Good afternoon to all,
There have been two X-class (X2.5) solar flares, followed by two M-class flares. Hopefully, some Earth-strike-zone CMEs will juice things up, but it all depends on the orbital mechanics involved. Right now,
https://rigreference.com/solar has only current space weather R3 radio blackouts with no G-level storms in the 24-hour forecast, just R2 radio blackouts. I really like the new design and the new neat real-time solar panel.
The strong-to-severe thunderstorm season has started up very early for us up here, but it's how we got our name (le Baie du Tonnere, from the 18th-century French Voyageurs). Storms up here on the Big Lake scared the crap out of them because they really get amplified by the geography. But it's not a good thing to have outdoor antennas connected to feedlines going into the house. So I have to keep an eye on Blitzortung. As a former aviation weather observer, I spotted a small opening between the northern Ontario and southern storm fronts (Duluth area) as the Big Lake "nose" split the systems. I didn't want to miss catching more flares after the first X2.5, so I kept my W6LVP look on the air and grounded my vertical and dipole antennas. A vertical loop sitting only 2m off the ground is a less likely target, and less likely to be bothered by the EMI that a ground strike or cloud-to-cloud burst 50-100 km away could generate. But I have blown up my share of electronics during thunderstorms!