Just a very quick update this month, due to heavy client work load . . . the very same reason I haven't had time to update the forecast results lately. Still, I figure you keep a finger on the pulse of world events, so you can update yourself while I'm preoccupied.
June starts out under a cloud, so to speak - literally, a storm cloud associated with the SuperMoon on the 3rd, the centerpiece of a geocosmic stress window that ups the ante for extreme coastal tides, severe storms and major seismic activity (magnitude 5+ earthquakes and volcanic eruptions). May ushered in the first SuperMoon alignment of the year, and we all know what that brought: killer typhoons and tornadoes, earthquakes and volcanoes. June follows suit. If you followed the news last month, you know that it pays to be ready for Mother Nature's worst. If it misses you, be grateful.
The June SuperMoon risk window extends through the 6th, and is planet-wide in scope. In other words, be ready wherever you happen to be. That said, astro-mapping suggests some particular risk zones of note. The Rocky Mountain range from Canada clean through the US and down through the Baja is one of the longitudinal risk ribbons associated with the June 3 SuperMoon. This same line emerges on the other side of the world to cross India, Pakistan and Russia. The horizon arc for this SuperMoon skirts the west coast of Africa to pass through western Europe, crossing northern Russia and China to pass through Japan on its way down to New Zealand. A sweeping Mars arc has an ominous look to it at this SuperMoon, and it stretches from the Aleutians to just east of Hawaii to emerge just off the southeast coast of Africa before jutting up through the Middle East and out through Siberia. I figure the June 3 SuperMoon to be one of the strongest storm and seismic indicators of the year, falling within hours of lunar perigee and the Moon's north declination extreme for the month.
Other geophysical risk windows for June include the 9th-12th (centering on the lunar equatorial crossing of the 10th), the 15th-21st (associated with the June 18 full moon), and from the 24th into the 27th triggered by the June 25 northward lunar equatorial crossing). The month closes out with another storm, tide and seismic risk window opening on the 30th as the Moon makes a perigee and peak north declination on July 1, melding into the July 3 new moon...cont'd
http://www.astropro.com/forecast/predict/2008-06.html