YES, to a degree................ and without any complex tools or paraphernalia! I make no claims to be able to fully predict the weather but I do claim that anyone can be empowered to learn to see for themselves some of the regular underlying patterns behind the weather and predict them well in advance. The following article aims to be a report on weather correlations to movements of the Sun and Moon. It does not offer any explanations or hypothesis for these phenomena.
We are all familiar with how the sun effects the seasons and we an make fair predictions as regards to mean temperatures over the course of the year. Making our observations more conscious we can note the altitude of the sun and compare it to temperatures. When the sun is high at midday it is summer and warmer temperatures prevail. When it is low, winter is upon us. This is an easy step and I am using the sun as an "instrument" of nature to clarify my thinking. So instead of using an instrument like a thermometer, or barometer, or clock, I am using the altitude of the sun as a gauge. So we watch the sun daily climb (ascend) in altitude
from winter to summer(ascending sun) and then go down again, after the
summer solstice, to winter (descending sun). As summer comes and the sun
gets higher in the sky To summarise the first part:-
Take your next "nature instrument" ............ the Moon. Watch how it changes altitude. Note how it ascends (climbs higher) and descends (gets lower) in 1 month whereas the sun takes 12 months to complete this cycle. The Moon goes through the same cycle as the sun but twelve times faster.
In summary:- There is this fortnightly component to the weather patterns. It is very simple and will be borne out by your observations and record keeping. I stress component because other weather patterns can dominate and override this one. Nonetheless this is a fundamental rhythm with the weather. A calendar illustrating and informing you of times of various sky rhythms is a great help too. It can be a tool to help you become more conscious of what you are observing in the heavens. I write this article as a compiler of such a calendar. Next step, while we are on ascending and descending
rhythms of the Moon. When the Moon (or sun) is rising in the east and setting in the west, then that is the day it is crossing the equator. Watch how often we have electrical activity (lightning) and winds around these times. For those interested, when the Moon crosses going southwards it is in the constellation of Virgo and when crossing into the northern hemisphere it is in Pisces. Using the same instrument (the Moon) but a different lunar rhythm, we can also observe how the Moon changes size in a separate month long rhythm (there are 4 lunar rhythms of approximately 1 month duration) . You can make a measuring stick (as some cultures do). Hold a stick at arms length against the backdrop of the Moon and notch the Moons visual diameter on the stick. Make fresh notches at each observation. The Moon's apparent diameter changes as it gets nearer or farther from the Earth in its elliptical orbit. The Moon's closest approach to the Earth is called perigee and it farthest distance away apogee.
Within this cycle, lunar perigee is when there is the greatest chance for rain to fall. This also when you getter higher tides. In some months the perigee distances are closer than others and it helps to know them when considering the planting of crops for example. Next note how often weather changes and rain occurs
after the Full Moon. Now we have changing lunar rhythms occurring all the time, one combination may bring rain here but not there. How can we be more specific as to location? If, for example, a full Moon is at peak ascension in January that combination will recur again in 19 years time. So if you can gather weather records for your district over as long a span as you can get you can greatly increases your chances of weather forecasting successes. Monthly averages do not help so much; you need more specific daily figures for your location. What happened 19 years ago in the same season when there was a full Moon at peak ascension; 38 years ago (2 cycles); 57 years ago? What happened in previous cycles of the new Moon at apogee? These weather records are also necessary to find correlations to the next cycle. Earlier in the article I mentioned the sun ranging northwards and then southwards between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. Well the Moon does roughly the same except that some years she ranges within the tropics and some years beyond. Over a period of 18.6 years (different to the 19 year rhythm) the Moon will move from an expanded range of 5 degrees beyond the two Tropics and then retreat to confine herself 5 degrees within the Tropics; and then expand back again. When the lunar declinations (movements north and south of the equator) have a more limited range weather fluctuations tend to be more extreme. One can swing from floods to droughts in very short time periods. Drought cycles are more associated with declination maximums (ranging beyond both tropics e.g. from 28 degrees north to 28 degrees south). What else can this "Moon-nature-instrument" help us with in weather forecasting? Used on a daily basis we can note when the Moon rises and when it. Observe when there is rain about, how often rain commences when the Moon rises or sets. Note also how there is a greater tendency for cloud formation when the Moon is well below the horizon and a cloud clearing when it is high above us. This needs to be taken in context of the season and the time of the day
We can come to appreciate just how
much correlation there is to the fluid dynamics of the Earth and the Moons
movements and changing luminosity. Of course knowledge of the weather can be a great boon to farmers for the planting of crops but there is more to the likes of perigees, full Moons and peak descensions. It would seem from H.Spiess' research that not only are these times the highest chance of receiving rainfall; but seeds planted at these times, are more likely to grow into higher yielding plants (refer to www.astro-calendar.com/shtml/Research/research.shtml). Are not the weather, oceans and plants dancing to the same tune!? A study of the underlying rhythms behind weather patterns can be very rewarding. This article was an introduction and there are other key rhythms like sunspot cycles that have a strong bearing on our weather. However we still need to remind ourselves that the weather still has a few tricks up her sleeve and will never become totally predictable! Brian Keats, along with Stefan Mager, is the author
of the Antipodean Astro Calendar, the Northern Star Calendar and the Biodynamic
Growing Guide. The calendars are guides for Naked Eye Astronomy, Weather
Forecasting & Biodynamic Planting. Diagrams are excerpts from the Antipodean Astro
calendar which is available from:- |