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Predicting
the Weather
by the Moon

Ken Ring



This is the first book to present sound scientific evidence for the Moon's influence on our weather and how easily it can be calculated.

Most farmers, fishermen, geologists and nomads know that Full and New Moons bring weather changes. Yet the Moon is never mentioned in any official weather forecasts, nor is it factored into any weather-computer model. Metereologists cannot agree as to whether or not the Moon is a weather influence. Some say it is a small player and others say it is not a player at all. They accept that the Moon controls tides, but will not come out publicly and attribute the Moon to influencing anything else. They also admit to having no real long range forecasting system.

KEN RING discovered how much the Moon influences our weather by keeping and comparing diaries over a ten year period while living in a bus touring New Zealand with his young family. Using this Moon-based system, he has been predicting the weather with surprising accuracy. For a long time he has campaigned for yacht races to be held at Moon phase safer times. In July last year he correctly forecast the weather on Millennium Day, on New Zealand's Election Day, and just recently, for the Sydney Olympics.

PREDICTING THE WEATHER BY THE MOON reveals vital information on how the Moon affects our weather, based on sound mathematics, ancient divination techniques and recently-discovered data from space research. It explains how earthquakes, hurricanes, and extreme weather conditions can be foretold by looking at the distance of the Moon from Earth.

For two or three days at the time of every New Moon, the Moon shields us from the solar wind - that electromagnetic energy force-field put forth by the Sun. The old cultures knew that was the time for planting and fishing and so, over thousands of years they grew the lunar planting and fishing calendars. Data coming now from NASA suggests that lunar calendar systems used by many ancient and surviving cultures to determine seasonal climatic fluctuations indeed had a sound scientific basis. One might say that this is knowledge so old, it is now new again.

For more weather information, visit Ken Ring's website:  www.predictweather.com

KEN RING is a mathematician with a passion for number. He is also a long-range weather forecaster. His forecasting columns a month ahead are syndicated throughout New Zealand, and are eagerly awaited by farmers, fishermen, pilots, travellers, and all kinds of event-organisers.

Main points:
• Extremely practical do-it-yourself handbook for predicting the weather.
• First popular science book to explain clearly what the Moon is, and its influence on Earth.
• Combines science with the myths and legends of the Moon from prehistoric times.
• Shows how earthquakes, hurricanes, and extreme weather conditions can be foretold by examining the distance of the Moon from Earth.
• Explains how weather forecasters are now seriously beginning to look at the effects of the Moon and are in regular discussion on this with the author.

  Predicting the Weather by the Moon - see a sample

 

Contents

Brief glossary
My journey
The formation of the Moon
How large and far is it?
The moon in ancient times

Discovering predictable patterns
Planting by the Moon – Observations of the Maori – Moon madness and ill winds

Through the phases
New Moon – Waxing crescent – First quarter – Waxing gibbous– Full Moon – Waning gibbous – Last quarter – Waning crescent

Tides and what pulls what
What's a tide? – Oceanic tides – Tides slow earth's rotation – Atmospheric tides – What causes earthquakes? – Perigees and apogees – In fishing – In planting – Comparing cycles – Dates of the perigee

The monthly wobble
Maximum declination and the 18-year cycle – Sun's declination at the solstices – Position of the Moon

What causes weather?
El Niño – La Niña – What causes El Niño? – What weather are we into now?

The barometer
Proof of atmospheric tides?
How to best use the barometer

Predicting
1. plot declinations for the month – 2. get in tune with the perigees – 3. plot and compare past cycles – Full Moons – Other forecasting systems – Historical evidence for cycles – 4. check out the wind – 5. look at clouds – Proverbs – Signs in nature – 1. of worsening weather – 2. of better weather
3. of weather change – 4. of earthquakes – Weather in Britain – Weather in New Zealand – Weather in USA

Looking directly at the Moon
New Moon (day Moon) – First quarter (day Moon) – Full Moon (night Moon) – Last (third) quarter (night Moon)

Reading weather maps
What are isobars? – Anticyclones – Cyclones – The Wahine disaster – Language of weather maps – What makes a thunderstorm? – What is a tornado? – What is a hurricane? – Beaufort scale – Other weather conditions

Q's and A's

Appendices
Monthly declination data for the year 2000 – Monthly declination data for the year 2001   Perigee, apogee, full Moon and new Moon in 2001

Bibliography
Index

Predicting the Weather by the Moon

Ken Ring

ISBN 0 906362 52 0, 200 pages, 216 x 135 mm, diagrams and charts in b/w,
£9.95 / $19.95

Qty?

Samples from this book:
My Journey
Discovering predictable patterns
- Planting by the Moon
- Observations of the Maori
- Moon madness and ill winds

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