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As we enter the month of June, two distinct events
have just happened. One is the formation of Cyclone Mora that formed
on 28th May in SE Bay and quickly transformed into a super cyclone
and made landfall in Bangladesh on the morning of 31st May.
The 2nd event is the declaration by IMD
that the South West Monsoon has formally set in on 30th
May 2017.
The date of formation of cyclone Mora has a
significant planetary connection. On 27-28th May, Mars entered
Gemini, only to come in exact opposition of Saturn in Sagittarius. Both Mars
and Saturn were in 1 degree – that is, in exact opposition with one of them
rising and the other setting at the exact moment in the sky. This simultaneous rising and setting of two planets is strong
rainfall support yoga. Almost at the same time on the morning of 27th
May, Moon and Mars entered Gemini together. Moon was with Mars in Gemini and then
stayed in watery sign Cancer during the period of genesis and realisation of
rains by this cyclone.
The cyclone’s genesis started when Mars entered the
previous degree of deep conjunction with Saturn. It intensified into a cyclone
when it was in exact conjunction with Saturn at 1 degree, 39 minutes in the
morning of 29th May and made landfall as Mars crossed 1 degree after
deep conjunction with Saturn.
The above combination of opposition between these
malefics is a rainfall spoiler as well.
Cyclone Mora showed that when the exact opposition
comes by way of one planet rising and another setting, it does cause a trigger
factor leading to very heavy rainfall. The swiftness and intensity of cyclone
Mora for such a short duration is made out from this kind of rare opposition.
We are going to see two more exact conjunctions this month. One will
be on 15th June when Sun comes in
exact opposition to Saturn.
The other will be on 19th
June when Mercury comes in exact opposition to Saturn. On both these
dates, one will be rising while the other will be setting the sky at the same time.
We have to see whether this
The 2nd event is
the onset of SWM on 30th May.
On 30th May, Venus was in the last degree
of Pisces and entered Aries on 31st May. Entry of Venus or Mercury
into the next sign in the rainy season marks a trigger to rainfall. In addition
to this, Venus, Mercury and Moon were in watery Navamsas on this date. Most
importantly Venus and Mercury happened to be present in the same Rasi with no planet
in between them. The closeness between them continuing till 21st
June also helps in rainfall from this trigger.
Rainfall
support yogas in June 2017.
(1) Venus – Mercury closeness.
Right from April 20th onwards,
pre-monsoon thunderstorms had been giving rains in NE India and parts of
interior South India. The stars traversed by Venus and Mercury during this period
signify NE section of India (Revathi, Aswini and Bharani).
However the gap between Venus and Mercury keeps
increasing in June from 25 degrees on 1st June to 55 degrees on 30th
June. This is a cause of concern as increasing gap reduces rainfall.
(2) Sun in Vayu Nadi.
When Sun moves across Rohini it is said to be in
Vayu nadi. This signifies rainfall accompanied with gusty winds. This started
on 25th May and is going to last till 8th June. Rohini signifies
central portions, and with Sun in Taurus (southern direction), the interior
parts of Peninsular India are likely to get rainfall during this period.
(3) Mars comes out of Dahana Nadi.
The movement of Mars in the star Mrigasheersha is called
Dahana Nadi. It causes intense heat. This started on May 16th and is
going to end on the night of 5th June. This results in reduction in
temperature. Though this is not a rainfall yoga, the reduction in heat
foretells presence of cooling features.
(4) Mercury enters combustion.
Mercury enters combustion when it is 14 degrees behind
the Sun. The day of combustion is usually marked with heavy rainfall or sudden
rainfall. Rainfall would usually occur throughout the combustion period in the
rainy season provided other rainfall yogas are also present. This combustion starts
on 9th June and ends on 4th July. Both these dates are
important for rainfall and the entire duration is likely to see rainfall. The
signs involved are south and west. This means South India and west India stand
to benefit by rains.
(5) Sun in exact opposition to Saturn on 15th
June.
This causes the simultaneous rising and setting of
Sun and Saturn. This happens on 15th June. At that time Moon will be
in same degrees in trinal house to Sun and Mars. Sun, Mars and Saturn will be
in Kendra position to one another (in alternating / odd signs to each other)
while Moon will be in rainfall causing Dhanishta on that day, crossing Ketu.
Moon will be in 9th house from Sun and Mars on that day. This is a
kind of manifestation of rainfall yoga involving Sun, Mars and Saturn with Moon
coming in trinal position to them. This month we will be checking whether this
combination works. The location is west.
Moon will be moving across stars that signify North West
during the period before and after 15th June. This might signify
Northern part of west coast of India, i.e., Maharashtra.
(6) Mercury in exact opposition to Saturn
on 19th June.
Mercury and Saturn will be at 0 degrees of Gemini
and Sagittarius respectively on 19th June. This would see Mercury
setting and Saturn rising at the exact time. At that time Moon will be in
Pisces, the watery sign. This is supposed to cause good rainfall. The location
is North, going by the location of Moon.
(7) Mercury enters Sowmya Nadi.
Mercury’s sojourn in the star Arudra is known as
Sowmya Nadi. It is a mixed bag of rains and windiness. By the star Arudra,
South eastern section of India is indicated. The duration of this sojourn is
from 21st June to 27th June.
Rainfall
spoiling yogas in June.
(1) The increasing gap between Venus and
Mercury.
In the past, triggers for intense and widespread
rainfall were seen to coincide with the conjunction of Venus and Mercury. The closer
they are to each other, better for rainfall. This year they are at considerable
distance to each other though for most part of June there is no other planet in
between them to spoil closeness.
They begin with a gap of 25 degrees on the 1st
of June. But with each passing day, the gap keeps increasing. On 20th
June, the gap reaches 43 degrees which was the distance that heralded retreat
of SWM in 2016.
The gap keeps growing even after that and reaches 66
degrees by 30th June. Throughout July this gap is maintained or
increased. Only in mid August the gap starts getting reduced when they move
towards each other.
This phenomenon of huge gap between them happening
in the beginning of SWM is a great dampener for a good season of rainfall. The
scenario in June and July would show us how far this feature is reliable.
(2) Mercury crosses Sun on 21st
June.
Usually when Mercury or Venus crosses the Sun in the
rainy season it will cause good rainfall provided strong rainfall yogas are
present. The only rainfall yoga during this time is closeness between Mercury
and Venus. But that is also spoiled by increasing gap between them and sun
coming in between them.
(3) Mars in the lead of all planets.
This is another feature that can reduce rainfall.
This gets rectified only in July when Sun crosses Mars on 29th
July.
Table of rainfall events in June 2017.
Date
|
Astrological
features
|
Event
|
Location
|
Spoilers,
If any
|
|
1
|
June
1
|
Venus-
Mercury in same sign
|
Rain
fall
|
East,
NE India,
Interior
Peninsular India
|
Mars
in forefront.
|
2
|
June
3
|
Mercury
enters next sign, joins Sun.
|
Trigger
to rainfall.
|
West
and West central India
|
”
|
3
|
June
5
|
Mars
comes out of Dahana Nadi
|
Reduction
in heat wave conditions.
|
South
and Central India
|
”
|
4
|
June
8
|
Sun
comes out of Vayu Nadi
|
End
of thunderstorm phase.
|
South
India
|
|
5
|
June
9
|
Mercury
enters combustion
|
Sudden
trigger to rainfall.
Probability
of a meteorological event.
|
Western
parts on India
|
”
|
6
|
June
15
|
Sun
enters Gemini to join Mars.
Comes
in exact opposition to Saturn.
|
Rainfall
|
Western
parts of India
|
”
|
7
|
June
15 to 20th June
|
Sun
and Mars in opposition to Saturn.
Moon
in favourable signs of rainfall
|
Rainfall
|
West
and North India
|
”
|
8
|
June
18-19
|
Mercury
enters next sign.
Exact
opposition to Saturn.
Moon
in watery sign
|
Rainfall
|
West
and South India
|
”
|
9
|
June
20
|
Saturn
enters Scorpio.
Opposition
with Mars, Sun and Mercury ends
|
Reduction
in rainfall
|
West
India
|
”
|
10
|
June
21
|
Mercury
crosses Sun.
Venus-
Mercury closeness ends.
|
After
isolated spells, a lull begins.
Dry
conditions start.
|
West
India.
|
|
11
|
June
21 to June 27
|
Mercury
enters Sowmya Nadi (Arudra)
Saturn,
Mars and Sun in watery navamsa
|
Rainfall
accompanied with winds
|
South
east India.
|
Rainfall
scenario for Chennai.
Chennai is going to see good rainfall between 25th June and 30th June. This is
ascertained from Local Garbottam experienced in Chennai.
The Margazhi
Garbottam showed that there will be moderate rains in the last week of
June.
Inference
from the above chart:-
Conjunction of Moon with a malefic happened thrice
during the corresponding Garbottam observation period. When Moon and Sun are conjunct
with a malefic on a day of Garbottam features,
that indicates rainfall from cyclone in the rainfall realisation period. The
conjunction that happened around 25th Dec 2016 was not accompanied
with Garbottam features in Chennai. So rainfall is ruled out during the
corresponding dates in June 2017.
The 2nd conjunction was with Mars and
Ketu. Even then local Garbottam was very less. There is no trigger factor in
the corresponding period in June 2017.
The 3rd conjunction was with Rahu. This
coincided with the time of Pongal in Tamilnadu. It was cloudy in Chennai during
and after Pongal in Jan 2017. This was a good Garbottam feature. The conjunction
with Rahu indicates a meteorological development in the form of a cyclone or
some activity on the rainfall realisation period.
The above picture shows the cloud cover on 19th
January 2016 at 1 PM (taken from the website of Dundee). One can find the
entire east coast of Tamilnadu and parts of Andhra experiencing good Garbottam.
The corresponding date of rainfall is midnight of 29th June 2017.
However those places that received rainfall on 19th Jan / 20th Jan would not get rainfall on the impact date of 29th / 30th June. Chennai did not get rainfall at that time, so there is better chance to get benefited by the cloud cover which served as a good Garbottam feature then.
However those places that received rainfall on 19th Jan / 20th Jan would not get rainfall on the impact date of 29th / 30th June. Chennai did not get rainfall at that time, so there is better chance to get benefited by the cloud cover which served as a good Garbottam feature then.
The next day also saw a far better cloud movement
over coastal Tamilnadu including Chennai.
The above picture was taken at 11.30 AM on 20th
Jan 2017. Chennai was particularly under the cloud cover.
By 3-30 PM on the same day, the clouds spread over
larger area of the coast and interior Peninsular India. (Pic below)
The corresponding date of rainfall is on the night
of 30th June 2017.
The area covered by clouds show a possible formation
of a system in the Bay corresponding to the conjunction of Moon with Rahu on
dates 24, 25 and 26th of June. But there is absence of a trigger feature by planets around that time in June.
This makes me think that rainfall would be experienced from thunder storms coming from the Western direction. This is based on a feature of Garbottam that rainfall would come from the opposite direction of cloud movement on Garbottam date. On 29th and 30th Jan, cloud movement was from east. Therefore rainfall would be from the western direction.
This makes me think that rainfall would be experienced from thunder storms coming from the Western direction. This is based on a feature of Garbottam that rainfall would come from the opposite direction of cloud movement on Garbottam date. On 29th and 30th Jan, cloud movement was from east. Therefore rainfall would be from the western direction.
These two dates 29th and 30th
June have strong Garbottam compared to previous dates in June. My notes show
that there was good cool breeze and aquatic shaped clouds on the corresponding Garbottam
dates.
If it really
turns out that good rainfall is experienced on these dates, then the concept of
Garbottam stands very much vindicated.
Update on 30th June 2017.
It rained mildly at some places of Chennai on the night of 30th June but not in my place. The above garbottam and reality check pertain to my place of observation.
On three days (5th, 14th and 19th) it rained during the day time. The corresponding garbottam time comes at night which is not possible to observe. Only day time observation is discussed here.