A long-range weather forecast built for one town and one year — the weeks rain, wind, heat and storm run strongest, dated day by day, so you can plan the planting, the build, the wedding around them. With a daily earthquake-strain outlook for the year.
$97 AUD · one location · one year · print-ready PDF
The day-by-day method behind your forecast is George McCormack’s. In his 1947 work on long-range astro-weather, he read each day from the positions and angles of the planets — the engine we run for your place and year. The earthquake page follows the lunation method of Öner Döşer.
It sits inside an older Australian line of work: Inigo Jones, who from a small observatory at Crohamhurst read the seasons for fifty years by the sunspot and planetary cycles. McCormack gives the daily detail; Jones gives the long view. We take your location and the year you choose, run the cycles, and lay the result out as a clean, dated report — the windows when each measure runs strongest, and when it eases.
Say the forecast shows a dry, settled run through the first three weeks of March, then a wet, unsettled stretch from mid-June. A grower lines the harvest up for that March window; a couple moves the outdoor wedding off the June weekend; a builder pours the slab before the wet sets in.
That is the use of it: not a promise of rain on a given day, but a dated map of when your town runs wet or dry, calm or wild — far enough ahead to actually plan around, the way the long-range forecasters always have.
A title page in your name, an introduction to the method, then the readings — the full year first, then month by month.
Rain, wind, heat and humidity for every day of your year on one chart — read against your town’s own normal, so the wet stretches and dry windows show at a glance.
Twelve detail pages — each month, day by day — with the notable weather windows called out, so you can plan around them.
A daily strain reading for the year — the days the planets and Moon pull hardest on the whole Earth, marked against the world’s active fault zones.
The full year just gone, then the very month we’re in — drawn with the same charts your own forecast is built from.
A sample for Brisbane, Queensland. Your forecast is built for the location and year you choose.
Pick your location and the year you want read. Pay once, securely, through Stripe.
Your forecast is generated to order from the cycles for your exact place and year — not a template, not a region average.
A print-ready PDF, titled in your name, ready to read on screen or printed on A4 and pinned to the wall.
A long-range weather forecast in the McCormack tradition — written for study, interest and the love of the cycles. Read it as guidance, not certainty.
A 16-page PDF forecast built for the single location and year you choose: a title page in your name, an introduction to the method, a full-year earthquake-risk page, a full-year daily weather page, and twelve month-by-month detail pages. It’s formatted to read on screen or print clean on A4.
No — and we won’t pretend otherwise. It’s a long-range weather forecast built on George McCormack’s astro-weather method, in a tradition that runs back to Inigo Jones. Read it as study and guidance, the way the old forecasters did — not as a certainty to make safety or money decisions on.
It’s generated to order from the cycles for your exact location and chosen year — not a region average or a template. The weather readings are measured against your own location’s normal.
After payment you’ll go straight to a short form to enter your location and year. Your forecast is then built and delivered as a PDF you can download and print.
Yes. Each forecast covers one location and one year. Want several? Order one for each — many students build a set for the places that matter to them.