
THE SPRING EQUINOX 2005 INGRESS CHART
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First of all, for non-astrologers visiting this site,
let me explain what this chart is about. An ingress chart
is a horoscope for the moment a planet enters a new sign
and such a chart can be calculated for any planet and
any sign. However, astrologers all over the planet are
paying special attention to the Sun's entrance into one
of the four cardinal signs (Aries, Cancer, Libra and Capricorn)
as it marks the beginning of a new season and can tell
us about what to expect during the coming three months.
The Spring Equinox, when day and night are of the same
length and spring begins, is marked by the Sun's entrance
into Aries and can give us clues about the general quality
of this season, until the Sun moves into Cancer at the
Summer Solstice.
I have set the chart for London, as this is the capital
of the UK and represents the whole country. (This is astrological
practice, even though you may not agree on an ideological
level that London should represent, for example, Scotland
or other areas and their people.)
The first thing I always like to look at in a seasonal
ingress is the weather, usually described by what is happening
on the angles of the chart. Well, this chart has 1°
Leo rising and the Sun at 0° Aries is forming an easy-flowing
trine to the Ascendant, so we can expect loads of very
warm and sunny weather. However, the Moon (a wet influence)
in Cancer (a wet sign) is conjunct the Ascendant and portends
heavy rainfall, possibly aggravated by its opposition
to Mars, which can indicate extreme freak weather. With
Venus, the ruler of the land (4th house) close to the
fixed star Sheát, I even think of renewed floodings,
as Sheàt is connected to drowning. I see a scenario
of prolongued dryness, nice warm days, occasionally rather
high winds (Mercury opposing Jupiter) and intersperced
with sudden cold and/or heavy rains the dried-out land
may not be able to cope with any better than the drains
or the rail system. We'll see ...
Secondly, the ingress chart in general: The Sun rules
the first and second house (the theme of the chart and
matters of ideological or material values) and is conjunct
Venus, the ruler of the fourth and eleventh house (family
matters, tradition, the land and political parties). The
Moon is aspecting Sun and Venus from the Ascendant in
a free-flowing, outgoing trine and usually stands for
the people, the masses. Since the Sun in itself stands
for leaders, kings and governments, this appears to be
the signature for the upcoming elections: The people (Moon)
elect a new government (Sun), the 'basic elements' of
the country (Venus) make their opinions known (ninth house)
in this election. I don't know enough about the charts
of UK parties to guess in an educated way what the result
will be, but Sun and Venus in the ninth house augurs well,
meaning that it would be to the benefit of the country
and its people, which is supported by the waxing Moon
favouring new beginnings and enterprises.
The Moon in Cancer, though, speaks of a tendency to stay
with what is, so the current government may stay in power
for a third term. (For example, on the day of the US elections,
the Moon was in Cancer and the American people kept their
current government, to the amazement and disappointment
of everyone else.)
Sun and Venus also form a sextile to Mars in Capricorn,
close to the Descendant. Although the sextile aspect speaks
of good opportunities up for grabs, I feel this might
be a mixed blessing. Mars is the ruler of the Aries Midheaven,
opposes the Moon (the people) and sits on the point of
alies and/or open enemies. This point is ruled by Saturn,
currently in its detriment (weak and mean) and retrograde
(also weak and mean) in the twelfth house of secret enemies.
These symbols take on various meanings: The election could
bring a strong opposition, legislation could be drummed
through parliament (Mars in the seventh) to the detriment
of the people and pertaining to "secret enemies",
the elusive terrorists we hear so much of these days.
Well, the last word hasn't yet been said about the UK
version of the US Patriot Act.
Lastly, I'd like to relate the ingress chart to the chart
of the UK itself. Some people swear by the coronation
chart of William the Conqueror, from December 21st, 1066
and I do admit that this chart seems to work sometimes
- but not always. The UK as is came into existence on
January 1st, 1801, and that is the chart I'm using here.
What strikes me first is that the Ascendant of the ingress
chart is in exactly the same degree as the UK's Jupiter
in the tenth house (and, by the way, very close to the
shared Ascendant of Charlie and Camilla, who will exchange
their rings and marriage vows on a rather naïvely
chosen date during this season.) In the UK chart, Jupiter
rules the third and the sixth house, transport and communication,
as well as health matters. There may be important developments
in these areas, and about time, too! Both, the delapidated
public transport system and the completely overwhelmed
NHS are, of course, the ingredients of an ongoing soap
opera in this country - as indicated by Jupiter in Leo
in the prominent UK tenth house. So, the government (Sun
and MC of the ingress chart) may try to deal with these
issues in a sweeping way and may get through with that
(trining UK Jupiter), but whether they will be successful
remains to be seen.
The chart ruler of the UK is Venus and she is currently
under the nebulous influence of Neptune, which is good
for music and the arts, mediumship and 24-hour drinking,
but not necessarily conducive to a realistic or practical
view of things. The Spring Equinox Venus sits in the UK's
sixth house (reality check and, again, health matters)
in Pisces, a sign often associated with chaos or unclarity,
and near the fixed star Sheàt of the drowning persuasion.
All in all, I think there will be desperate attempts to
get on top of it all that will end in even more chaos.
Well, what else is new?
The Moon/Mars-opposition of the ingress chart is touching
the fourth and tenth house of the UK chart (housing and
government), indicating ongoing disputes about housing
issues, for example the plans to build massively in the
flood plains or new taxes put on house sales. The people
are not amused.
And lastly my favourite, which is a bit of a mind boggler
- literally - so I will try to guide you through this
one carefully. In the ingress chart, retrograde Mercury
and retrograde Jupiter form an opposition which touches
the fourth and the tenth house, tradition and open exposure.
Jupiter rules the sixth house (everyday reality) and the
ninth house (higher learning, expression and the 'good
daimon' connecting us to the mind of God). Mercury rules
the third house (communication) and the twelfth house
(secret enemies, yes, witchcraft, yes - but also the realm
of spirituality, artistic inspiration and talents like
clairvoyance and telepathy). For all we know, something
is going to be stirring in all of the areas involved and
it may have to do with a return to things of the past,
one of the meanings of retrograde motion.
Now, in the UK chart this opposition runs across the first
and seventh house (manifestation -Jupiter- and cooperation
or enmity -Mercury). In this chart, Jupiter rules communication,
while Mercury rules the higher mind and the 'unseen realm'
(twelfth house, see above). In combination with Neptune's
spiritualizing transit over the chart ruler of the UK,
I feel that there may be more and more people openly practising
alternative forms of communication, which have nothing
to do with Royal Mail or your mobile phone implant, but
rather make use of the old and forgotten abilities of
our minds, which have been thoroughly brainwashed - but
not thoroughly enough. So, one of the things to do this
spring, next to tending your garden, sitting in the sunshine,
voting and complaining about silly government measures
would be to practice your telepathy.
And just in case you're a bit rusty in that department,
but do have a comment, send us an email! |
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