An "extraordinarily dangerous" category 5
hurricane slammed into southwestern Mexico Friday, bringing lashing winds and
rainfall that has the potential to create life-threatening flash floods. Hurricane
Patricia made landfall near Cuixmala, west-northwest of Manzanillo, carrying
165 mph winds at 6:15 p.m. local time (7:15 p.m. ET), according to the National
Hurricane Center. Palm trees bent and rain whipped in sideways as the storm
made its first appearance on land. "The winds are really strong. It's
amazing, even the cars are moving," Laura Barajas, a 30-year-old hotel
worker from the major cargo port of Manzanillo near where the storm hit, told
Reuters.
As we have
seen in the past few posts, the powerful eclipses of September are now making
themselves visible in world events. Hurricane
Patricia is another of those examples. Shown
here is the chart for the solar eclipse of September 13 drawn for Manzanillo.
Notice that the eclipse[20vi] is placed on the IC [17vi], the cusp of the 4th
house that is connected to weather conditions in mundane astrology [1].
Yesterday, October 23, transit Mars conjoined the IC and was within 2 degrees of the eclipse
thereby triggering it into manifestation. Diana Rosenberg links the star
Denebola conjunct the eclipse with “storms
and extreme barometric lows”.
Denebola’s manzil Al Sarfah, “The Changer”
(of the weather) was associated with storms and hurricanes. This was the North
Node in 1588 when the Spanish Armada sailed from Lisbon to invade England:
after a pounding by English ships and terrible storms only a remnant returned to Spain; Uranus at the 1715 Los
Capitanas Disaster: 11 Spanish treasure laden ships out of Havana sailed into a
massive hurricane; Mars at the Great Hurricane of 1780 that completely
flattened the West Indies; the Sun when SS Central America, with 500 passengers
and 21 tons of California gold, floundered in a terrible hurricane and sank in
1857; at the Sept. 1928 New Moon during the massive Lake Okeechobee, FL ,
second deadliest in US history; Mercury and Venus at the August 1935 New Moon 5
days before a Category 5 Labor Day Hurricane “the most intense and tight-knit
ever to strike Florida” hit the Florida Keys, the barometer fell to the lowest
ever observed in the US with wind estimated at 150-200 mph; Neptune at the
map-altering Great New England Hurricane of 1938 that hit without warning: 186
mph winds wrecked Long Island; the South Node when Category 5 Hurricane Camille
with the barometer at its 2nd lowest reading in US history hit the
Gulf Coast in 1969 and several others [2].
[2]
Secrets of the Ancient Skies; Diana K. Rosenberg (v.1, p.648-656)
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