Friday, June 12, 2009
Accredited astrologer
Please use and enjoy the following report on the visibility of the planets in 1999. This information has been adapted mainly from Stardate, a bimonthly astronomical periodical published by the University of Texas at Austin. (Vol. 27 #1 January/February 1999) Information was also drawn from Jim Maynard's Celestial Influences astrological calendar for 1999. Tropical zodiacal positions are used in all cases. Given times are in Pacific Time. So, fellow astrologers, get your noses out of your books (and away from your computer screens) and look up to the sky -- where it all started!
April 1999
APRIL - Venus is out-of-bounds this month from April 19 until May 31; it is farther north than the Sun ever gets. Out-of-bound planets are said to act so extremely that they can become an unrecognizable distortion of their own qualities. Watch for extreme Venus-related news and activities during this period.
2 - Moon conjunct Mars.
2 - Mercury stationary direct 1: 19 A.M. P.S.T. 21 degrees Pisces.
5 - Moon conjunct Antares.
12 - Venus conjunct the Pleiades.
15 - New Moon 9: 22 P.M. PDT 25 degrees Aries.
16 - Mercury at it's greatest western elongation from the Sun: it is at its most visible before sunrise in the eastern sky.
18, 19 - Waxing crescent Moon is near Venus, Mars and Aldebaran.
24 - Mars is opposite the Sun; it rises at sundown and sets at sunrise. Mars is retrograde, close to the Earth and is at its brightest now. Moon conjunct Regulus.
28 - Moon is conjunct Mars and Spica.
30 - Full Moon 7:55 A.M. PDT, 9 degrees of Scorpio.
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