By Tuesday evening, a wave of thunderstorms reached the region of Budapest. On Aranyhegy in Óbuda, at around 8:15 PM, a non-mesocyclonic tornado formed from one of the thunderstorm clouds. Meanwhile, there was heavy rainfall in several other settlements in Hungary, with minor flooding in several places. https://tinyurl.com/bde4bm37
Although science [1] does not recognize it, astrology accepts that eclipses can impact the weather at a place especially if they occur on the horizon or the meridian. And the effect of the eclipse need not be felt immediately but can take place well after its occurrence especially close to lunations just before or after the eclipse. (The Budapest thunderstorms have taken place on June 6th just after the June 4th Full Moon).
The last lunar eclipse of May 5th was not only significantly aligned with the horizon at Budapest but also conjunct radix Pluto [14sc] (upheavals?) on the MC in Hungary’s radix chart [2]. Among events linked to the stars that form the backdrop to the Ascendant and the Moon, Diana Rosenberg has “storms and high winds” and writes:
Turbulent mansion Ti (noted for tempestuous weather) and black holes make this a major area of storms and shipwrecks. These stars were transited in 1864 when a Bay of Bengal cyclone caused a 40-foot wave to hit Calcutta killing 50,000; in 1906 when a huge typhoon hit Hongkong killing about 10,000; in 1925 when the “most violent and deadly tornado in American history struck Annapolis, MO; at the Great New England Hurricane of 1938; in 1977 when after 4 snow storms in 2 months, Buffalo, NY was hit by the Great Blizzard of ’77; in 1989 when Hurricane Hugo, packing 135 mph winds, hit Charleston, SC; at the October 1998 New Moon at the start of the Category 5 Hurricane Mitch.
[1] https://sciencing.com/moon-visible-time-5168.html
[2] http://www.dominantstar.com/a_hungary.htm
Comments
Post a Comment