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Previous Posts
Sunday inspiration: Trusting the future
Astrologers have a reputation, which we ourselves and our forbears have propagated, of being able to foretell the future. If you run a Google search for "Can astrology predict the future," the very first article is from a well-known astrology site titled "Predicting the future with astrology."
posted 8:30:05am Feb. 12, 2012 |
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Neptune in Pisces and the question of reality
Neptune just slipped back into Pisces where it will remain until 2025. Neptune's role in the astrological pantheon is to cause us to question where the physical world ends and a more transcendent reality begins. It therefore rules our spiritual experience, but it can also be confusing and induce
posted 5:30:53pm Feb. 08, 2012 |
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Leo Full Moon, February 7 2012
art by Dave Archer. The Moon will be full in Leo on February 7th at 4:54 pm Est/9:54 pm GMT. The Full Moon is the peak of the lunar cycle - it's a time when our goals and aspirations reach fulfillment as we prepare for the waning cycle during which we are generally asked to let go of something tha
posted 8:05:40am Feb. 06, 2012 |
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Sunday inspiration: The Great Nest of Being
"Whenever we moderns pause for a moment, and enter the silence, and listen very carefully, the glimmer of our deepest nature begins to shine forth, and we are introduced to the mysteries of the deep, the call of the within, the infinite radiance of a splendor that time and space forgot - we are intr
posted 9:08:41am Feb. 05, 2012 |
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The trouble with Demi Moore
The troubled actress Demi Moore has been in the news lately after she was hospitalized for what appears to be a combination of prescription drugs, nitrous oxide and alcohol. While her behavior has been more erratic since her separation from third husband Ashton Kutcher, Demi has a long history of
posted 7:34:45am Feb. 04, 2012 |
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posted December 16, 2009 at 7:20 am
in fact, the deepest Solar Minimum in the 100 years that scientists have been recording solar activity.
This is yet another little reminder that we know next to nothing about the grand and sweeping cycles of this planet, its primary star, and our solar system.
posted December 16, 2009 at 9:59 am
How funny. Joe comments that we know next to nothing when the opposite is proven to be the case. I think Joe the Plumber is a good example of the type of person who feels overwhelmed by all this science data and feels helpless.
That is ok, we have a planet full of people just like him. Yes, the 10 meter band for radio enthusiasts is popping and yes it appears the solar flux is coming back along with some sunspots.
As a result, expect lots of space junk to re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere that has been aloft far beyond it’s life expectancy.
Also it will be a great learning event for climatologists to watch the changes in noctilucent cloud formations in the mesosphere. These upper level formations impact solar radiation and absorbtion in ways we are beginning to hypothesize about.
Coupled with a strong El Nino, this summer could become deadly with heat. Watch out forest fire response teams.
posted December 16, 2009 at 6:34 pm
Sunspots are driven by global warming just as quakes, hurricanes, and other bad stuff. Most who “believe” that it all is a natural cycle are only skilled in gaming search engines, corporate horror money, and lazy geologists.
posted December 16, 2009 at 8:02 pm
Joe comments that we know next to nothing when the opposite is proven to be the case.
Really, Earl? It’s been “proven”? How nice you feel we’ve got it all figured out. I’d like a toke of whatever you’re smoking that gives you such confidence. Many scientists have expressed amazement about how it seems the more we discover, the more we realize how little we know about our home planet. I’m quite at ease in knowing how little I know, because it’s the beginning of wisdom.
posted December 16, 2009 at 10:05 pm
Earl, you sure are excited about that puny Sunspot #1035! I’ve watched those pop up and then disappear again throughout the minimum.
Watch 1035 disappear again. In the meantime, please watch Dr. Kirkby’s lecture (CERN) regarding global temperatures during minima. It appears that the sun’s mechanics are leaning towards long-term disruption in the torroidal field.
If that happens, we shall be pumping methane directly into the atmosphere in a vain attempt to avoid the ice age!!
posted December 17, 2009 at 7:05 am
Earl E: stop attacking people, I say this for your own benefit, maybe you were raised to think you had a right to attack people you will never know, but you taint this wonderful blog.
posted December 18, 2009 at 8:06 am
I’m all for a lively discussion, but when people start calling other people stupid I will have to start deleting posts. Let’s try to keep the conversation intelligent and stay out of knee-jerk wingnuttia on either side.
posted December 21, 2009 at 6:20 am
Only gammaray pictures are available. That calcium potassium picture shows “dream”sunspots which could get to a real visual sunspot.
Its not fine to put datas away. I think , the new cycle is slow , deep in a minimum. Temperature delepment will show