This week in Astro News:
It's holiday time...
It’s holiday time, and that means blue skies and blue waters. It also means
sitting outside on the terrace having a late dinner, and walking along the
beach afterwards under an inky sky studded with stars. It’s very romantic –
and it’s also a perfect opportunity to see one of the most impressive signs
of all: Scorpio.
You can’t see Scorpio properly from the UK, because we’re too far north; but
if you’re holidaying in the Mediterranean, or better still in Florida or the
Caribbean, then you can’t miss it, and once you’ve seen it you’ll remember
it for ever. Any time during the next month or so will be fine. You need to
face south after sundown when the stars are coming out, preferably looking
out to sea so you get a low and level horizon. Just over the sea you’ll see a
definite T-shape, tilted to the right; if you follow the stem down away from
the head you’ll find it goes on a bit and then curls round to the left in a
wonderful hook, like an upside down coat hanger. That’s the sting. It’s a
real whopper of a constellation - much bigger than you expect. The red star
behind the head is Antares, known to the Babylonians as the Watcher of the
West, and important enough to the Greeks for several temples to be built
aligned towards it. The star at the end of the sting is called Shaula; it
sounds like it would make quite a nice name for a girl, but I’m not sure what
it would do to her personality! Still, being called Sting never did a certain
rock star any harm, did it?
It seems I was right about last week’s fine weather as the Sun and Jupiter
conjoined. Unfortunately, such aspects don’t last. During the coming week
there are no fewer than seven separate contacts between Neptune and the other
planets – sometimes two or three on a single day. Neptune, of course, is the
god of the sea. Get your wellies out.
AstroDiary
Summer schools:
Aug 5 – 9: Company of Astrologers. School of Acupuncture, 13 Mandela St,
Camden, London NW1. Day: £32 (£28 Friends); Week: £120 (Friends only). Tarot
(Aug 5); Surviving Outer Planet Transits (6th); Interpreting Progressions
(7th); Relationships (8th); Horary (9th). Book: 01227 362427. Email:
admin@coa.org.uk.
Please double-check with the organisation before attending any events listed here - we cannot accept any responsibility for events changed/cancelled.
Are you holding an astrological event - especially one outside London!! -
that you would like others to know about?
Research into Astrology and Infertility by Pat Harris, MSc., D.F.Astrol.S.
I would like to thank everyone who has responded to my earlier notices on Jonathan's website and who volunteered to take part in the research that I am conducting as part of my PhD in astrology and health psychology at Southampton University, UK. I now have quite a number of people taking part which will help me in conducting my study into factors that may or may not correlate with fertility treatment outcome. I should have a progress report out soon. However, I am still looking for women who are currently pregnant - not necessarily as a result of fertility treatment - and who would like to contact me about details of my research to see if they would like to take part. My email address is: pharris@interalpha.co.uk
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