its second landfall at 6:10 a.m. CDT on August 29 as a Category 3 Hurricane with sustained winds of 125 mph (205 km/h) near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana. At landfall, hurricane-force winds extended outward 120 miles (190 km) from the center and the storm's central pressure was 920 mbar. After moving over southeastern Louisiana and Breton Sound, it made its third landfall near the Louisiana/Mississippi border with 120 mph (195 km/h) sustained winds, still at Category 3 intensity.[1]
Katrina maintained hurricane strength well into Mississippi, but weakened thereafter, finally losing hurricane strength more than 150 mi (240 km) inland, near Jackson, Mississippi. It was downgraded further to a tropical depression near Clarksville, Tennessee. The remnant system was last distinguishable in the eastern Great Lakes region on August 31 when it was absorbed by a frontal boundary. The resulting extratropical storm moved rapidly to the northeast and affected Ontario and Quebec.[1]
By August 26, the possibility of unprecedented cataclysm was already being considered. Some computer models were putting the city of New Orleans right in the center of their track probabilities; the chances of a direct hit were forecast at 17%, with strike probability rising to 29% by August 28.[10] This scenario was considered a potential catastrophe because 80% of the New Orleans metropolitan area is below sea level along Lake Pontchartrain. Since the storm surge produced by the hurricane's right-front quadrant (containing the strongest winds) was forecast to be 28 feet (8.5 m), emergency management officials in New Orleans feared that the storm surge could go over the tops of levees protecting the city, causing major flooding.[11] This risk of devastation was well known; previous studies by FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers had warned that a direct hurricane strike on New Orleans could lead to massive flooding, which would lead to thousands of drowning deaths, as well as many more suffering from disease and dehydration as the flood waters slowly receded from the city.[12]
At a news conference 10:00 a.m. on August 28, shortly after Katrina was upgraded to a Category 5 storm, New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin ordered the first ever mandatory evacuation of the city, calling Katrina, "a storm that most of us have long feared".[13] The government also established several "refuges of last resort" for citizens who could not leave the city, including the massive Louisiana Superdome, which sheltered approximately 26,000 people and provided them with food and water for several days as the storm came ashore.[14]
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Ok, I have had this dream before, so usually its pretty important. This is a drawing of an area in the United States that will completely disappear forever. I do not know how it could disappear, it may become a lake or something. What I do know its that its not going to be there anymore, and allot of people are going to be affected there and to the east?? This is all...
9.19.2006
reply
Hi, thanks for this, and I do see a connection.
Brian

Oblique aerial photographs of a segment of the Chandeleur Islands in the easternmost area of the Pontchartrain Basin in southeastern Louisiana. (Arrows mark a common referenced location.) The Chandeleur Islands are part of the Breton Island National Wildlife Refuge established by President Teddy Roosevelt in 1904. The islands have never been developed or significantly impacted by modern society. The pristine islands normally function as a major bird rookery, which provides critical habitat for several endangered species.
The photographs were taken before and after four hurricane passages occurring between 2001 and 2005. Note the extreme overwash of the barrier island in which most sand (white area) was washed away. Much of the vegetated platform (dark area) was also eroded. The Chandeleur Islands do breach naturally and may heal themselves. Recent storm activity, such as Hurricane Katrina, has not allowed sufficient time for significant recovery of the islands. Long term, the islands have had a net reduction in areal extent resulting in a loss of important habitat and hurricane protection to the coast. Imagery from the U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Florida.
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