View Single Post
Old 10-30-2006, 06:06 PM   #9 (permalink)
Pro Astromet
Junior Member
 
Pro Astromet's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: pacific northwest
Posts: 15
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dustin View Post
Theo,

Januarary is colder than Febuarary, look it up in climate records. Can you give me proof of where astromet transists make it colder than, "convential meteorology" ?

Dustin
No two seasons are exactly alike. The "conventional" meteorological records you talk about for "January" only extend 70/80 years or so, and are not good at all to use for legacy data to forecast advance weather long-range. To do that, the only possible way is astronomically.

Look at an ephemeris for January 2007, and tell me what you see. Astromet "transits" as I interpret them show things rather clearly to me. I see astronomical transits that are very interesting; especially the cold temperatures and the super snowstorm for Jan. 28-Feb. 2 for parts of the Northeast and especially the Mid-Atlantic, and Atlantic corridor. The proof is always in the weather that occurs. If you want to forecast long-range, you got to look at the skies with a telescope. Not a microscope. The bigger picture is always first - Long-range, Medium-range, to weather events that are reported in the short-range. That's how it works.
__________________
Theodore White/Pro Astrometerologist
Pro Astromet is offline   Reply With Quote